Candidate Personal Narrative
NAME:
Karen Kliegman
| | |
HISTORY (10 points) | TOP |
I graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 1979 with a Bachelor of Arts in English. After a stint in the advertising
world, I married and had two children. One day I walked into the office of my
children’s elementary school and noticed a job posting for a school aide. I
thought that it might be a perfect way to put a little money in my pocket while
my kids were in school. I applied for the job and was hired by Watson Elementary School in the Rockville Centre, NY school district. When I look back on it
now I laugh! I went to that interview in shorts with my two young children in
tow, thinking that I would never get the job. However, much to my surprise, I
was hired as a Kindergarten Aide -- my educational career was off and running!
I remember that during that first year as an aide, my most troubling dilemma
was figuring out the teacher’s cubby system! At any rate, the following year
the school district made the decision to hire teaching assistants and to reduce
the number of library media specialists in their five elementary schools from
three to one. My principal called in all of the aides to tell them this news
and to offer all of us teaching assistant jobs. I fervently hoped to be the
Kindergarten TA, but he had me earmarked for the library. I was very
disappointed! Little did I know what a huge impact his decision would make on
my professional life. To this day I am overwhelming grateful to him.
As I look back over my teaching career, I realize now that
there were four major events that have impacted the course of my life. The
first was that decision by my principal to place me in the library. For
four out of the five days a week I saw classes on my own; on the fifth day the
library media specialist was there. What a panic! I had little teaching experience
and had to quickly figure out what I was going to do with the classes
that came in on a scheduled basis. I felt so insecure and inadequate, despite
the fact that many teachers told me I was doing a great job and had a natural
knack for teaching. Some of them advised me to go back to school and get a
teaching degree. At the time, I thought they were crazy! At some point, I
decided to look into a masters program in library science. I had certain
stipulations, however. I would take only one class and it had to be on a
Saturday so it would not interfere with taking care of my children. If I didn’t
like it, that would be the end of it. Well, the rest, as they say, is
history. I LOVED it, and after that semester I was full speed ahead and
received my master's a year later. In 1998 I applied for my first library media
specialist job and was hired by the Cold Spring Harbor School District. I
taught happily there for two years but it was a long commute from my home and
when a job closer to home in the Herricks School District came along I applied
for it.
This decision was the second turning point in my teaching
career. The day I went to Searingtown School for my interview, I instantly
knew in my heart that this was the place for me. I arrived at 8:20 AM just
when the children were being let in. I was surrounded by hundreds of happy,
smiling kids of several different nationalities, eagerly and energetically
trotting down the hallways. Nancy Lindenauer, the principal of Searingtown School, offered me the job the day I was interviewed and it was the luckiest
day of my life. Since 2000, Nancy has allowed me to transform the library
program into a program that revolves around inquiry-based activities, causing students
to revise their prior understandings and deepen their understandings of the
world. I sought to institute an approach to learning that involved exploring
the world, asking questions, and making discoveries in the search for new
understandings. I wanted the students to develop skills such as careful
observation, reasoning, critical thinking, and the ability to justify or refute
their existing knowledge. Shared inquiry naturally lends itself to
collaborative activities that are multidimensional -- students collaborate with
each other and with teachers, as they learn alongside with the global community
provided by technological access in the library.
In 2001 I heard about an exciting graduate program at Long Island University. T.E.A.M. (Technology, Education, and Multimedia), a unique program,
consists of select groups of educators interested in playing key roles in
shaping and building learning communities for the 21st century. The program is
based on team building, collaboration, constructivism, shared inquiry, critical
thinking, project-based learning, performance assessment, multiple and
emotional intelligences. Enrolling in this program opened the door for me to
immerse myself in collaborative, constructivist, project-based learning. This
was the third key event in my career and absolutely helped to shape me into the
educator I am today. Through TEAM I was introduced to educators and innovators
in the world of educational technology. The program allowed us to create
partnerships with local and national community members and it was through this
opportunity that my first online project, The Circle of Life, was born.
Through TEAM I was introduced to marine biologists from The
Riverhead Foundation, a nonprofit organization whose mission is the rescue,
rehabilitation and release of Long Island injured or sick marine animals. I
created a project for students to work in teams to problem-solve and direct
their learning as they explored a real-world problem. They worked with The
Riverhead Foundation through both personal and online interactions. It was a
gratifying feeling to bring this collaboration to my school and to see the
entire school involved in it. I submitted my students’ Inspiration
concept webs
and was awarded an Inspired Teaching Award from Inspiration. I
had my first taste of using technology as a tool to make connections between
communities inside and outside the walls of the library and I was hooked!
The next shared learning project I created was the Federal
Holidays Project (2002). The project started as a fifth grade curriculum unit
focusing on core values of democracy. I put out a call for participation and
was thrilled when Scuola
Media Alfredo Oriani, Casola Valsenio, Italia eagerly joined the project.
My students were able to exchange information about how holidays were
celebrated in America and in Italy. To the best of my knowledge, this was the first time that students at Searingtown School connected with other students on an international basis. The Federal
Holidays project is one of my most requested projects. I am always surprised
to receive an email from somewhere in the country requesting permission to use
the project!
An idea emerged from a workshop I attended with TEAM, a seed
of an idea that eventually became Walls That Talk, a project which later would
be awarded first place in the ISTE SIGTel 2004 Online Learning competition. Walls
That Talk was the catalyst for many exciting career opportunities. I began to
give workshops at conferences, I was asked to become a contributing author to a
college textbook and I wrote an article for The
SIGTel Bulletin in August 2004.
The fourth pivotal event in my career occurred in 2002 when
I read on a listserv that an online publication called MidLink Magazine
was looking for a teacher/editor. I sent in my application and was hired by
Caroline McCullen, the editor and founder of MidLink. Being part of the
MidLink team, a small group of educators from around the United States and
Canada, has impacted me both professionally and personally and I will
discuss that later in the narrative.
Since Walls That Talk, I have created Political Cartooning
(2003), an online project in which our fifth grade students studied editorial
cartoons, created their own, and shared them with other schools in New York and
Meet the Candidates (2004), an election project based on the Bush-Kerry
presidential election. The election project had 21 schools participating from
across the United States!
