Wednesday

Have You Tried Edmodo?

I recently had the opportunity to attend a workshop on Edmodo.  Whenever I heard about teachers talking about creating a class page with their students, Edmodo always came up.  And I'm interested in using technology more with my students;  I already had a classroom blog which I talked about in this post.  I just didn't know how Edmodo was different.

The instructors likened Edmodo to Facebook.  While I wouldn't "sell" it to parents in that way, the kids did see the connection right away and were excited about all the features:

  1. Kids can personalize their account complete with avatar, learning style, career goal, and inspirational quote (they can even search by famous person within the system).
  2. Kids can reply to posts.
  3. Kids can write their own posts for others to reply to.
  4. Kids can upload photos, links, and documents.
  5. Teachers can post all of the above as well as polls and quizzes (very similar to using Google forms, but integrated onto Edmodo itself).
  6. Teachers can enter dates and assignments into an integrated calendar.
  7. There's an app for that (Apple and Android).
However, Edmodo is designed for children and therefore has safeguards against predators as well as cyber bullying. 

First, when you sign up for Edmodo as a teacher, you are given a "classroom code."  You will give that code to your students when you sign them up, and no one else can see the page unless they register with that code.  It's not the same as a password, in that the children will sign in with a username and password each time they log in, but the code is only used by them once when the register.  Once your whole class registers, you can "lock" the group.  If you get a new student later in the year you can reset the code to register that student (students who registered already don't need to re-register with the new code).  So the bottom line is, no one is getting on now or later without your help.

Second, unlike Facebook and other social media sites, there is no private messaging between students.  Anything a child writes will be seen by you and every other child in the class, and it will be logged under their real first name.  If a child was going to say something inappropriate, it would be as if they stood up in the middle of class to say it; it's all out in the open. 

You even have the option (in case you do have a "bold" class this year) to "moderate" comments.  That is, you can set their posts to stay hidden from the other kids until you approve each one.   

Edmodo does not require an Email to sign up (unlike most websites that you create accounts for).  The only tricky thing about signup is that children need to tick a box that says their parent has read and agreed to the terms of use.  Out of respect to this rule, I sent home a permission slip that granted the children permission to tick the box in class during my introductory lesson.

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Edmodo-Permission-Slip-Free-1195367[Update] A reader requested a copy of this permission slip.  I've added it to my TPT store for free for a limited time, so if you're interested, grab it now!

I've used Edmodo for 2 weeks now, and honestly I am not sure I love it more than the classroom blog.  Watch for a future post on the pros and cons list for Edmodo versus Weebly. 

So if you're interested in Edmodo, I feel it IS worth trying, but you might find a different platform suits your needs better. 
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Please Promote Creativity in Elementary School


I bet if you did one of those "Wordle Clouds" for all the elementary education articles out there written in the past 5 years, you'd see COMMON CORE in the forefront and creativity barely visible. 

Case in point:

On Thursday, our guidance councilor came in, in the middle of a lesson I was teaching.  She said she wanted a few fourth graders to create mini banners with uplifting words on.  She showed a sample and handed me 7 precut banners with words written lightly in pencil on the back.  Of course nearly every hand went up saying "Ooooh, me, me, pick me!"  Sounded a lot more fun than the instruction I was giving at the time on restating the question in an open response standardized test question.  I hid my annoyance about having my lesson derailed.  I asked, "When do you need them" and she said Monday.  I said "Sure, that sounds fun."  As she left, I put them on the shelf behind me and continued with my lesson as though there was no interruption. 

The kids soon forgot about it when they saw I was committed to carrying on with my ELA plans, but I didn't.  I just needed time to plan.  I wasn't going to pick 7 kids and leave out everyone else who wanted to participate.  So after school I measured and cut 9 more banners and for what feels like the first time this year, I wrote on our Morning Work board:


On the back of your paper is a word.  On the front, write the word in bubble letters or block letters.
Notice:
  • The letters are written in ALL CAPS.
  • The letters are outlined in black.
  • The letters are all the same color.
  • There is a background design.
The kids came in Friday morning and I heard them saying to others who were coming in in the second and third waves, "We get to color for Morning Work!  We get to draw letters for Morning Work!"  Even more exciting was when they asked, "Can we use markers?"  So often I say no because it makes paper curl, but these banners were on glossy cardstock which required marker.  Normally I don't even have markers for them to use, but I remembered we got a huge class set at the beginning of the year.  So I opened it for the first time, and kids came up as they arrived to take one of each color and I helped bag them.  It felt like Christmas morning.

What happened next made the artist in me cry.

As I was enjoying the quiet calm of contented coloring children, I began to hear muttering.
"JOHN didn't do all the letters in the same color."
*John's head slumped and his face went red*
"Leave me alone, I don't care!"
"You're SUPPOSED to write them in all caps!  Look, read the board!"
"Can I get another paper?"
"I messed up."
"Is it okay if draw a peace sign for a design if my word is 'peace'?"
"Can I start over?"
The kids were not used to having the freedom of expression. 

Maybe being interrupted during a test taking lesson was EXACTLY what they needed that day.

It's not like this came as a surprise to me.  As early as September I could see that this group needs constant reassurance (more than most beginning fourth graders).  They want the answer to come fast and easy to them.  They want to know right away if it's right.  And while taking pride in one's work and striving for accuracy wonderful things that some kids need more of, it can also be paralyzing.  What they saw on the board was not a list of suggestions: they saw a rubric.  For an art project.  For a social skills initiative.  For words like, "Peace, friends, and acceptance." 

I called for their attention.

"Kids, this is an art project.  It's not a math problem that has one right answer.  Your job is not to check each other's work and point out what others are doing wrong, pick up an eraser, and change it so that you all have the same answer.  The only directions were to write the word you are given. The rest are just things I noticed that help the word stand out clearly.  The colors and designs you use are your choice!  Don't criticize each other's art.  Appreciate the differences: art is meant to be different.  That's what makes it interesting to look at."

They went back to coloring quietly for a few minutes before they started looking at each other's art again and the chatter started back up:
"I tried making shadows.  It really does look like shadows."
"I gave mine a border."
"Can I see yours?  That's really good!"
"I made mine look 3D." 
"Look at mine!"
It was a start. 

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