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Small-group Skyping, Part 3: Plan B

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plan b by alangutierrez

plan b by alangutierrez

The explosion of Web 2.0 and social media has given us and our students a prodigious number of tools to use for collaboration. We have an exponentially growing number of Plans B-Z to use when something doesn’t work.  This week, our end of the Skype book club we’ve created with Karin Perry’s (@kperry) students fell apart just because.  This time it wasn’t about accountability or technology or really anything we share control over in the classroom.  Things just fell apart, but the center of our collaboration – students’ desire to connect and share their reading experiences with one another – has held firm.  We’re going to Plan B with the idea that it will help us return to Plan A – small-group Skyping.

What is Plan B?  For us, it’s a Ning.  While we regroup, Karin’s students will be building a Ning to which they’ll invite us. We’ll all use the Ning asynchronously to share posts and comment on one another’s insights until – here at our end – we’re caught up and able to contribute as we want to. (As I want us to?  Have to check on that.)

Despite the challenges we could not meet through our own actions, I’m greatly excited about what the Ning will bring to the reading group.  Students will be able to blog – to compose, revise, revisit, an add to their thoughts about boos and reading. Splinter groups can form by book or genre using the groups feature. Students who happen to be posting at the same time can chat. The calendar can be used by students to share power together in drafting reading schedules and in scheduling Skype sessions later on when both groups are ready.  I think the Ning will transfer power from the emails and tweets Karin and I have been sending one another into the students’ own social network built around their love of reading.  Once we see when we can Skype or chat during the school day – or outside school – students can manage their interactions over reading using multiple social media platforms suited to their purposes with minimal oversight from us adults. The Ning should give students ownership over the Skyping.

While I’m sorry that we’ve hit another temporary FAIL, I’m remain so very grateful for our Skype book club because its teaching us how to persist with challenging tasks and to WIN together.

Thanks to Karin’s students for starting work on the Ning!

Written by Chad

January 22nd, 2010 at 10:15 am

Small-group Skyping, Part 2: Peer & Personal Accountability

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Longleat Hedge Maze by Howard?Gees

Longleat Hedge Maze by Howard?Gees

Today we had a great time introducing ourselves to Laura Oldham’s (@engltchrleo) new reading classes via Edmodo; our small-group Skyping cohort also happily reconnected with Karin Perry’s (@kperry) students to discuss James Dashner’s The Maze Runner.  We used 1:1 iPods Touch and m.Edmodo.com for our introductions; we gathered around Skype on a MacBook for our book club.  We posted our introductions mostly asynchronously with some nearly synchronous replying via Edmodo, back and forth with Laura’s enthusiastic students; our Skype session was live with Karin’s.  Students had a list of questions to focus their introductions on reading, but not exclusively so; we used teacher generated questions planned over Gmail for the Skype discussion as our two groups came to today’s discussion having read different amounts of The Maze Runner.

That is to say, Karin’s group had finished the book and was ready to start discussing our next book, Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies.  Our group members had reached chapter 2 of The Maze Runner.  While we had opted-in and committed to read The Maze Runner over Winter Break, we did not do so.  Therefore, instead of discussing the entire book today, we responded to some broader, abstract questions about the book’s premise:

  • How would you run a world with no adults?
  • Have you ever been confronted by an unsolveable problem?
  • Is it fair for teachers to assign problems with no clear solutions?
  • Would you rather have an adventurous, dangerous job, or a safe, dirty one?

The students huddled at each end of the videoconference and then shared out their answers over Skype.  There was a great deal of nuanced thinking and middle-school humor.  Some highlights:

  • “We would need a democracy.”
  • “We would need leaders.”
  • “We wouldn’t want a tyrancy [sic].”
  • “It’s not fair for a teacher to assign you a problem you can’t solve if it’s going to be graded.”
  • “It’s okay if the problem imparts some larger life lesson.”
  • “I guess we know who the heroes are in these groups.”
  • “I would stay in the kitchen and save the world with treats.”

After the Skype session ended, our group talked about accountability.  We did not draft a reading schedule before break.  We did not keep in touch via Edmodo or our class Google Voice line, though we could have. Before break, we opted in to read The Maze Runner, committed ourselves to Skyping again today, and went home with our books.  We could have done more – I could have done more – to make sure we were finished with the book by today, but after our talk today I’m not sure that I would have changed a thing.  We didn’t do our part; while that’s not okay, per se, everything was ok thanks to our partners’ kindness and our discoveries about accountability.

I’m chagrined that we didn’t uphold our end of the bargain.  I’m vexed we didn’t do what we said we were going to do.  I’m sorry we hadn’t read enough to engage with the questions and conclusions our partners were ready to ask and share.  However, I’m kind of thrilled that today we discovered personal accountability because of our audience of peers.  There was no life lesson I had to impart (and on Friday who’s ready to do that?); no metaphor connecting schoolwork to real work (but the book was about a maze full of monsters that kids had to escape).  There were no excuses (no dogs were harmed in the eating of our books); there was no external consequence handed down by the teacher (you’ll never be allowed to teleconference again!).  There was common personal regret and embarrassment, but also a very vital and genuine determination to meet our partners half-way next time.