Presently I am working on two new projects: Ye Olde Colonial
Fair and We Are the World. In the colonial project, our fourth graders will
study colonial life in New York; I will be posting a call for participation
with the hope that schools from the other twelve original colonies will sign up
so that we can exchange information about the different states. We Are the
World (tentative name) is very exciting. This project will focus on the issue
of global child labor. Searingtown’s art teacher, Beth Williams, has arranged
for child labor activist, Chivy Sok, to visit our students. I have arranged
for Ms. Sok to give an all day child labor workshop at Long Island University to teachers. I am creating a website for the project; our fifth grade students will
learn about this important topic beginning in April and will create artwork and
poetry that will be published into a picture book through a grant I received
from Teaching Tolerance. Proceeds from the sale of the book will be donated to
organizations that are devoted to helping victims of child labor. The web
project will include a call for participation… who knows how far it will go?
| PROJECTS (10 points): | TOP |
CIRCLE
OF LIFE: (Fall 2001)
In the fall of 2001 I created the Circle of Life project for
our four classes of fourth graders (approximately 100 students). The project
was a collaboration between Searingtown School and The Riverhead Foundation for Marine
Research & Preservation. Students worked with The Riverhead Foundation for Marine
Research & Preservation, to actively study the marine environment of New York, particularly marine mammal and sea turtle populations. The goals of the project
were to integrate technology into instruction while promoting intellectual
curiosity and creative expression. The online learning module allowed students
to use a variety of research skills to locate, collect, and organize geographic
and scientific data related to New York marine mammal life. During the research
process, students were engaged in higher order critical thinking skills that
required them to evaluate information from a variety of sources, including
books, videos, the Internet, and hands on experience. Students were required to
analyze the information they collected, connect ideas using technology tools,
and demonstrate their learning through the development of various multimedia
products and through art making which nurtured and celebrated children's
positive connections to their local environment.
Students were assigned different roles: “marine biologists,”
“artist-naturalists,” “stranding specialists,” and “public awareness
specialists.” The website allowed them to explore various resources that would
support their research.
Students used PowerPoint, Inspiration, digital cameras, and
FrontPage to create their own website
. The construction of a website as the final culminating product enabled them
to develop multimedia views of their research that could be shared with others
around the world.
I was so proud of our students! Let me preface this by
saying that nothing like this had ever been done before at our school! The
thought that students could create a website was unheard of! Their website was
a showcase of their learning.
The Circle of Life site was featured in the education
portion of the Riverhead Foundation’s website as a learning module. It was
chosen as a four star Blue
Web'N "Pick of the Week" and received an excellent review at
Education World. The project helped me to become one of 20 winners worldwide of
the 2002 Inspired Teaching Awards for Visual Learning from Inspiration™, was recognized by Sea World,
and was presented at the NSBA Technology & Learning Conference in Dallas in 2002. Not bad for my first online learning project!!
FEDERAL
HOLIDAYS (Fall 2002)
The Federal Holidays project was developed during a workshop
uniting library media specialists with classroom teachers to develop projects
that paired information literacy specialists with curriculum content
specialists. With content ideas provided by two fifth grade teachers, I
developed Federal Holidays for our five fifth grade students (approximately 125
students). I posted the project with a call for participation on MidLink Magazine and various listservs.
Three other schools participated, a fifth grade class and an eighth grade class
in New Jersey and one middle school class in Italy! The project was designed
for upper elementary and middle school students studying the meaning of
American culture, United States symbols and core values of the American
democratic system.
Federal Holidays proposes two main tasks: 1) students will
teach their class about an existing federal holiday by creating a PowerPoint
presentation; and 2) student teams will imagine a new holiday that represents the
spirit of America and then write a persuasive argument which will be supported
by either a poster or a postage stamp in order to convince the class that their
idea is the best one. The site includes links
to all the required resources, a
teacher guide, and a voting ballot.
A sampling of the new holidays
proposed by my students is available online as well as some of their persuasive
essays. One is included here.
Justice Day
Dear Fellow
Students,
As we all know, a
tragic even took place on 9/11/2001. As a result, we strongly believe
that a holiday should be made to honor those men and women for we, as
Americans, cannot stand as a statue amidst a battle while our kinsmen are being
shot to death on the battlefield. We also feel that this holiday would be
a time for Americans to be able to observe a moment of silence and remember
those who sacrificed their lives for their country on that tragic day.
We think this
holiday should be called "Justice Day" and it would be symbolized by
the fallen Twin Towers and an American flag to represent our unity. This
holiday would be a federal holiday and would be observed on the 2nd Monday of
September. All Americans would participate in this holiday by wearing
flag pins, shirts, and caps to symbolize our unity. Families who lost
family members on that tragic day will gather together with friends and other
family members to mourn their loss.
On Justice Day,
all government offices, companies, and schools will be closed. All
Americans would be free to choose their ways of observing the holiday.
Some of them could go to Ground Zero, the site where the towers crumbled to
debris, to pay their respect to those who lost their lives while others could
watch the event of remembrance from TV news broadcasts.
"United We
Stand," we believe justice will at least be served when all Americans can
participate in this commemorative holiday. We thank you for your time in
listening to us and we hope you can take into consideration making Justice Day
a federal holiday.
A few students put together a Photojam
of the proposed holidays which they submitted to the Multimedia Mania student
contest. Although they did not win, it was a wonderful learning experience for
them and for myself.
I continue to receive email on this project, some of which I
am sharing below:
"FRIEDMAN, PAMELA" Old York School
Branchburg, New Jersey
Dear Ms. Kliegman,
What a wonderful project you have designed! I am very interested in having
my 5th grade students participate in this project. I am the Technology Teacher
in an elementary school (Grades 3-5) and was looking for something exciting to
introduce to my 5th graders
Dear Karen,
Thanks so much for posting my school's Power Point projects! We're on
vacation this week, but as soon as I get back to school, I'll show my students.
It was so much fun participating.
Thanks again,
Pam
Gian Carlo Visani wrote:
Hello Karen!
Thank you for your e-mail. I like your project, and a
class in my school will participate in it. The students will find information
about Italian National Holidays in Internet. Then they will try to propose a
new Italian holiday and the meanings. Your idea to compare the holidays and the
students' envision is interesting. I think we will have a great collaboration
too!
Gian Carlo Visani
Scuola Media di Casola Valsenio
School Web page: www.dinamica.it/mediarc
Karen,
I am a fifth grade teacher in Danville, Illinois. I really thought that the Federal Holiday project was outstanding! I
would like to use it as the basis of my project. I would like to seek your
permission to use the Federal Holiday project and modify only the standards so
that they would address the Illinois Learning Standards. I would be very
grateful if this would be possible!
I also noticed that you are looking for
a call for participation. I would be very interested in finding out what this
entails. Although I am not a whiz with technology, I am trying to find
ways to integrate the use of technology with my students and to
involve them in collaborative projects. I will look forward to hearing from
you!
Sincerely,
Jeff Cooper
Garfield Elementary School
1101 N. Gilbert St.
Danville, IL.61832
-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Kotowski
Sent: Sat 1/11/2003 5:26 PM
To: Searingtown
Cc:
Subject: Federal Holidays
Dear Webmaster:
Wow. What an excellent project. I just
received my Blue Web'n update and found your project highlighted. Deservedly
so. It is so obviously well thought out and well produced. It is highly
impressive.
I teach Computer Sciences at the Gerald R. Dever Middle School in Rockaway Park. The focus of our school's Magnet Program is Law &
Forensic Sciences. I have already e-mailed the link to your site to all
our department heads. We will be making use of it.
Thanks again for such an excellent piece of work. You should
be proud of your accomplishment. M. Kotowski Computer Sciences Dept.
