Technology in the Classroom

Teaching Research Techniques

by Laura Groves on January 22, 2013

We have all the information we need at our fingertips, right?

Well, sort of. Thanks to the internet, there’s plenty of information out there. But students still need to be taught how to use that information responsibly.

My high school sophomores write a research paper using MLA endnote citation, and it’s not their first. Our high school requires an acceptably written research paper each year, and our students move on well prepared. It’s not an easy task for students or teachers — lots of grading, as you can imagine.

How do you successfully teach research techniques? Here are some suggestions:

1. Consider your students’ level and ability. Ours is a unit school (PK – 12), and research techniques are introduced in the lower school. Don’t expect students to know it all, obviously. Consider this a building block project; raise the bar a bit every year.

2. Break the project down into bite-sized bits, and communicate the schedule clearly.

3. Communicate your source expectations clearly and early. If using internet sources, teach students how to discern between the good and the bad.

4. Check student work each step of the project so you can catch big problems while they can be more easily fixed. It’s a lot easier for a student to fix source problems early than it is when the weight of typing the entire paper is on his shoulders.

5. Be flexible but consistent. Flexible with those of differing abilities and those with less exposure to this kind of project. Consistent with deadlines, especially with those familiar to the project. If you start moving deadlines around, it’s harder for the students and the teacher.

6. Talk about the problem of plagiarism, and take it seriously. CBS News did a great story on the subject, and Youtube has a number of good videos you can show your students. Watch and pick one that will speak to them.

7. Be sure your students understand documentation at the appropriate level – or they’ll find themselves plagiarizing. Show them how to give credit where credit is due. Choose the method that will work best for you and your students and give them examples. There are many websites that show examples and some that even put the information into citation form for you, but choose one for your students so they can be sure they’re following your instructions.

8. Reward them on the day the paper is due! A research paper is a lot of work. Your students will have learned a valuable skill and worked hard, so bake some them brownies!

No matter what field they enter, all our students will have to handle information. They’ll have to discern between credible and bogus sources, and as people of character, they should all know how to give credit where credit is due.

What about you? Do your students undertake a research project? Share some of your suggestions with us.

Laura Groves

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She was fourteen-years old and holding her boyfriend’s hand at the water fountain. “That one’s mine,” she told him as she pointed to her Venn diagram comparing and contrasting Hinduism and Buddhism hanging on the wall.  She was pregnant. The boyfriend, already sixteen in the 8th grade was trying to hold down a restaurant job so he could take care of his girl. And they cared to look at her carefully drawn circles on the pink piece of construction paper. He, this young man who rode a moped to a job at night, listened as she explained her process.  I was stunned. I have always hung student work in the hallways, but until then, I thought I was just contributing to the aesthetic appeal of our school. I didn’t realize that even big kids care. According to Rick Wormeli, a national education consultant and veteran educator, one of the five ways educators should transition students through the formative adolescent years is to understand students’ concerns about belonging by, “Design(ing) classrooms and hallways with student interests in mind, with student work prominently displayed.” Publishing and presenting work for authentic audiences, even if it’s other students in the school, provides students incentive to persevere to quality learning and product. My principal has made unique connections with students this year by having them show him their work in the hall and then photographing the pieces with his phone. He shares his collection with others as they visit our school building. I’ve compiled a list of a few ways that middle schoolers at my school publish and present their work. I would love to hear what you do in your school!

  • posters
  • student-led conferences
  • writing contests
  • web-based, digital presentations such as Prezi, Glogster, Storybird
  • Power Point presentations
  • Post-it notes
  • phone images
  • Email or blog comments
  • letters
  • videos
  • performances

What are your favorite ways to publish student work?

photo credit

Kendal’s personal blog is a spacious place.

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A Teaching Tool You HAVE to Meet!

by Laura Groves on September 26, 2012

Looking for a great study tool for your students? Check out Quizlet – the leading study site in the US. I learned about Quizlet from my high school sophomores, who use it all the time. And it’s easy to see that Quizlet’s tools can be used for all ages.

Quizlet was created by Andrew Sutherland when he was a high school sophomore looking for a way to study for a French vocab test. (Amazing, huh?) The website says it’s used by over ten million people a month.

Quizlet is free, simple, and has mobile apps. The website is incredibly clean and easy to navigate. Teachers can create sets of terms for their classes, or students can input information on their own.

Once sets are created, they can be studied six different ways, from flashcards and practice tests to various games. Students can even print flashcards, tables, and glossaries, if they wish. There are a number of interesting sets already available in Quizlet, but as a student enters his own terms and definitions, his learning is reinforced; and then, he can play Scatter or practice flashcards to his heart’s content.

So, check out Quizlet. And tell your students to give it a try!

by Laura Groves

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On Feeding the Planet and Learning in the Process

by Kendal Privette on September 7, 2012

It’s my favorite kid-friendly site on the net. Free Rice.  Sponsored by and supporting  the United Nations World Food Programme, Free Rice has two goals:

  • to provide education to everyone for free.
  • to help end world hunger by providing rice to hungry people for free.

How does it work? Players answer quiz questions, and for every correct answer the World Food Programme provides ten grains of rice to hungry people all over the world. Free Rice has several subjects from which to choose including English vocabulary, world geography, math, science, art and foreign languages. When my students get to home room in the mornings, they boot up those laptops and start saving the world. Any extra time at the end of class is met with my direction, “Play Free Rice. Save the world.” But a caveat – it can be addicting. I speak from personal experience!

Check out this short video from the World Food Programme website:


 So….play Free Rice. Save the world!

Kendal’s personal blog is a spacious place.

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Learning in the Digital Age

August 29, 2012

Smartboard? Check. Document camera? Of course. Student e-readers? A given. Personal smart phones: A necessity. Does your classroom utilize all of those? Or any of them? I’d imagine we’re all at different places in terms of technology. Some school districts and private schools may provide the latest and greatest, while others are scraping by with [...]

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Technology Lesson Idea for Students {Make a Movie!}

June 13, 2012
Technology Lesson Idea for High School Students {Make a Movie}

Need an assignment for students that incorporates your educational subject with technology? Consider having students create or help create a movie. Video assignments are fantastic ways to engage students on multiple levels and in varying core standards, while encouraging that “21st Century Learning” in the process.  Another thing I love about making movies in class [...]

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Using Music to Teach English as a Second Language

May 17, 2012
Teaching Tip for Teaching English as a Second Language

The following is a guest post from Marsha Goren. Marsha teaches in Petach Tikva, Israel, where she has creatively begun the American English School in her city. Enjoy the following tips for how she uses songs and videos to teach ESL. You can find Marsha at her blog, GlobalDreamers.org. **************** I am an American who [...]

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Using Audio Recording Technology

April 23, 2012

Looking for a way to spice up your lessons with some tech-related fun? One of the easiest ways to enhance your lesson plans is to incorporate audio recording technology. If you have a computer lab available to your class, each child can access the sound recorder found in the Accessories folder of every Microsoft Windows-run [...]

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Top 10 Teacher Tools for 2012

April 2, 2012

I just got back from attending Ed Expo 2012– a huge convention for teacher store owners where we get to see all of the brand new classroom products that are being introduced this year. As a former teacher, I look forward to this event every single year and can’t wait to get my hands on [...]

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Technology Timesavers for Teachers

March 29, 2012

Teachers today are fortunate to have access to technological tools that make our jobs easier and minimize the paperwork involved in educating our students. I didn’t grow up with computers like today’s students did, but I’m very much on board with becoming more tech savvy and, yes, even accepting help from my students when I [...]

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