Our partners were exceptionally gracious today – kindly helping us with characters’ names and really engaging with us in the general questions that made possible our participation in the conversation.  We recognized that and appreciated it greatly.  We owe them one heck of a book club.  We had fun with reading today because of them.

And we found personal meaning in preparing for class thanks to peer & personal accountability.  We want to do better so we feel better about our contributions to collaborative projects with peers.

It might not get any better than that.

Except, you know, for reading (finishing) really good books.

We’ll let you know in a few weeks.

My kids today also gave me an opportunity to see again how we can turn any situation into a learning opportunity if we all come to the social media platform with open hearts and minds.  What cuts learning short when students aren’t prepared isn’t so much their lack of preparation, but a teacher’s insistance that they be prepared before being allowed to move forward with learning.  Aren’t we always ready to learn?  Isn’t there another question we could ask?  Haven’t we all failed at a task before finding a solution – one of many?

Finally, here’s an idea for next year to harness the power of social media for peer accountability in the classroom: 1:1 accountability partners.

It’s hard to find meaning in doing work because a teacher says so.  It’s hard to find meaning in letting down your group when you’re horsing around again by recess.  It’s hard to listen to an authority figure talk about what you should have done.

What if we tried this instead?

  • Partner classes across schools for semi-quarterly projects, but weekly or semi-daily blogging.
  • Connect students with 1:1 partners sharing similar interests and ideas about school.
  • Ask partners to post weekly or semi-daily to a blog shared between the two of them.
  • Ask partners to post each Monday on what they want to accomplish academically over the next five days at school.
  • Ask students to report each Friday on their progress towards their goals.
  • Ask partners to post a positive comment about a success each week and to pose an encouraging question about a work in progress.
  • Ask partners to send one another supportive Tweets, Yams, or Edmodula (?)  regarding their goals throughout the week.

I think we could come up with a reasonable permissions and assessment framework for this, and maybe succeed in part in decentralizing accountability in the classroom, making for less coercive teacher-student relationships.  I bet we could even do this with the classes next door.

We could experiment with “do what you say you’re going to do” being the law of the land, rather than “do what the teacher/rubric/calendar says to do.”

Anyone want to opt-in?

Small-group Skyping

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What is Skype? by malthe

What is Skype? by malthe

Today one of my reading groups started “small-group Skyping” (thanks for the phrase, @bjnichols) with some of Karin Perry’s (@kperry) students. The students met on Skype and then watched three book trailers before settling on Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies as the novel they wanted to read and discuss together after winter break. I thought the entire experience was awesome and illustrative of how teachers can use social media for familiar things like reading groups or lit circles. I think proof-of-concept successes with common practices bridged across classrooms by new technologies have great potential for attracting skeptical teachers to embrace meaningful uses of classroom technology. Certainly small-group Skyping can be the gateway to re-imagining several common classroom practices like character tea-parties or interviews.

Karin and I met at Teri Lesense’s (@professornana) #NCTE09 presentation on new classics. We sat next to each other at a table in the back corner. I arrived after Karin and thought she had picked the best spot for live-tweeting. We followed one another on Twitter, exchanged blog URLs, and kept in touch about the possibility of a Skyped reading group. Neither of us had much experience with Skype, but we set up our accounts, put together a pool of books, tweeted back and forth about our meet & greet/book-trailer lesson plan, tested our Skype connection at school, recruited kids and brought them together, and then got out of the way. The kids did a great job. They commented on the moods and tones of the trailers; they talked about taking into account everyone’s genre preferences, they set up an opt-in agreement to read one book over break, and they all agreed to read another book together afterwards. I can’t wait to read with them and hear what they say. I can’t wait to figure out how to scale up what works. I most enjoyed watching the students’ synchronous engagement with discovery and learning.

We watched trailers for American Born Chineseby Gene Luen Yang, The Maze Runner, by James Dashner, and Uglies. Uglies won as the book group, while The Maze Runner became the opt-in title over break.  Each trailer was unique in its approach and production values.  It was cool to watch the fan made trailer for Uglies and think about having students undertake a similar project for a book.

Here are initial student comments:

  • “It was fun to talk with different people from different places.”
  • “I liked meeting new people on Skype because I didn’t have to write to people or type numbers on a phone.”
  • “It was interesting. It draws your attention.”

I’m looking forward to students’ reflections on their books and their new partnership at the end of our project, whenever that will be.  Hopefully, the students will resist an endpoint.  Today’s activity had a lot of splash, but for me, the lasting educational benefits of small-group Skyping and other communications technologies come from the relationships formed around learning long after the novelty of the technology fades.  I hope students will feel the same way.