Gerald R. Dever Middle School
-----Original Message-----
From: Jen
Sent: Tue 11/18/2003 10:44 AM
To: Searingtown
Cc:
Subject: About your Project
Hello-
We are working on this project
assignment for our school educational technology class and were going to
use your Federal Holiday Project. We will be taking things from your project
and just wanted to make sure that we are granted permission. We will be giving
you credit on the assignment since we will be taking things from your project.
We hope to hear back from you soon!
-Jennifer
-----Original Message-----
From: Karen Lawler
Sent: Wed 10/20/2004 11:24 AM
To: Searingtown
Cc:
Subject: Federal Holidays
Karen,
I just wanted to thank you for sharing this great Federal Holidays project.
I am preparing to use it with my eighth grade students
Once again, thank you,
Karen Lawler - Computer Teacher
Woodlynne School
131 Elm Ave
Woodlynne, NJ 08107
-----Original Message-----
From: Janet Sutphin
Sent: Mon 1/24/2005 1:11 PM
To: Searingtown
Cc:
Subject: Permission to modify the Federal Holiday Project
Hello,
I am the principal at Love Chapel Elementary School in Erwin, TN. Our school is participating in an online WebQuest training professional
development activity. One of our assignments is to find a project to modify and
use in our school. I was looking at our state standards and searching for a project
that matched when I discovered the Federal Holidays Project. It is exactly what
I was searching for! May I modify it and use it in our school? I do not intend
to post it on the internet. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Janet Sutphin
WALLS THAT TALK
(Winter/Spring 2003)
There is so much to
say about this project, I don’t know quite where to begin, so I will start at
the beginning! You never know how or when your imagination will be sparked.
Sometimes a great book will inspire your creativity. Sometimes it is an issue
or a world event. For me, it was a trip to Connecticut with a group of
graduate students from Long Island University’s educational technology program,
T.E.A.M. We chartered a bus and visited the home and studio of artist Ellen
Griesedieck. A former photographer for Sports Illustrated and an artist for
Paul Newman’s line of products, Ellen is a petite woman with a grand vision.
She is in the process of creating The Wall of America: a giant painting –110
feet long, 40 feet high – a kaleidoscope of men and women engaged in 38
different kinds of work. In The Wall of
America Ellen explores the commonality of different working experiences
across the country. Regarding young people -- Ellen says, “I want kids to see
how limitless their possibilities can be…to empower them to have their own
creative agenda."
What inspiration could I bring back to my school that would
allow my students to express their dreams in a way that was meaningful and
appropriate to who they are? Searingtown students represent an array of
cultures. We have students whose families are from Korea, Japan, China, India, and other middle eastern countries – in fact, approximately 45% of our
students are of Asian heritage. What if we created walls—a place where
students could share knowledge–-that would celebrate and embrace the diversity of
cultures that make up the fabric of our community’s population? How could I
design a project in which educators and children would work together as
contributing partners to build a learning community—one which linked people of
different cultural backgrounds in order to create something valuable and
meaningful for everyone?
The George Lucas Foundation
tells us that “the question that will launch a project-based lesson must be one
that will engage the students. It is greater than the task at hand. It is
open-ended. It will pose a problem or a situation that the students can tackle
knowing that there is no ONE answer or solution.” We decided to take an
authentic and relevant situation in our school community, that is, an
ethnically diverse population, and tried to design meaningful activities built
around the following essential questions:
What is important for me to
understand about the world, myself and others?
Who am I as a person within my
culture?
How can I introduce myself in our
community to both show the uniqueness of my culture and how we are alike?
I got a few interested teachers involved and after
brainstorming, decided that we would pose the following challenge to our
students:
Imagine if you
could build walls that talk about the different cultures that make up Searingtown School.
Imagine if you
could study those walls and other walls around the world and think about how
these walls could unite people instead of divide them.
Our objective was for students to see themselves as
architects who could build walls of understanding. By designing activities
that emphasized that everyone has a culture that shapes how we see the world,
ourselves, and others, we hoped to give the students the tools they needed to build
enduring understandings.
To support the learning, I created the Walls That Talk
website making sure that all necessary telelearning resources were available.
Among other things, the project website included a list of the
84 areas of the world our students came from and all electronic resources
needed to complete the various activities that were designed to support the
project.
Fifth grade students were randomly assigned a country or
state to research, other than their own, in order to deepen their understanding
of other cultures. In order to broaden students' perspectives and increase
their ability to see the world from another culture's point of view, students
were required to outline their research using Inspiration organizers, Visible Wall
and Beyond
the Wall that were designed to visually clarify the idea that some aspects
of culture are observable and some aspects can only be suspected or imagined.
These activities eventually led to over 80 web pages
created by our fifth graders using a template made in FrontPage as they
researched the cultures of the countries and states that make up the heritage
of the Searingtown School family.
Our fifth graders created a mural that is a
symbolic mosaic of the rich culture that makes up our school. Based on their
library research, under the guidance of our art teacher, students created a
triptych mural – a global family tree that encompasses the world. Leaves
representing different regions of the world are infused with symbolic
expressions of different countries and states.
After studying real and figurative walls with their fifth
grade mentors from our gifted and talented program, fourth graders were asked
to consider how walls could serve to divide people or to unite people. They
were also encouraged to think about how they, as individuals, fit into the
tapestry of the world. Students then wrote a series of poems about real and
imaginary walls, as well as “I Am” poems, studies in self-exploration. These
poems were later published in a book by the American Poetry Association.
In conjunction with their writing, fourth grade “apprentices’
worked with our visiting professional photographer to learn how to transform
digital photographs with Adobe PhotoShop and then, along with our technology
teacher, assisted over 100 students to create digital self-portraits,
in which students explored their identity in relation to their heritage and
their dreams for the future. The portraits are powerful expressions of our
students' vision of themselves and how they fit into the world.
Our younger
students explored the word "hello" in 42 languages and analyzed
Cinderella tales from around the world. Using Kidspiration, second graders
compared
and contrasted how fairy tale ingredients change due to the story’s
cultural setting. From the library and classroom, students moved to the art
studio where they created “Story Shoes” that intertwined the stories they heard
as well as the stories that only they could imagine. What could we ask our
youngest students to do? How could the concept of building unifying walls
translate to a kindergartner? The answer: legos and blocks, of course!
Our young architects created their own walls of imagination.
This project was unique in many ways, but most importantly,
it successfully brought an entire school community together. Walls That Talk
offered students a small but powerful way to help promote tolerance by providing a conduit for
students to express their
feelings about themselves and the world while learning to respect and
understand other cultures. Their technology and art projects gave them the
opportunity to construct walls that bring communities together.
Walls That Talk was a collaborative project in many
different ways:
o
A collaboration between teachers
o
A collaboration with a University
o
A collaboration between grades
o
A collaboration with experts (Art Historian; Professional
Photographer)
o
A collaboration between schools (One from Bulgaria, other NY schools at Long Island University’s Building Walls of Joyful Learning Event.)
o
A collaboration between the community and the school (The
Herricks Community Center awarded us a grant for this project; A celebration
event took place in our school attended by administrators and parents – our
students were the ambassadors for this evening event.)
