Saturday, July 26, 2014

My Vision of the Classroom of the Future


8-13-2020

Wow, my last new Fall semester is starting for Southwestern Illinois College. I will be retiring in May. I am in my home office getting ready to teach my classes. This is so much easier than the olden days when I had to travel by car, use $50 of gas a week, and report to an office every day.

My students are not just from the SWIC area as in the past. I have students from all over the world learning together and teaching each other new concepts. They meet in our “virtual” classroom where each student’s feed is shown in one place. Everyone has the ability to lead or participate in the class discussion.

Many of my students attend the 30 minute hybrid classes during their lunch hour. They can log in to the class from any location using their Google glasses.

Each of my students have their own blogs where homework is posted and fellow students comment and respond to each other. The class has a social bookmarking site where the class compiles a list of web sources on each topic and shares them. This is so much easier than when they had to buy textbooks and lug them around. Every time a student posts to their blog, I receive an alert from the RSS feeds that I have set up. It is easy to see what new topics and posts the students have shared.

In the past, I had to set up my entire online class. It took weeks! Now with my class wiki, I set up topics and the students build their own learning environment with online resources that are of interest to them and the class. I find the students love learning this way. Everyone can find information that is useful to them, their country, and their interests.

With so many different multimedia free sources on the web these days, I am now doing all of my assessments are projects. Students are no longer tested on wrote knowledge that they have, but on how they use their ability to use resources and create assignments that will benefit them and be used in their life. My students use free online apps for storing and sharing photographs, podcasting class assignments, and screencasting instructional videos.

Social networking is very important for my class. Not only do they use the old technologies such as Facebook and Twitter, but they also do mashups of their class notes, related web sites, video and podcasts they have created, and share them with the class. All of my students’ projects have been tagged and many are likely to be favorited by professionals in their fields. It gives my students a sense of pride to be published daily and considered an expert while still in college. I am very proud of all of them.

I remember in a class I took in 2014 how we talked a lot about whether Connectivism was a learning theory or not. With all of the new web technologies and the way our students are using them, there is no doubt at all. Our students love learning this way. They can find their own learning and use their web skills to put together information better than I would have every thought.

It is wonderful to have so many guest speakers from different places throughout the world giving my students tours of their facilities through Skype. The students can learn so much better with a real-life expert giving real-live examples!

It seems so long ago that I brought a stack of papers home to grade. Most businesses and schools have totally done away with their printers. With Google glasses, every personal or work document and all of the information of the web is available right in front of your eyes. All you need do is give a verbal command, and that document will appear before your very eyes. Now that we have the National WiFi system provided by the government, I have access to grade homework assignments from anywhere. I no longer have to be at my computer! I graded this week’s lesson and taught my class from Rome. The students enjoyed sitting with me on the Spanish steps for their 30 minute class. I also learned that one of my students, Tricia, is in Florence. We may get together next week to show the class examples of how Florence is the technology center of Italy.

As an older teacher, I have been through many stages of technology. I can remember my first word processor. It had a built-in spell checker. I was so impressed. It took 20 minutes to run a spell check on a 10 page document. Then it gave you a list of the words spelled wrong. You had to go find them and look them up in the dictionary to fix them. I thought there would never be any technology more impressive than that!

My grandchildren are now in elementary school. My daughter feels it is important to have her children socialize face-to-face with other students, so they attend school three days a week while the other two are spent at home learning by networking in to the classroom. She tells her children of the old days when she had to go to school every day and how they had to leave their phones in their lockers during the school day. My grandchildren look at her old paper textbooks and ask how they sent in their homework. I feel so old!

As I reminisce on my 37 years of community college teaching, I am happy to have been a part of the changes in education. There are very few jobs that allow people to keep up with technology as I do. I am continually forced to learn new ways to inspire my students. I look forward to retirement. I will now focus my efforts on helping my friends at the retirement home learn new ways to communicate with their families and friends.




Lutz 8-A-1

Web Applications

I explored the Zoho site for this activity. Wow! I think this will be great for two of my classes. It will definitely benefit the visual learners in the group as they can upload notes, pictures, videos, sound, etc.

I liked the video explanation of how I could have my class create a zoho page and send me their link so that I could put all of the class in one place. They could then upload assignments to this and share with the class.
Some of the things that I will have them upload are:

  • A brief summary of what you learned the first week of class and how learning could be made easier in this class.
  • A picture of you in order to learn class names.
  • Thoughts on Chapter 1 and 5 ways in which you used a computer today.
  • Post a picture and letter about your dream computer.
  • Create 4 questions for our class Internet Scavenger Hunt and post to your zoho.
  • Find a video on cloud technology to post.
  • Write 5 review questions from Chapter 5.
  • Post your notes from Chapter 6. (I will let them use this to take the quiz).


Overall, I think Zoho will be a great learning tool for my classroom for all learning styles!

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Lutz 7-A-1

Big Shifts

I enjoyed reading about the Big Shifts in our textbook. I think I use “Teaching is Conversation, Not Lecture” a lot in my classroom. Many of my students are working and have important things to add to our conversations about computers. I do still lecture some but like to make it more conversational whenever possible.

