Amplify: Digital Teaching and Learning in the K–6 Classroom by Kristin Ziemke and Katie Muhtaris is out now. Amplify does exactly what the title implies. "When introducing technological tools, we often apply the same practices and strategies we use in our daily teaching, but amplify their power with technology,” write coauthors Katie Muhtaris and Kristin Ziemke. “We model what we want students to do with the technology, guide them to try it out with us, provide time for practice, then share as a class.”
In today's post, the authors list three ways to incorporate digital teaching into your everyday practice. Try them out!
Daily reading is an essential component of the elementary classroom. A healthy balance of student- and teacher-selected texts, comprehension instruction, and many opportunities to practice reading creates strong readers. Research is clear that minutes spent reading equal student achievement (Nagy, Herman, and Anderson 1985). By intentionally providing time for digital reading, we invite students to learn about current events and topics of interest. A balanced approach works best, based on interest, curricular inquiry, and classroom learning experiences. Students benefit from explicit instruction in applying navigation and comprehension strategies when reading in a digital format. Although it’s tempting to label students as digital natives and assume they understand these concepts, it’s clear that kids need support, and it’s up to us to explicitly teach and model elements of digital reading. We teach skills like scrolling and navigating, the functions of different Web elements, minimizing distractions, and finding just-right websites.
A class recording booth is one of the easiest ways to capture student thinking. You can create a recording booth with practically any device—laptops, smartphones, tablets, and Chromebooks all have built-in cameras that will allow you to capture video. We find that most devices with built-in cameras have some form of recording program available by default. A few possibilities include Camera, Apple's iMovie, or WeVideo. Choose something simple to use and focus on how the tool can capture a different type of evidence. Often what kids say gives us completely different information than a written response. We depend on the recording booth so much that we’ve added a microphone to eliminate interference from background noise: we need to capture their thinking in a high-quality format.
Video book reviews create a book buzz as students talk excitedly about their favorite books and make plans for future reading. By allowing kids to record video book reviews and making them accessible on a website or blog (“Why don’t you go watch the latest book videos and get some ideas about what to read next?”), we build a community in which kids know they have an audience for their work.
We use a variety of simple-to-access, digital collaborative spaces to gather feedback from students, respond to student work, or provide information and site links. Like corkboards, chart paper, and sticky notes that make thinking visible, these digital collaborative spaces invite all students to view, respond, and interact. There are other good tools available, but we like Padlet because it has a number of options, is accessible from numerous devices, provides a personalized URL, is easy to share, and saves all bulletin boards in a single account. It’s a wonderful tool for gathering feedback from students; we often use it to pull together final thoughts about a lesson or to share lingering questions. It’s quick to set up and easy for students to access and thus the perfect tool for impromptu lessons and data collection. When Kristin’s class finished a read-aloud of The Little Red Hen, she created a Padlet wall that said, “Did the Little Red Hen do the right thing? Share your thinking.” The notes kids added led to a wonderful debate on what is fair. Katie has used it in a similar way to archive students’ thinking, as a place for student book clubs to share their learning, to collect exit tickets after a lesson, and as a format for students to create their own websites.
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Kristin Ziemke (left) has been teaching and learning from children in both urban and suburban schools for the past 13 years. She engages her first grade students in authentic learning experiences where reading, thinking, collaboration, and inquiry are at the heart of the curriculum. Follow her @KristinZiemke.
Katie Muhtaris (right) has enjoyed teaching and learning with her students in the Chicago Public School system for the last eight years. She is Nationally Board Certified as a Middle Childhood Generalist and holds a Master’s Degree in Teacher Leadership. Follow her @KatieMuhtaris.