This project was awarded ISTE’s SIGTel 2004 Online Shared
Learning Award (first place). I was able to present the project at NECC
and the response was so positive! I also presented Walls That Talk at the
NYSCATE and ASSET Conferences in New York. The project has detailed instructions for
teachers including Standards,
Curriculum Areas & Objectives, Required
Resources, and Method
for Evaluation. There is a Suggested
Reading List, a Call for
Participation which explains the background and goals of the project and
suggestions for various ways to participate.
Walls That Talk has taken on a life of its own, much to my
delight and surprise. I received an email from Anne Marie Weiss-Armush from DFW
International www.DFWinternational.org
in Texas requesting permission to reprint one of my student’s webpages on Chile in a Teacher’s
Guide to Pablo Neruda & Chile because “I looked everywhere and think it
is the best thing for elementary kids that is available on the net.” I also
received an email from Craig Roland, Associate Professor of Art Education
School of Art and Art History - University of Florida who wants to include the
Walls That Talk website in his book, The Artroom in Cyberspace – An Art
Teacher’s Guide to the Internet. How proud that made me of my students’
work!
POLITICAL CARTOONING (FALL
2003)
Political Cartooning was a project I developed as a spin-off
a great online project, The Joke’s
On…, developed by Susan Silverman, of the Comsewogue, Long Island school
district. I emailed Susan, and asked permission to post my project as a
spin-off and received the following response:
Hi Karen,
Your project is
FANTASTIC and I'm going to link it to my project right away!
Susan’s project asked that students create a political
cartoon based on what they are studying or a current event. Cartoons had to
include three constructed response questions, which would then be posted on her
website. In conjunction with her project, I created Political Cartooning which
elaborated on her project, focusing on fifth grade curriculum. An important
part of our curriculum is the analysis of primary documents. Including Susan’s
students, over 75 students participated in this project from Searingtown School in Albertson, Long Island and in Comsewogue, Long Island, New York.
In Political
Cartooning, students were asked to design a political cartoon based on
a local or national event or current school issue. They then had to write
an analysis of your cartoon and compared it to others created by fellow students
and students from
other schools. The project was based on the essential question, “How do
political cartoons represent point of view?” In order to scaffold for success,
the project was supported with tools such as Kidspiration graphic
organizers that students could use to visually represent the purposes and
techniques of cartoonists, and a PowerPoint show introducing symbols used by
cartoonists.
Students were required to read about issues online to find a
topic for an editorial cartoon; use Kidspiration and Inspiration
to organize their data and then scan their cartoons on to the computer.
The resulting
cartoons are impressive! As usual, Searingtown students far exceeded my
expectations. They tackled subjects as varied as the Revolutionary War, Bin
Laden and school lunches! Teachers were very pleased with the higher order
thinking skills required to create cartoons that included symbols and to write a cartoon analysis. I was pleased that our
students could exchange opinions with Susan’s students to increase learning
from both schools.
MEET THE
CANDIDATES (FALL 2004)
Meet the Candidates
was probably my most successful project so far in terms of participant
response. Fifth through eighth grade classes from New York, Illinois,
Virginia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Louisiana, New Jersey, Ohio, California,
Florida, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Michigan participated in our
project, so I am guessing over 400 students participated!!
I developed this project during the summer of 2004 while taking an online
course, Ways of Knowing: Multiple Intelligences and Instructional
Technology, offered by Walter McKenzie, author of Multiple Intelligences and
Instructional Technology: A Manual for Every Mind. The course
examined Dr. Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences within the
context of today's digital technologies. The activities of the project are
aligned to the nine multiple intelligences. The Multiple Intelligences
alignment as well as the Social Studies, Language Arts, Information Literacy,
and ISTE Technology standards
met through this project are available on the website.
Goals of the project included:
- Information gathering, issues analysis, and citizen
activism
- Restating major ideas of a complex topic in concise form
- Comparing and contrasting credibility of differing
accounts of the same event
- Forming an opinion based on critical examination of
relevant information
- Communicating orally and in writing
In Meet the Candidates, students worked in teams to research
the platforms and policies of the 2004 presidential candidates and developed
marketing plans and public awareness campaigns. Tasks
included developing a video based on three promises the candidate would make to
the American public, an Inspiration poster detailing the U.S. election process, campaign posters using Photoshop, and a PowerPoint slide
show that would educate the public on the importance of voting. All
participating schools were invited to vote using our online poll, allowing my
students to examine how different geographic areas of the country voted and
compare it to the real presidential election.
The project was named “hot
site of the week” from Blue Web’n and was featured on The Surfaquarium Online.
Some Feedback:
Hello! I just found your website, and I was wondering
if I could sign up my classes to participate in your online voting
project. I think that his is an excellent project! I teach at Immanuel Lutheran School in Bay City, Michigan. I have 5th, 7th, and 8th graders for different
subjects. I would love to be able to participate. Please let me
know if this is possible. Thanks for some great ideas!
--Kim Bublitz
I am joining the Meet the Candidates project. I have
adapted for Florida and will use it with Gifted grades 2-6. This is a wonderful
project. It shows a lot of creativity and thought. –Kristi Richburg, Rideout Elementary School
Hi Karen,
I LOVE your project. Is it too late to add another
teacher?
Thanks! Susan Silverman
Vice President-Iste-Sig for Telelearning
Hello! Kudo's on such a Fabulous Project!!!
Do you do any other online
collaborative projects? Keep my email handy in the event you have others.
Thanks – Melanie Dusci, Curriculum Technology Integration Partner
| COLLABORATION (10 points): | TOP |
In my projects I have encouraged telecollaboration through
email. Once I have a list of project participants, I usually set up a group
email list to correspond with participants. I always offer to post links to
participant’s work on my website. In some cases, as in the Walls That Talk
project, I have actually published the work on my website. Unfortunately, my
school does not have the technological equipment to do video conferencing so I
do not have that option presently.
For all of my projects I post a “call for participation” on
MidLink Magazine as well as submit project descriptions to many educational
listservs. I also try to have my projects reviewed and posted at educational
resources such as Blue Web’n and Education Week.
The most effective strategy I have employed to promote
collaboration has been the use of group discussion boards. I particularly like
QuickTopic, a free and easy to use discussion board. QuickTopic was an
essential component of Walls That Talk; it was a place for teachers in my
school, students from Long Island University, Ellen Griesedieck of Wall of
America, and others to stop in to exchange ideas.
I love the idea of blogging; I have set up a blog for the
newest project I am working on for project partners to stop by; however, this
is not a tool I can use with students because our school’s “net nanny”
prohibits it.
The word “collaboration” to me includes more than the
exchange of information between different classes. My definition of the word
aligns with the explanation that defines The Electronic Educational Village (The EEV) vision:
“Collaboration key elements”
- It includes children as desired, vital, and
contributing partners with others in a learning community.