I also use the “Know ‘Where’ Learning” in my classes. I never give a student a direct answer to a question. I ask “Where might you go to find that information?”. I also have the students sit at the lab computers and look up information on the subjects we are discussing. This keeps them more engaged, and they seem to enjoy learning this way.

One of the ways that I feel that these shifts will affect me in the future is the “Open Content” shift. One of my coordinators for my online class, Internet Essentials” has talked about getting rid of the textbook. The text changes so frequently on the subject of the Internet that we need a new version every year. This makes me very nervous as I will need to build the content.

My views have changed on “Open Content” since I have taken this class and the “Educating the Net Generation” PLS class. That class didn’t have a textbook. Everything comes from the Internet. I has given me new hope in how I might design my online classroom.

I would also love to change my tests according to the “Mastery is the Product, Not the Test” shift. It seems, however, that all of these shifts require much more of my time!

I can use technology to find and build my online classes. I will research to find some new “products” instead of tests for my Intro to Office Support class. I do fee, though, that I need to give the old-fashioned tests to find if they know the terminology that is so important in our field.


I enjoyed this section of the book—it does make sense to me, I just need to shift my thinking.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Lutz 7-B-1

Paperless Classes


My classes are almost completely paperless. The students receive the syllabus on the very first day of class. I wouldn't even really need to do that except there are some students who like to see and touch the syllabus. There are no other papers distributed or collected during the semester.

This has helped me in my role as a teacher. I am much better at keeping track of electronic documents than paper ones. Here are some of the ways:


  • If all of the handouts are in my Blackboard class, I have no one asking me for a copy of the one they lost.
  • If all of the assignments are electronic, I have no one asking when they are due or what is due.
  • If assignments in Excel are turned in electronically, I can see all of the formulas and how the document was created.
  • I can see the document properties and tell if two students have turned in the same file.
  • All communication is handled through the CMS, everything is in one place.
  • Many tools are available in Blackboard including wikis, discussion boards, white boards, etc.


As you can tell, I have used these methods since early 2000. It has changed the way I teach dramatically. Things are much more organized. Students have come to expect all of the materials for the class to be online.
I measure learning in my paperless class the same way as in a regular class. Everything is graded online and feedback is given for each assignment. Students seem to like that there is a digital record of everything they have turned in. I have no questions about lost assignments or when something was turned in!


I don’t think I have done a good job building a learning network in my online class. This class has shown me some great ways to do that with group projects although I think it is a lot of work for the instructor. I do have the students participate in a weekly roundtable discussion. This creates some networking in the class.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

6-A-3 Responding to Connectivism

I had looked at the negatives of connectivism all week long since our group also had the "against" position, so I decided to look at Group A's wiki to find out the positives of connectivism at their wiki site:
https://summer14-bce-01.wikispaces.com/Group+A+6-A-1

Great job, Group A. I agree with the comments you made on the wiki. I loved the video of the connected student. It made the theory easier for me to understand.

The only problem I have with this theory is that it seems to be a LOT of work for the teacher. Throwing away the textbook is very intimidating for those of us who have been around for a while. Am I going to have to create a new lesson every day for them? Will they all work well this way?

I think there are good things and bad things about connectivism. I don't mind using it for some activities in my classroom, but not all students will find this a good way to work. We need to appeal to all of our students learning abilities.
6-C-2 Skype
I love Skype! I first started using Skype when my youngest daughter went to college. It was so good to see her face and hear from her roommates and see her dorm room from far away. It gives a mom a little piece of mind!

Last night I Skyped with Amy from our class. Amy and I are in the same Wiki group and have communicated lots through e-mail and messages, but it was nice to actually see and hear her last night. It was great hearing her little dogs barking. Hearing about her terrible/horrible broken foot kind of week firsthand was so much better than reading about it. Amy got to meet my daughter, Allison. And, after all of that, we even talked about our wiki project and how to make it better.

In the future, I would like to use Skype in my classroom to have guest speakers. With small class sizes, it is hard getting speakers. If those people could be in their own offices, they could "show us around", let us see their office technology, and give us tips on their jobs. By using this technology, I think my students will gain a better knowledge of the "real world" of office administration.

Friday, July 4, 2014

OK, well, I hope this works. I created a great podcast on Audacity, so I'm going to try to link to it on my OneDrive. Crossing my fingers......
Click here to hear my podcast.
Here is a picture of the Grammar Girl Podcast I found on iTunes.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

5-A-1 Flickr Possibilities

Isn't this a great picture I found at Flickr? It shows the the evolution of technology. The left side is the old technology and the right is the new. I thought it would be a very good topic starter for my OAT 121 Intro to Office Support Class.

I am going to use it to show my what people thought was technology in the past and what has become what we call "legacy" technology today.

I think I might try the annotation feature to add some notes to each of the sections or maybe links to my blog with more information. Then I will have the students create a similar photo of what was new technology in their lives and post it on their blog with a comment on how fast technology is changing our lives.

Here is a great web site I found" http://www.imagecodr.org/get.php. This site will help you cite your Flickr images--just copy and paste the URL in and it will give you the rest!

Image Citation:
CC. (2006, November, 25). ilovebutter, Technology Then and Now. Retrieved July 2, 2014, from: www.flickr.com/photos/jdickert