Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Final Requirements in Finals


Article on the Interview I made with Foreign man about
 ICT Integration in their Country

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” 
        ― Nelson Mandela


Based on my interview with Mr. Mark W. Bray, a Professor of Dankook University, Seoul Korea. On the topic of the integration of ICT in schools or in the Teaching -learning process. He had said that IT based technologies is being used in many ways, computers in the classroom, projectors, power point slides, You tube short clips 1 to 7 minutes long, having video or distance education conference calls during classes, group discussions involving internet topics and goggling information for class pedagogy.

He also say that it can give more information, more ways to learn and digest the information, more options on presenting it to the students and a better ability to find and search for information on their own as outside of classroom studies?
For the question whether it is effective, he claimed that it is effective, as there are more options in presenting lessons by the teacher and the learner will be stimulated by more interesting methods of learning. Liking theories to real world thinking is very important to my students and enables them to link learning and life examples.
While interviewing him, I learned that the use of technology in the teaching-learning process of Korea is almost the same with the use of ICT in the Philippines.


Proof:





Friday, August 24, 2012


Real life uses of Computers in Education

Teaching Learning process

  • Instructions:
    • Instructing the students using PowerPoint slides, Word documents or Web pages and using hyperlinks for better concept clarity.
    • Helps in improving pronunciation of students by using microphones, headphones, speakers, specially prepared software and special dedicated websites.
    • Video conferencing, chat and email helps in better communication, hence better concept clarity. Also concept of E-tutor has given access to teachers instantly and given teachers a better chance to earn.
    • Current syllabus can be viewed through website of the concerned school board; made available to students if teacher has made a website and uploaded using Internet; and updating- using web could be done easily.
    • Inspiring students to express their imagination using Paint Brush
    • Encouraging the students to surf web pages and gather relevant detailed information through web pages.
    • Readymade software could give practice material to students
  • Learning:
    • Collecting notes /pictures/videos from web pages for detailed information and projects/assignments.
    • Saving the documents as soft copy for future use
    • Learning through animations, as they are much near to the students
    • E-books/online libraries/online encyclopedias help to guide in minutes and save precious time and resources.
    • Creating videos using images, albums for better power point slides.
    • Simulated Learning gives them an idea of the real situation.
    • Publication of pamphlet/brochures for awareness with institution and among community members.

Testing and Evaluation process

    • Keeping records of students for their academic scores
    • Keeping records in relation to personal history
    • Creating question bank for students
    • Using computers for testing by asking questions from question bank
    • Online Testing and Evaluation
    • Analysis and interpretation of the data
    • Previous year Question papers and sample papers using web sites.

Guidance purposes

    • With reference to collective records of the students maintained year wise, stored in computers
    • Testing for aptitude, interest, psychology using computer data bases and internet.

Library

    • Documents stored as soft copy for students/faculty members use
    • Online magazines , journals, brochures , research articles
    • Records of the books/record of the books maintained using special library software.
    • Records of the issues and returns of the books.

School Administration

    • Records of students(personal, academic, financial)
    • Records of employees of school
    • Accounts of the institution
    • Decision making process
    • Aid to memory with minimum paper work
    • Eye on current regulations of government and affiliating school boards and related authorities
    • School canteen for billing
    • Fees collection and maintenance of fees record.
    • Circulation of instruction/notices and getting it in printed form
    • Preparation of school magazine.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

 The largest network on earth, the Internet, started in 1969 with four nodes installed at the University of California-Los Angeles, the University of Califorina-Santa Barbera, the Stanford Research Institute, and the University of Utah.