- It naturally links people of all ages and backgrounds
with cultural and community resources on Long Island. The experts and the
people who have passion for a particular learning experience collaborate
with children and adults to create something (meaningful) valuable for
all.
- It naturally links with family members, inviting
parents, grandparents, and siblings to be partners in learning, action,
and society.
- It extends into and beyond school or work days to a
more holistic view of life and living. It blurs work and play or
obligation/responsibility and desire/choice.
- It builds caring, meaning, and self-worth.
- It values emotional, psychological, physical, and
social well-being.
- It has components that would change or be dramatically
enhanced with powerful tools of electronic communications and multimedia
expressioning being used well.
- Art, dance, music, writing, speech, and other types of
expression become the aesthetic domains of all people. Gifted
communicators play leadership roles in a system valuing the power of well
articulated and designed expressions. It crosses academic disciplines
often blurring the very sense of a particular discipline and building a holistic,
natural learning experience.
- It is energizing and intrinsically motivating for
children and adults.
- NYS curriculum and standards fit naturally. Issues of
demonstrated competencies using all levels of Bloom’s taxonomy and
accountability for learning as measured by testing using valid and
reliable measures. Learning that engages learners is authentic and
meaningful and seems naturally motivating. Once learners are engaged and
motivated, the process of learning has the natural foundation to happen.
Students learn while contributing. Learning can be measured and reported.
| LEARNING REQUIREMENTS (10 points): | TOP |
Perhaps because my two master’s degrees are in library
science and educational technology, my projects always address Information
Literacy Standards and ISTE Technology standards. In fact, along with the other
two elementary school library media specialists in my district, I developed an
Information Literacy Scope and Sequence because I believe that the ability to
locate information, to evaluate it, and to use it effectively is an
increasingly vital skill for the success of students today. Thus, my projects
tend to focus on creating online virtual environments which support
collaboration, promote the appropriate use of technology tools, and encourage
the inquiry process.
My projects address the following information literacy
learning requirements:
- What is the information problem to be solved?
- Analyze the audience in preparing and presenting a final
product.
- Compare and select possible presentation formats for a
final product.
- Determine types of information, i.e. textual, pictorial or
numerical, needed to complete task.
- Information-Seeking Strategies: Which resources can I use?
- Analyze and compare content of electronic resources, e.g.
CD-ROM, the Internet.
- Location and Access: Where can I find these resources?
- Demonstrate knowledge of procedures for accessing
information in electronic resources.
- Use of Information: What can I use from these resources?
- Recall and organize previous knowledge of subject and
build on that knowledge base.
- Apply note-taking skills, e.g. highlighting most
significant information
- Paraphrase or summarize information to avoid plagiarism
- Record information sources in an approved bibliographic
citation format.
- Synthesis: How can I share what I have learned?
- Organize and integrate information, e.g. using sequencing,
webbing, outlining
- Gather feedback and discuss strengths and weaknesses of
presentation and review accordingly.
- Evaluation: How will I know I did my job well?
- Use personal criteria such as quality of product and level
of personal effort to evaluate the product and justify assessment.
- Summarize the final product, what went well and what
should be improved in future products.
All of my projects support the NETS standards, particularly
the following:
1. Basic operations and concepts
Students are proficient in the use of technology.
2. Social, ethical, and human issues
Students develop positive attitudes toward technology uses
that support lifelong learning, collaboration, personal pursuits, and
productivity.
3. Technology productivity tools
Students use productivity tools to collaborate in
constructing technology-enhanced models, preparing publications, and producing
other creative works.
4. Technology communications tools
5. Students use telecommunications to collaborate, publish,
interact with peers, experts, and other audiences.
Depending on the project, NYS social studies, science, art,
mathematics and language arts standards are interwoven.
Some of my projects were created to strictly support our
curriculum-- Federal Holidays, Political Cartooning and Meet the Candidates
were specifically created to support our fifth grade social studies
curriculum. Detailed standards
information can be found for Federal Holidays on the teacher page.
Political Cartooning standards
information is available as well. Meet the Candidates standards
information is available for teachers and also includes a unit plan
detailing alignment to multiple intelligences.
Walls That Talk, Federal Holidays, Meet the Candidates,
Political Cartooning and Circle of Life support state learning standards, but
more importantly, support my school district’s mission statement:
“Herricks
School District, a Community of Learners, through its educational programs,
promotes intellectual curiosity and creative expression, values diversity, and
measures success by one's personal development and contribution to society.”
It was also important for our students to identify connections between different disciplines in the
curriculum. In Walls That Talk, for example, various activities were
seamlessly integrated and often incorporated standards of many different
curriculum areas. More detailed information is available on the Walls That Talk Teacher
Information Page.
| ASSESSMENT (10 points): | TOP |
As a library media specialist, I do not give out grades to
my students. However assessment is a crucial part of every project I have
created – both for myself and for my students. My projects include a rubric
and/or evaluation page; in most cases they are available online for both my own
students and other participants.
In the Circle of Life project, I had assessment pages for
each student role to go to monitor how they were doing and self-evaluate. Please
see the following links:
Circle of Life Evaluation1
Circle of Life Evaluation2
However, I think the best measure of their learning can be
seen at the website
they created!
Walls That Talk relied on authentic assessment. We
gave students feedback on how well they understood the information and on what
they needed to improve. Students also did self-evaluations at the end of
the project. They accepted responsibility for measuring their learning by
writing reflections that discussed what they thought they did well and what
they needed to improve. For our purposes, this method of assessment
helped us to see where we needed to improve our instructional design. The
most informative feedback was the students’ self-reflections. I had my
students write reflections on their experiences; I also had an end of the year
“Research Program Survey” for my fourth and fifth grade students to fill out. It
was absolutely evident that the children were astounded by how much they
accomplished and how much they learned. This year’s fifth grade (last
year’s fourth grade students) came to our research program (a combination of
library and technology co-taught by the library media specialist and technology
teacher) with excitement, enthusiasm and anticipation. End of year surveys
contained comments such as, “I wish we could come to research more often” That
is the best measure of success of all!
I used Project-Based
Learning Checklists and written self-reflections for Federal Holidays. For
Meet the Candidates I had rubrics for each team to fill out and they are on the
project website for all participants to use:
I also created and was the facilitator of a collegial circle
in my school for Walls That Talk, which was a source of excellent feedback
throughout the project. I kept a journal of it online.
This journal kept track of the development
of the project, the timeline,
and linked to our discussion group on QuickTopic. Images of
both can be seen below:

We were able to monitor and adjust the project as we went
along to make sure that the learning outcomes we were trying to achieve were
being accomplished.

We had a celebration day
attended by administration and Searingtown parents. The response was fantastic
which told me that the project had succeeded.
Another measure of success of my projects are the responses
I got from colleagues, students, and parents. Emails in the Project
Description of this narrative attest to that, as well as the testimonials
written on my behalf.
| AFFECTIVE AND OTHER OUTCOMES (10 points): | TOP |
In the Circle of Life project, by encouraging stewardship of
the New York marine environment, students became aware of the idea that success
could be measured by one's personal development and contribution to society.
