Week 5
1) Have I changed my opinion towards technology in the classroom since I began this course? Most definitely. I had never planned on using technology in the classroom; it hadn't ever really crossed my mind as a tool or a possibility because when I was in high school we never used technologies. However, now that I have seen the endless possibilities that mathematical technologies can create, I think they are a must. I wish I had learned how to use Excel when I was in high school. I feel a little behind the eight ball now that I am at this point in my education and am learning the ins and outs of the program. I do not want my future students to find themselves in a similar situation. I want them to be well prepared and given as much knowledge as possible. Also, I have seen through my own experience with GSP that it can be an excellent tool for fostering understanding in geometry. It gives students a hands on experience that can help them learn in their own ways and at their own individual pace. I have yet to learn about the other programs being utilized in our class, but I'm sure when I do I will find them extremely useful and relevant as a future mathematics teacher.
2) One thing I could not determine with Excel was how to drag an equation down into multiple cells, but keep some components of the equation constant. At first I couldn't figure it out at all, but then I learned that you had to insert a $ ahead of whatever cell you want to keep constant in the equation. I then could still not get it but soon after realized it was because I was simply placing the $ in the wrong position. I was writing, for example, B$4, but you need to insert $B4. This is extremely helpful in the activities I am finding for this class, but also for my own benefit in my MATHS 335 class. I will continue to share my 'aha' moments throughout my blogging. Hopefully I will have a lot more because they get me excited to keep learning about Excel and other technologies as well.
Week 4
Busy busy week! I feel like I was working on Logo all week long! I partly was but I definitely enjoyed it. I want to play with it some more and try to make things like Christian did in his video we watched in class on Tuesday. At first, I was taking the really long, more difficult route in making anything in logo. I was relieved to find that I could program things in it and use them continuously. My favorite thing I programed was 'ngon' which allowed me to make any polygon with any side lengths, instead of programming each polygon separately. I'm not super happy with my quilts. I feel like I should have programmed them differently, or there should have been an easier way to program them. They are pretty long; lots of steps. I'm not sure, I'll have to look into it. Also, using colors makes it more fun!
I also thoroughly enjoyed the reading comparing learning principles to video/computer games. As I said in my reaction, I never would have thought the two had anything in common! Although I've never played any of the games mentioned in the article, perhaps I should look into them ha.
Lastly, I'm glad we got to speak with Mr. Reed. He had some very helpful information, and I'm glad we can go back and review the conversation and be able to reference it if we need to. It blows my mind that you can just voice/video chat with anyone, anytime. The technology we have today is crazy. I wonder what my great grandparents, etc. would think!
Week 3
Week 2
Ah voicethread. My new favorite thing. I played around on voicethread for quite some time over the last week. I watched some of the tutorials and other videos as well, practiced making comments on them, and made a little one myself just for practice as well. I think they would be very helpful when trying to teach students. I like the idea of having a group for your class where everyone can view the videos and make comments and even draw to make their ideas or questions more clear. Also, sadly, I didn’t know about taking screenshots on my mac so that was definitely a useful thing to learn. Jing seemed somewhat pointless to me. Maybe I just don’t know the ins and outs of it enough to make it useful. I’m working on it.
I worked with iMovie and garage band also. I had used garage band before so that wasn’t anything surprising. However, I’ve never used iMovie and found out some neat stuff you can do with it. There is probably a lot more than I even discovered. I made a slide show with pictures and music, considering I don’t really have any video footage to upload and work with.
This is off topic but I just remembered it: I was looking for that patch for Microsoft 2007 to enable me to open .docx documents and I still cannot finding it. Any help?
Week 1
The spreadsheets are going pretty well. First I worked on the “how do you spend your day” tutorial you emailed me. The directions were very helpful and I was able to complete the worksheets fairly easily. I had to figure out that the total hours in a day did not include the “nothing special” category and I had to therefore change the formula in order to include it. That used the SUM command, which isn’t difficult to understand/use. The only thing I had some trouble with was the graph. I knew how to insert it and everything, but then I had trouble figuring out how to label each bar a different category (i.e. sleeping, homework, watching tv, etc). I finally realized that I had to actually highlight those categories’ cells and not just the cells with the number of hours spent on each of those categories. Also computing the averages wasn’t too difficult. Oh and learning how to put the worksheets as “protected” was helpful because later when I was getting activities off the internet they were protected and since I had done this tutorial first I knew how to make them unprotected so that I could work with them.
The internet activities I found just let me insert information and play around with different functions. Namely mean, median and mode and other elements of a box and whisker plot. I don’t think you can actually construct a box and whisker plot on excel but perhaps I should look into it. I didn’t know you could find the quartiles of a set of values so that was interesting, and the commands aren’t complex at all. The other activity I messed with was one involving slope. They had developed a graph and if you changed the value of the slope the line on the graph would automatically change. I cannot figure out how this was made. I don’t know the equation in order to make the worksheet know that it’s dealing with the slope of a graph. Also there is a group of cells that gives the intervals for the x and y-axes and you can change them right on the worksheet. I also don’t know how they did this. Like how do these cells know that their job is to change the intervals on the graph? I’m still working on determining this. I posted this file to my ilocker so maybe someone else in our class can take a look and see what they can figure out in the mean time.
I appreciate your comments about Spreadsheets and am most interested in your comment about how your work is impacting your view of using technology in your future teaching. I would agree that it is more of a hassle, so you have to ask if it is worth the investment of time and energy. Thanks for the feedback on the class structure. We will make adjustments as necessary over the semester.
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