Author Archives: Fran Mauney

About Fran Mauney

Fran Mauney has over 30 years experience in education. She is an award winning educator who leads academic innovation and technology projects for Greenville County Schools. She enjoys training teachers, students, and administrators, keynote speaking, playing with grandchildren, and serving at church. She has her own consulting business and shares her expertise with community organizations and tech companies around the country. She has served as an adjunct college professor, university supervisor of student teachers, School Advisory Board member for Education and Human Services at a local university, member of School Improvement Councils, Site Director for Grants, and led the education practice at SYNNEX, while caring for her 99 year old mother. Together, they host a weekly online talk show about living life with purpose. She is honored to be part of the Game Changer program with the National Center for Performance Health and Consultant/Trainer for ImaginGO.

Blogging in Elementary School

How can you use a blog effectively with children ages 5-10?  Let’s share some ideas with each other.

I really like the ease of blogging and adding photos and links to showcase student work.  Some examples I’ve seen in schools of effective blogging are for each student to write what they are thankful for at Thanksgiving, or tell what their first gift of Christmas would be after reading the Polar Express.

Suggestions: Have students respond to literature by typing in their comments for Language Arts.

Math: Have students explain the steps in solving a math problem.

Science: Take pictures of nature or science experiments, upload them to the blog and let students comment about the photos.

Social Studies: Upload photos of historical figures and have students write about them.

Ask a question so the students have to formulate their own opinions and post it on the blog. For example: ” Is watching TV good for you or bad for you?”      ” Do you think homework helps you learn?”

The Armstrong teachers decided to create a blog on their GCSD teacher websites.

They decided to use their blogs for classroom discussions!

Did you know that you can now upload videos to your blog from your Flip Camera very easily using Media Share with Discovery Education?

Here is a tutorial to show you how: Uploading Video to Your Blog

Here is an example of a video uploaded to Media Share: Winter Writing with Multi Age Class

UTC 11 Share your Vision

Fran Mauney

We are preparing for the Upstate Technology Conference and would love your input.  This year’s conference will be on June 14, 15 at Wade Hampton High School. We would love for you to present some of the lessons that you are teaching at our conference. The website is under construction now and will be available shortly.  www.utcsc.com

Here are some of the comments/suggestions that we received from our participants last year.

1.  UTC 10 survey results commented about having more skype, blogs, podcasts, tweets, about the conference…….. maybe have a few overflow rooms for popular sessions……… can  you wrap your brain around this and give feedback about the best way to do this?  Will you ask your professional learning community how we can best meet the needs of the teachers that attend?  That would be huge.

2. What topics do you think we need for next year?  Our theme is “What’s Your Vision?” spinning off the point that Hall made last summer about the lack of a shared vision……Will you tweet about this, post on facebook or ask your plc?

 
3. We have 4 big solutions to make this year’s conference better: 
a.  no long lines when you enter the building……. just grab a registration form, card and return the form to us with our card number on the form.
b. extra parking down the road at the athletic fields, I’m checking on buses to transport from there
c. shorter time to get your credit from the conference (new program was written for that) GCSD teachers will have a shorter wait getting points uploaded to the portal.
d. hopefully, less crowded rooms if we have more presenters and overflow rooms (we need YOU to present)
e. food tables spread out and colored coded tickets for different food choices.

Using the professional learning community mind-set, could you share ideas about ways to make the conference better?  Add your comments to this blog. I look forward to hearing from you and if you’d like to volunteer, let us know.

What is your vision for UTC 11?

What’s Your Vision?

Fran Mauney

Hall Davidson, nationally known speaker with Discovery Education, inspired over 1000 participants, presenters, and vendors last week at the Upstate Technology Conference to meet the needs of today’s learner.  He challenged us to create interactive student centered lessons using free technological resources that are available at our fingertips. When asked why teachers are not engaging students in the learning process, the answer was not the lack of funds, or the lack of good teachers, but the lack of a shared vision.  This revelation exposes how crucial it is that we form professional learning communities with the shared vision of revolutionizing our schools.

According to Education Week, “learning is no longer preparation for the job, it is the job. In a world in which information expands exponentially, today’s students are active participants in an ever-expanding network of learning environments. They must learn to be knowledge navigators, seeking and finding information from multiple sources, evaluating it, making sense of it, and understanding how to collaborate with their peers to turn information into knowledge, and knowledge into action.”

Sir Ken Robinson  challenges the way we’re educating our children. “He champions a radical rethink of our school systems, to cultivate creativity and acknowledge multiple types of intelligences.” It is true that most adults don’t enjoy what they do for a living, they simply endure their jobs until the week-end. But there are others who love what they do and couldn’t imagine doing anything else. Their work defines who they are. Listen to Sir Ken Robinson’s inspirational talk at TED in February 2010 and see how we can help students find their talents and abilities.