This project focused on creating an online virtual environment, a “floating
classroom,” which supported collaboration, teaching and the inquiry process.
The project, through the use of the Internet and hands on experience engaged
students in the critical analysis of societal issues and empowered them to
become active, critically thinking members of the local community. Our
virtual "floating classroom" empowered students to become
independent thinkers who solve real-life problems by making connections between
their studies and their world.
I am especially proud of the Outreach
page of the site where students put together an informative report based on the
exchange of information between themselves and an ‘expert’ – a marine biologist
from the Riverhead Foundation. The student website reflects the learning that
took place through our collaboration with the Riverhead Foundation. Our
students adopted injured sea animals and participated in a beach clean-up of
one of our local beaches. One fourth grade girl told me after the project that
she wanted to become a marine biologist and was signing up for a summer session
in marine biology. Although we did not collaborate with other schools on this
project, I feel it was an electronic collaboration in the sense that my
students could email questions to marine biologists from the Riverhead
Foundation, access their electronic resources, and contribute to the
Foundation’s educational knowledge base.
The Federal Holidays project began only a year after the 9/11
tragedy, an event which touched the entire world, but particularly those of us
here in New York. In our school alone faculty members and a student lost loved
ones, and everyone knew someone who perished that day. The feelings of
somberness and patriotism that enveloped our country then were reflected in
some of my students’ holidays…it was touching, to say the least. Having my
students think about and take an active role in contributing to the well-being
of our country’s psyche was healing and powerful. Sharing their voice with
students from another state and even another continent was empowering.
My students were able to learn about how national holidays
are celebrated in Italy and compare it to how we celebrate them in the U.S. They also corresponded through email with the Italian students and exchanged cultural
information. Being able to do this gave them a different perspective and
opened up their world a little bit. The Italian students wrote to us in
English, and my students had to learn to appreciate the effort that went into
that, since English was not the Italian students’ first language.
In Walls That Talk, we wanted our fifth grade students to do
country reports that were deeper than the usual school country report that
regurgitates statistics, flags, and mottos. Thus, before students were allowed
to begin their research, Socratic Seminars, based on lessons from The PeaceCorps
Worldwise Curriculum, transpired. Students participated in “quick writes”
in which they reflected about the feelings associated with belonging to a special
group. They were assigned homework to interview their families to find out what
was special about their cultures. These activities increased appreciation
of other cultures and self-esteem about their own cultural identity. When
we first began the Socratic Seminars, many of the students were embarrassed to
talk about their family’s traditions, favorite foods, etc. By the time we were
done with the various activities of the project, students were infused with
a sense of pride about who they are and where they come from.
On May 20, 2003, hundreds of children from school districts
all over the metro NY area gathered together on the C.W. Post campus of Long Island University to celebrate Building Joyful Walls of Learning. I ran
a Walls That Talk workshop at the event where students participated in creating
a wall of peace
poetry. Students from about six schools, including mine, from the New York area took turns adding two-line stanzas to the poem. My students participated in a
“Let there be peace on earth” rally with hundreds of other students and left
handprints on a canvas that will be part of Ellen Griesedieck’s Wall of America
mural.
Students from Tzvetan Naydenov's class from the Petko R. Slaveikov School in Vratza, Bulgaria wrote poems about peace in celebration of Spring
Day 2004 in Europe. When Mr. Naydenov’s class came across the Walls That
Talk website he emailed me to have his students’ poetry included
on our website. This was very exciting for my students!
Over the past couple of years I have received a few emails
pointing out errors in the country websites that my students created. For
example, on one site we mixed up maps of countries, and one lady from England was quite disturbed by the description of fashion in England on our student site. She
wrote:
Good morning,
I am an English woman living close to London, and I have
just read your website. The facts relating to fashion and food are totally
wrong!! the only women wearing "plain skirts and simple accessories"
are very rare, possibly over 50, (or the Queen) - the rest of us
dress in a very fashionable European style akin to Paris. Our food is also very
cosmopolitan, bacon is still enjoyed occasionally as a breakfast dish, and Yorkshire
pudding is only served traditionally with beef, usually on a Sunday. Most diets
these days are sushi for lunch, and salads, with Italian, French and modern
sophisticated food for dinner. The children’s game is also British Bulldog, not
Bullfrog, and no-one plays it anymore. With regard to "Sir" or
"Ma'am" the only people referred to in this fashion are members of
the Royal family, or peerage (Dukes, Lords etc.) The chances of having to use
this form of address is very unlikely indeed, although polite efficient hotel
and waiting staff may refer to individuals as Sir or Madam, just as in America.
I look forward to seeing some corrections on your
website.
With kind regards
Elizabeth A. Norton (Mrs)
On behalf of my students, I emailed Mrs. Norton back:
Thank you for bringing this to my attention. I will
make the corrections. Would you mind if I gave you credit for these facts? The
site you referred to was created as a research project by a 10 year old; her
facts were found on online sites and books on England. This shows me how
important it is to get real 'expert' data!
The objective of this assignment was to understand the cultures of other places
around the world. Your kind of input will make the assignment more authentic.
May I ask how you came across the website?
Sincerely,
Karen Kliegman
Library Media Specialist
She responded:
Thank you for responding so promptly, I hope I didn't
cause any offence!
Until a couple of years ago I travelled extensively on business, including
to New York often. London compares to New York, except our buildings aren't
as tall!! Both cities are a cosmopolitan melting pot, that retain certain
idiosyncracies native to the nation. Not everyone eats sushi for lunch, just
as in New York, there will be people buy hotdogs too!.We do just get a
little tired of being portrayed as cabbage-boiling country types in tweed -
so not true! Well done to your ten year olds for their efforts, though,
they only relied on what they could find.
I found your website whilst looking for differences in etiquette between our
two countries, and your school came up on the google search within that key
word.This is connected to my work, which is training for hotel companies.
Please feel free to credit me with these facts, although this is not
necessary.
Before I forget, we do shop at markets, if there's one nearby, but mainly my
supermarket delivers after I've shopped on line!!
Thank you for your time,
Liz Norton
Now, how else could my have students experienced this?!!
By facilitating the
love of learning, Walls That Talk affected the way children interact as global
citizens by fostering the development of students as good citizens in a
culturally diverse, interdependent world. By giving them the tools to develop
understanding, students felt connected and empowered, allowing them to reveal
the potential within themselves. We asked out students to be writers, to be
artists, to be researchers, to be technology experts, and to think about their
hopes and dreams for the future. They far exceeded our expectations.