source : http://www.users.uswest.net/~ajensen1/index5.htm

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

My Reflection in Midterm

             Computers really had a lot of services that it can offer to us.
             In this period a have learned a lot of uses of computers. its wider access to education and as making learning's more easy to have.
           I have learned in the project-based that the process is more important that the product, because it is the  journey of how we come-up with the product, in which the learning and the development of the thinking skills are fully develop in this stage. Resource-based project,simple creations,guided hyper-media and web based projects are the examples of IT-based project which can be effectively be used in order to engage students in activities of a higher plane of thinking.
            In the computers as information and communication technology,i have learned that computers as a tool of communication comprise the media of communication to audiences,for instance the learners, like television and radio.As an information technology, it served to enhance and enrich the teaching-learning process.
           Computer as a tutor, i have learned that even thought their is a wide use of computer in learning but still it cannot replace the teacher as the giver of learning because they are the one who deliver and facilitate the knowledge with the use of  computers for the student to get a lot of information and learn at their own pace.
           In the innovating world of today we cannot deny the fact that the knowledge of computers should be acquired by every individual for them to be able to operate and have a lot of wide information of the world today.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

My Reflection for Prelim

         There are a lot of ways in learning information but still their goal is to give the learning to the learners.
         In this period we have discuss a lot of means of teaching and in learning. One of it is the integration of technology in the instruction, or this is what we call the ICT, in which its main goal is to make information's more accessible for learners and make classrooms more conducive for learning.
          The discussion of the ICT plan of the Asian progressing countries also helps us as a guide to formulate  our own goals and objectives that we want to have also for our countries.
         We also discuss the four learning theories, the meaningful learning,which the students use their prior knowledge to make another ideas. The generative learning, in which the students was just given a piece of information and they were able to elaborate it with the use of the things they already learn from their experiences and to what they have observe from their community.Discovery learning, in which the steps or procedures and the answer was already given by the teachers and the students are the one who will discover on how the answer was being derive out from what is given. The last one is the constructivism,which is learning by doing,and the environment has the greater contribution to the learners learning,they also learn all the information that they can use in the real world.
          Even thought there are a lot of techniques and ways of learning,we really need also to bear in mind that it is up to the students in how are there ways of learning  and how the teacher deliver the lesson and deal with students.
 

