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Morning
Keynote:
Next Generation
"Virtual Environment" Technologies for Enhanced Learning
Chris
Dede
Students and teachers
are beginning to use sophisticated interactive media to enhance
learning, in school and out. By the end of this decade, classroom
teaching will routinely include handheld wireless devices,
shared virtual environments in which learners' avatars can
interact with digital objects, and broadband videoconferencing
with added tools for collaboration across distance. All these
capabilities are important for complementing presentational
instruction with guided, collaborative inquiry-based learning
that centers on real world problems and higher order skills.
My research recently has centered on shared virtual environments,
like Alice stepping through the Looking Glass, that enable
students to have learning experiences impossible to create
in classroom settings. These include multi-sensory immersion
in virtual worlds for mastering difficult concepts in science,
as well as participatory historical experiences in which students'
avatars travel back in time to collaboratively aid a town
troubled by health and environmental problems. These technology-based
learning environments illustrate the types of new educational
applications advanced computers and telecommunications can
provide to increase students' motivation and learning outcomes.
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Morning
Discussion Session:
Encouraging
Women In Technology
Jo-Ann
Castano
Sculptor, website
developer and community networking consultant Jo-Ann Castano
will share her experiences working with the Women
In Technology (WIT) project based at Vermont Technical
College. This program aims to demystify technology and encourage
girls in middle school and high school to study and consider
careers in math, science and technology. Each summer, WIT
conducts four technology camps for Vermont girls that include
hands-on workshops taught by women scientists, engineers,
and technicians. Castano's workshops in web development
focus on team building, learning the fundamentals of web
publishing and research, writing and editing code, designing
a well-structured site, and understanding how to optimize
websites to communicate not only with the target market
but with the Internet's search engines, robots and spiders.
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Morning
Discussion Session:
Where's the
Media? Models for Creating and Distributing Teacher- and
Student-Made Digital Media
Mary
Hopper
Ralph Summer
The unavailability
of high-quality digital media for use in the curriculum
is a key obstacle to realizing the potential that computers
could have for enhancing education. This presentation will
examine the possibility of improving the situation through
systematically extending models for creating and distributing
teacher- and student-constructed digital media. Common distribution
models such as freeware, shareware, open-source, and commercial
will be described along with popular examples of how the
models have been successfully implemented. Then the relationships
between these models and popular approaches to constructing
and distributing teacher- and student-made media will be
examined (e.g. webquests, Schrock's Guide, d-libraries,
etc.). Finally, discussion will focus on the degree to which
either expanding upon existing approaches or implementing
entirely new models might result in the availability of
more and better-quality digital media for use in classrooms.
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Morning
Discussion Session:
Facing History
on the Web
Howard
Lurie
This session will
describe current attempts at Facing
History and Ourselves to use the new media technologies
to engage teachers and students in in-depth analyses of
history and adolescence. Through the development and use
of an online campus for Facing History teachers, we are
building learning communities devoted to sharing best classroom
practices and developing successful strategies for integrating
new media into the Facing History curriculum. In addition,
we will discuss new methods we have developed to identify,
evaluate and employ historical content available on the
web.
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Afternoon
Discussion Session:
The Three
Ts of Cyberethics in Schools
Jerry Crystal
Half the elementary
and middle school students who responded to a poll conducted
by Scholastic Inc. said they don't believe hacking is a
crime. This disturbing perception by students is only one
aspect of dealing with the issue of cyberethics in our schools.
In this session, Jerry Crystal shares insights gained from
working in a middle school environment with 900+ wireless
laptop users. He highlights specific procedures, websites
and governmental resources that address what he refers to
as the three T's of cyberethics in schools:
- Thinking - that
begins with creating, evaluating, and revising acceptable
use policies (AUP) so that they agree with a school's
educational philosophies and are imbued with strength
and consistent enforcement.
- Techniques -
that create a school climate that encourages ethical technology
use at all levels. These proven techniques help to communicate,
encourage and enforce ethical behavior.
- Technology -
that used intelligently helps to minimize problems and
maximize the goals of an institution's AUP.
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Afternoon
Discussion Session:
Candid Candidates
Mary Leyden
Mary Leyden will
present a media literacy and authoring project completed
by sixth-grade students at Bernardston Elementary School
entitled Candid Candidates. In this project, students
learned how to identify the persuasive elements of presidential
campaign advertisements. Their deconstruction and analysis
of this year's campaign ads led them to understand the powerful
role that media plays in our election process. Following
these exercises in deconstruction, each student received
a letter from a past president of the United States in which
they were congratulated on their appointment to the candidate's
campaign advertisement committee. Students then began the
historical research and media authoring segments of this
project. Working in teams of three, students researched
their candidates and the era in which they ran for office.
Using this research, each group produced a positive, one-minute
campaign advertisement in which they targeted a specific
audience, demonstrated their candidate's stand on an important
political issue and experimented with the art of persuasion.
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Afternoon
Discussion Session:
What a Tangled
Web We Weave: Media Literacy, Symbol Systems and Learning
Vera Walker
The emergence of communication
technology has ushered in an era of new and changing literacies.
Research suggests that most American children spend over five
hours daily engaged in some form of print and electronic media.
Educators must begin to embrace new pedagogical strategies
to teach children of the digital generation. In this session,
we will focus on how new and traditional media are impacting
American culture, particularly in education. This workshop
has two parallel purposes. First, it will present a comparison
study on the use of electronic, oral and print-based stories
for reading comprehension. Second, participants will be introduced
to selected methods of using mass media such as intermedial
teaching techniques and Internet-lesson plans to bridge existing
and future literacy practices. The presentation is given in
PowerPoint and a reading packet is available to workshop participants.
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