Meet the Candidates was a very exciting project for my
students because it was timely, it involved many technologies, and it gave them
the chance have their voice heard on issues reserved for the "over 18 crowd." I
believe that this project demonstrates how technology can redefine traditional
tasks. One of my goals was to show how technology can ENGAGE students in
learning. I incorporated websites that employed all types of resources and
activities to engage the students, such as Time for
Kids: Inside the Issues; Weekly Reader: Election
2004 - The Issues and its Election Game. The
project combined standards, quality resources, meaningful activities and
collaboration. The project allowed them to actively participate by campaigning
and voting. Their videos, originally intended to be commercials, evolved into
real productions! One group created a Larry King show and another group did a
“man on the street” video. Their videos, shown at our election rally, were
simply phenomenal. Of course the acting and learning video production was fun
for the students, but more importantly, it required synthesizing their research
of Bush and Kerry’s political platforms, as did all the tasks. The project was
interactive and hands-on; it required teamwork, debate, and consensus building,
making it an appealing and effective learning experience. Waiting for our
election results to come in from around the country made the learning even more
authentic; to end up having the same voting result as the real election was
surprising to me, to my students it was a validation.
If I can sum up the affect of engaged learning like this it
would be: GIVING STUDENTS A VOICE THAT HAS THE POSSIBILITY OF BEING HEARD
AROUND THE WORLD ON ISSUES THAT MATTER TO THEM PROMOTES A LOVE FOR LEARNING!
| PROFESSIONAL IMPACT (10 points): | TOP |
Through my masters in educational technology I was fortunate
enough to go to workshops given by Howard Gardner, Bernie Dodge, and Dr. Milton
Chen of the George Lucas Foundation. I was able to meet people in and out of
the educational community – artists, holocaust survivors, humanitarians, museum
directors, and people of multicultural backgrounds and concerns. Filled with
all of this knowledge and inspired by these great thinkers and trailblazers, I
am highly motivated to create projects that incorporate multimedia with a
thirst for learning about the perspectives, beliefs and stories of others. It
is my mission to use technology to stimulate collaborative work and inquiry
based interaction; to promote a constructivist, resource-based learning
environment that encourages critical thinking, team learning, mentoring, and
shared inquiry; to integrate library, technology, and classroom curricula; to
mentor educators in the creation and implementation of technology-based lesson
instruction and student assessment in conjunction with state, library, and
technology standards.
Encouraged by the success of my projects and the recognition
the projects have earned, I have given professional development courses
in the teacher center of my school district for the past four years. All of the courses I have offered
are based on integrating technology into education. I
have offered courses on creating webquests, creating classroom websites,
integrating digital video technologies, using web-based technology tools, etc.
I have been very proactive in my district; I am on the technology committee, I
am the webmaster for my school; and I know that my knowledge of information
literacies and educational technology are well-respected and often tapped into.
Basically, I love to teach and I love to be innovative. I’m
not afraid to dream big, and I have written grants to help my teaching dreams
come true. I received mini-grants for the Circle of Life project, the Walls
That Talk project, and just last week received a grant from Teaching Tolerance
to support the next online shared learning project focusing on child labor and
children's rights that is being developed
right now in collaboration with my colleague, Beth Williams (art teacher). The
grant will allow us to
publish a children’s book on the subject of children’s rights. I am motivated
every day by the wonderful children I teach and the amazing colleagues and
principal I am fortunate to work with.
I have lead workshops at conferences over the past three
years. I have presented workshops in which I have shared the learning outcomes
of my online projects at the NSBA Technology &
Learning Conference, at NECC, and locally at ASSET (Associated Suffolk
Supervisors of Educational Technology) and NYSCATE
(NYS Association for Computers & Technology in Education). I will be presenting this
March at ASSET again and in May at
the NYLA
SLMA Conference (School Library Media Association of the NY Library
Association) on integrating technology into the library research program. The
opportunities to network, go to workshops, and receive feedback on your own
projects at these conferences are so valuable. Professional growth naturally
occurs through this type of collegial environment where one has the opportunity
to learn about what others are doing as well share what you are doing..
I have also given workshops at my school to parents and local
community members. As I have mentioned before, I presented the Walls That
Talk project to the Herricks Community Coalition, an organization of community
members whose mission is to promote tolerance and understanding in the
multicultural community I teach in. I have given workshops to parents on
using the Internet and on the research program I lead for fourth and fifth
grades in my school.
I remain an active villager at the Electronic Educational Village, Through
the EEV I continue to meet new teachers, get new ideas and set up new
collaborations, as I am doing now with the child labor project I previously
mentioned:
From the EEV April 2005 Online
Calendar:
Chivy Sok, Human Rights
Presenters: Chivy Sok, B. Schneiderman, K. Kliegman
Location: C.W. Post in Room 314, B. Davis Schwartz Library (2nd floor)
Time: 9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Chivy Sok, a child in the
Killing Fields in Cambodia and since then a human rights activitist, will
conduct an all day workshops (counts as two for those of you in T.E.A.M.). She
will work with up to 20 upper elementary, middle, and high school teachers who
want to address this tough topic with their students. She said she wants only
passionate teachers, not just mildly curious ones.
We know about Chivy through the
efforts of Karen Kliegman, graduate of TEAM in 2002 and active with us since.
Karen will see who would like to attend from her district, Herricks, and then
we will select from the people who sign up here, to make a group with no more
than 20.
Chivy is coming in from California just for this session. It will be a special EEV event. Sign up if you think you
may be interested. We have information now on the day and will be sending it to
our students via e-mail.
My relationship with MidLink has been beneficial in many
ways. First, it gives me the opportunity to exchange knowledge with and learn
from the MidLink team. Caroline McCullen is a mover and shaker in the ed-tech
world and has been an inspiration and mentor to me. Brenda Dyck, who is also
nominated for this award, is a prolific creator of online shared learning
projects, a writer, and the best colleague one could want to work with. In
fact, all of the people associated with this publication are talented, energetic
professionals who have confirmed for me that all of our volunteer effort
and time we put into “pushing the envelope” is well worth it and both
professionally and personally rewarding. Being part of the MidLink team has
allowed me to gain a wider audience for my projects, to attend national
conferences, to give workshops to college graduate educational technology
classes, and most of all, to work with other educators who share the same
passion for using technology as a tool to enhance student learning. My
professional growth can only continue to expand through my associations with
MidLink, with the EEV and other online communities.
| PERSONAL IMPACT (10 points): | TOP |
Well, I’ve certainly come a long way from putting papers in
kindergarten cubbies! I cannot emphasize enough how going back to get my
graduate degrees has changed me personally. I have become an active learner
and contributor to learning. I have become a mentor to some and am mentored by
others. I am passionate about what I do, proud of what I do, and love what I
do. I am awed by the colleagues I work with and am honored to be able to learn
from them. But, as we are all well aware, there are challenges to contend with
and problems to overcome!