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

E-LEARNING



Online learning in many forms is on the rise in schools of all types across the country. Students in many parts of the country now have a long list of choices when it comes to e-learning. The menu of options often includes full-time, for-profit virtual schools; state-sponsored virtual schools; supplemental online learning courses offered by brick-and-mortar schools; and charter schools presenting a hybrid option of digital material coupled with face-to-face instruction.
The International Association for K-12 Online Learning, or iNACOL, estimates that more than 1.5 million K-12 students were engaged in some form of online or blended learning in the 2009-10 school year. At the end of 2010, supplemental or full-time online learning opportunities were available in at least 48 of 50 states, plus the District of Columbia (iNACOL, 2010).
Options for full-time virtual schools are growing. Students from kindergarten through high school can seek out online schooling opportunities, which usually include virtual teachers and a combination of synchronous and asynchronous online learning (Education Week, June 15, 2011). These schools are starting to focus more on the issue of socialization for their students and some are incorporating more face-to-face instruction into their array of services to allow for student interaction both online and in person. They’re forming clubs, holding proms, and creating school newspapers.
At the end of 2010, 27 states plus the District of Columbia had full-time online schools serving students statewide, according to iNACOL’s report, “A National Primer on K-12 Online Learning.”
But full-time virtual schools also face the reality that for many students with two parents working outside the home such a scenario is not an option. Such students often cannot tap into full-time online schools for that reason, and virtual school providers acknowledge that their version of education works best, particularly in the lower grades, when an adult is present to assist.
In addition to courses that offer an online instructor, some researchers say students have had the most success with hybrid or blended education. That can mean that students use digital content with a face-to-face instructor, or an online instructor and an in-class teacher may work together to assist students. Hybrid charter schools, which use mostly digital curriculum with face-to-face support and instruction—sometimes even combined with an online teacher—are gaining a foothold in K-12.
At the same time, a growing number of students now have access to online courses in their brick-and-mortar schools. Schools are tapping into e-learning for a variety of reasons. Some schools say it saves money and allows them to offer a wider variety of courses, including Advanced Placement classes. Others say it can help with scheduling conflicts when a face-to-face class is provided only at a time when a student already has another obligation. In addition, online courses can provide highly qualified teachers for classes otherwise not offered by a school.
One of the fastest growing areas of e-learning, and a category that mainstream schools are increasingly turning to, is credit recovery. These online courses allow students to retake classes they haven’t passed, but in a new and different format. Many of these credit recovery courses give students a brief evaluation, then permit them to skip concepts they already know to focus on ideas they haven’t yet grasped. However, some educators and education experts have questioned the quality and academic rigor of these programs (Education Week, April 28, 2010).
So where are traditional schools getting these online courses? Some are developing their own, others are purchasing them from for-profit vendors and a growing number are able to tap into state virtual schools or state-led online learning initiatives that currently exist in 38 states. Some schools find it easier to use courses developed by a state-run virtual school, since it is already aligned with their state standards.
Online learning in many forms is on the rise in schools of all types across the country. Students in many parts of the country now have a long list of choices when it comes to e-learning. The menu of options often includes full-time, for-profit virtual schools; state-sponsored virtual schools; supplemental online learning courses offered by brick-and-mortar schools; and charter schools presenting a hybrid option of digital material coupled with face-to-face instruction.
The International Association for K-12 Online Learning, or iNACOL, estimates that more than 1.5 million K-12 students were engaged in some form of online or blended learning in the 2009-10 school year. At the end of 2010, supplemental or full-time online learning opportunities were available in at least 48 of 50 states, plus the District of Columbia (iNACOL, 2010).
Options for full-time virtual schools are growing. Students from kindergarten through high school can seek out online schooling opportunities, which usually include virtual teachers and a combination of synchronous and asynchronous online learning (Education Week, June 15, 2011). These schools are starting to focus more on the issue of socialization for their students and some are incorporating more face-to-face instruction into their array of services to allow for student interaction both online and in person. They’re forming clubs, holding proms, and creating school newspapers.
At the end of 2010, 27 states plus the District of Columbia had full-time online schools serving students statewide, according to iNACOL’s report, “A National Primer on K-12 Online Learning.”
But full-time virtual schools also face the reality that for many students with two parents working outside the home such a scenario is not an option. Such students often cannot tap into full-time online schools for that reason, and virtual school providers acknowledge that their version of education works best, particularly in the lower grades, when an adult is present to assist.
In addition to courses that offer an online instructor, some researchers say students have had the most success with hybrid or blended education. That can mean that students use digital content with a face-to-face instructor, or an online instructor and an in-class teacher may work together to assist students. Hybrid charter schools, which use mostly digital curriculum with face-to-face support and instruction—sometimes even combined with an online teacher—are gaining a foothold in K-12.
At the same time, a growing number of students now have access to online courses in their brick-and-mortar schools. Schools are tapping into e-learning for a variety of reasons. Some schools say it saves money and allows them to offer a wider variety of courses, including Advanced Placement classes. Others say it can help with scheduling conflicts when a face-to-face class is provided only at a time when a student already has another obligation. In addition, online courses can provide highly qualified teachers for classes otherwise not offered by a school.
One of the fastest growing areas of e-learning, and a category that mainstream schools are increasingly turning to, is credit recovery. These online courses allow students to retake classes they haven’t passed, but in a new and different format. Many of these credit recovery courses give students a brief evaluation, then permit them to skip concepts they already know to focus on ideas they haven’t yet grasped. However, some educators and education experts have questioned the quality and academic rigor of these programs (Education Week, April 28, 2010).
So where are traditional schools getting these online courses? Some are developing their own, others are purchasing them from for-profit vendors and a growing number are able to tap into state virtual schools or state-led online learning initiatives that currently exist in 38 states. Some schools find it easier to use courses developed by a state-run virtual school, since it is already aligned with their state standards.