It will require extra planning, more conversations with colleagues, time spent researching while we break out of our comfort zones and share the successful (and not so successful stories) we experience in the classroom. We need to form professional learning communities within our schools, district and across the state with teachers, administrators, university professors and student teachers as we collaborate about the best ways to help students find their talents. We need learning teams to help us become better teachers.

This summer as you prepare for the upcoming 2010-2011 school year, challenge yourself to incorporate more student centered activities. Choose one project that you could easily add to an existing unit and observe your students as their interest, excitement, and achievement soars. Give your students choices about how they’d like to learn. Incorporate the multiple intelligences in your lessons and add a technology feature. Check back on the Upstate Technology Conference website for hand-outs and links to help you prepare more student centered activities this year.

Our students spread their dreams beneath our feet, we need to tread softly.

HUE and DimDim

By Fran Mauney

I have to tell you about the latest technology toy that is a must for your classroom! It is called a HUE webcam and it only costs $50!!!!  It can be a web camera or a document camera and best of all, it is so easy to install and use.  Simply install the CD that comes with the camera.  Then, plug the camera into your USB drive and click the camera icon on your screen. Automatically it begins working. Now you can have a document camera or a web cam in your classroom and you don’t have to pay $500-$1600 for it.  How does it work?  Think of a small lamp with a flexible neck, if you tilt the camera head down, it works like a document camera and projects on your computer screen. If you tilt the camera up it acts as a webcam and can be used for Skype and other programs.

Why would you need a document camera in your classroom?  Well, I use the HUE as a document camera to show students’ work, science experiments, math manipulatives or textbook or newspaper pages.  We edit students’ work together by using the ActivInspire software and highlighting, underlining, or drawing on the screen.  Everyone can see the science experiment as it is projected on the interactive white board or screen. (You do need an LCD projector in order to project the image on the board, screen or wall.) I can take pictures of the steps of a scientific experiment AND it works as a video recorder as well.  You can capture the recording by choosing to in the File menu or take pictures by pressing the silver button on top of the camera. It is that easy! If you’d like more ideas about how to use a document camera in your classroom here is a list:  Document Camera in the Classroom

I tilt the camera neck up and use it as a web cam when I am teaching using the program called DimDim.  Here is a quick start guide telling you how to set up your account. Setting Up DimDim  This is how it works, Schedule Your Meeting and invite attendees.  Why would I use DimDim?  As an Instructional Technology facilitator, I use it to train teachers.  I can email the teachers and invite them to a meeting, they can click on the link, sign in and see my computer screen.  If my HUE camera is attached, they can also see me as I teach. They can type questions while I’m teaching and the questions will appear on the side of the screen.  That way I can answer questions while I teach.  As a classroom teacher, you could use DimDim to meet with other teachers from other schools and share ideas. This could cut down on travel time and you could meet online instead of in person, or you could use Skype to communicate with each other.

One more thing, the HUE comes in great colors: blue, red, green, white, black, and pink.

These are a few ideas that could help you communicate better with your students and teachers. I hope that you will find this useful in your classroom.

You can learn more about exciting new technology toys/tools at the Upstate Technology Conference. Sign up to present or participate today!  c u @ utc!

Welcome Educators!

Welcome Teachers!

I would like to share ideas with you about ways to integrate technology in your classroom. My favorite technology toy is the Flip Video Camera and I use it almost every day. By allowing your students to create videos, write scripts, conduct research, and practice public speaking, you are creating independent, critical thinkers and resourceful problem solvers. Check out this website to help you with ordering Flip Cameras.  You can get two cameras for $150. http://www.digitalwish.com/dw/digitalwish/products

Here are a few videos that students have made using the Flip Video camera:

Welcome Elementary T Search Projects: http://teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?video_id=111169&title=Welcome_T_Search&ref=franmauney

Photo Peach is one of my favorite photo sharing sites.  I use it weekly to publish students learning. Check out the Service Learning Project at Wade Hampton High School:

WHHS Supports A Child’s Haven on PhotoPeach
http://photopeach.com/album/ax3onj

Students enjoy writing stories using the Promethean Board:  http://www.prometheanplanet.com/blog/?p=1894

What type of Active Classroom do you have?  See the steps of a Promethean teacher:

http://www.prometheanplanet.com/blog/?p=1869

I found a great new technology tool.  It is called a HUE. It is a document camera/webcam and it only costs $50.  Here is the link:

http://www.huehd.com/products.html