When I approached my principal (who, by the way, is
absolutely the most fantastic, supportive principal on the face of the earth
–lucky me!) about Walls That Talk, she thoroughly embraced it. However, not
everyone shared my enthusiasm. Change is difficult; doing what one knows how to do is easy. I
was disappointed that the whole school was not as thrilled as I was; looking back at that
now, I realize how naïve I was. I went back to my principal for
advice. She told me that I had to find a way to implement the project without
making anyone feel imposed upon and that I had to learn not to take rejection
to heart. What good advice that was! A few weeks later, I had put together a
luncheon in the library, “La Fiesta en la Bibliotheca,” with my art teacher
colleague, where we served up
Mexican food and guests from the EEV. It produced a congenial, non-threatening
ambiance which, in the end, produced several teachers interested in being part
of the project. I found a way to make it work, by putting together interested
teachers in a collegial circle, by partnering with the most enthusiastic
teachers (our art teacher and computer teacher) to share the brainstorming,
work, tears, and laughter. I learned to reach out to others to who could help
and to help others who needed guidance. Walls That Talk produced its own
energy, it was a snowball of a project, and every step of the way, from the
initial disappointments to the rush of success was a learning experience for
me. Being part of that experience gave me the confidence to speak at workshops
and the motivation to keep moving forward.
I also learned that some people will not change and that not
everyone will understand how important it is for teachers to embrace technology
and to create collaborative online learning opportunities. I’ve learned to not
to get frustrated and to cultivate the relationships that I have with educators
of a similar vision with the hope that more will join in the fun as time goes
on. Learning how to take in the positive and let the negative pass by me has
been key for my own professional and personal growth.
Another problem which I have not yet solved involves
telecollaboration. I find that very often other teachers across the country
“participate” in my projects but when it comes to sharing data the
participation kind of dwindles away. I am happy that other teachers are using
my online projects with their students, there certainly is a sense of
self-satisfaction with that, but it is a little disappointing that sometimes
the connection ends there, despite my efforts. I am also not able to set up
email accounts for students and our Internet filter does not allow any
group-type website. That poses another difficulty; at this point, all I can do
is send email to the collaborating teacher with attachments. But I would
rather that the students truly interact --perhaps one day that will be
possible.
| PROMOTING YOUR PROJECTS (10 points): | TOP |
I promote my projects on MidLink Magazine. We have a
project registration form on MidLink for all of our projects. I also send out
project descriptions to various educational technology listservs, such as
Classroom Connect, Riverdeep and MiddleWeb. I have promoted all of my projects
at the conferences referred to previously. I have written for the SIGTel
Bulletin about Walls That Talk. I have also been able to promote my projects
at the Electronic Educational Village at Long Island University. Examples of
online “call for participation” pages are below:
| DIRECT PROJECT ASSISTANCE (10 points): | TOP |
As I have previously stated, I have a teacher’s page on my
projects that include standards and project directions. As time went on and I
got better at this, I started including timelines and equipment needed. All
of my projects have whatever handouts or graphic organizers are needed to take
part in the project, they are available as PDF, document, or Inspiration
files. I always include my email, in fact, I encourage and hope for
correspondence, to answer any questions or concerns. In some cases, as I have
mentioned previously, I have started QuickTopic discussion boards. I also do
group emails to all project participants. Below are examples of project
assistance on my sites;
| EMPOWERING OTHERS (10 points): | TOP |
Through the courses I teach in the Herricks Teacher Center
and by modeling technology integration through my projects, I believe that I
have empowered and encouraged other teachers to, at the very
least, recognize the power of online collaborative learning. I think that the
unexpected connections between our students and students from different parts
of the country and even the world has enlightened teachers to the possibilities
and usefulness of technology and its power to multiply the impact of teaching
and learning.
Professional Associations:
- American Library Association (ALA)
- American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
- International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) -
SIGTel
- Nassau School Library System
- School Library Media Association
Publications:
School Library Media
Activities Monthly, December 1999. Authored and published library curriculum
unit.

Read
Creating a Learning Community:
Walls That Talk
SIGTel
Bulletin
1 August 2004
“This article presents the successful integration of
information problem-solving skills, technology, curriculum, and artistic
expression. This integration can highly motivate and inspire both teachers and
students. Steps to create this project-based module, "Walls That
Talk," are provided. The steps are designed to change the way children
view themselves as global citizens. This extensive online project promoted the development
of a learning community where teachers, administrators, students and parents
could learn together in order to benefit student achievement as well as
professional and personal growth. Readers will need RealPlayer to view and
listen to the clip.”
Contributing Author: THE COMPUTER AS AN EDUCATIONAL TOOL,
4e, by Richard Forcier and Don Descy. Publication date: 2005
Conference Workshops Given:
- Harnessing the Power of the Web With MidLink Magazine,
NSBA Technology & Learning Conference, 2002
- TEAM Walls That Talk: A Technology-Enriched Art &
Multimedia Model of Learning, NECC 2004, ASSET 2004, NYSCATE 2003
- Harnessing the Power of the Web With MidLink Magazine
(updated); MEGA MiddleWeb, Raleigh, North Carolina, November 2004
Upcoming Workshops:
- Harnessing the Power of the Web With MidLink Magazine
(updated), ASSET, (Long Island, NY), March 2005
- “Teaching the Elementary School Research Process: An
Integrated Program Combining Information Literacy Skills, Technology, and
Classroom Curriculum” NYLA
SLMA Conference . Description from program: How do LMS begin to
teach our younger students the skills they will need to be successful in
the 21st century? Participants will learn how to use technology as a tool
for inquiry-based learning through a librarian- developed upper elementary
research program that combines standards, quality resources, meaningful
activities, and collaboration.
Websites:
For the past four years, I have been the webmaster for Searingtown School and Searingtown School
Library Media Center, both sites have received awards and recognition. (Please note: My district is switching over to a
website provider in the very near future; it is possible that those
URLs will change during the judging! My web projects were available from the
Searingtown website; however due to the fact that the district is switching
over to this new service (which will not have the capabilities to host my
projects), my online work is now available at Mrs.
Kliegman’s Webfolio.
| GSN's ROLE (10 points): | TOP |
I think the biggest challenge to conducting online
collaborative learning projects is overcoming technology-related obstacles. I
have found that many teachers from other schools do not have server space and/or
have limited tools to electronically communicate. In fact, I almost had
this problem myself! As I have mentioned, my district is switching over to
a new website provider in the very near future. Luckily for me, I
have been able to find server space elsewhere, due to my associations with Long Island University and North Carolina State University. In the past, I
have had nine and ten year olds create websites using FrontPage - I will not be
able to do that any longer. In any case, server space is an issue for many
teachers. Using a free server such as Geocities is not always an option; for
example in my district, free web servers are filtered out.
Global SchoolNet is a wonderful resource for teachers
interested in getting involved in collaborative projects and I am embarrassed
to say that I was not even aware until now that I could register my projects
there!! I will take care of that immediately! I think it would be wonderful
if GSN could provide discussion space for teachers and for students, too!
There are other free discussion boards available on the ‘net, but if one were
participating in a project listed in GSN, it would be great to be able to stay
within the site. I think the main goal for encouraging teachers to
electronically collaborate is to make things as easy as possible for them.
Time is always an issue and an obstacle!
I don’t think I am savvy enough to develop new tools, but I
certainly would be interested in testing them!
I was very surprised, honored and grateful to be
nominated for this award and I thank you for taking the time to consider me!
Karen Kliegman
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