My two goals of my GAME plan are to first meet the National Standards by improving to collaborate with parents, students, peers and community members using digital tools and resources to support student success and innovation. The second goal is to increase participation in local and global learning communities and to explore creative applications of technology to improve student learning.
I am finding the resources needed to be successful by reading my colleagues comments to my last post about my GAME plan. I have been able to take their suggestions and slightly modify my plan. This week’s learning resources introduced me to four methods of assessment; forced- choice, open-ended, performance based and project-based (Cennamo, Ross, Ertmer, 2009, p. 142). As for my first goal, creating a newsletter to increase parent involvement my colleagues have suggested I have the students help in the creation of the newsletter. Cennamo, Ross & Ertmer said it best when they said learning to teach generally, and to teach with technology specifically, are lifelong journeys (Cennamo et. al, 2009, p.1). I can take my idea of the newsletter and turn it into an authentic assessment for my students. The project based assessment will help my students create their own portfolio and work sample. Not only will they be doing this but they will help me reach my goal of parent involvement because the parent now will see what their students are learning not only from me but from the writing skills of their children.
As for my second goal I have taken the suggestion of a colleague again that I may want my students to work in small groups and create a wiki. The wiki can be a great tool to teach the students to understand the importance of team work and completing tasks while being physically active. The students can use the wiki to create a new game and then share it with the rest of the school or other schools if I am able to create a global learning environment. I think it is an excellent idea. I am taking physical education and creating an assessment that is not only physically challenging but also mentally challenging all while using a newer form of technology.
It is very interesting to me to see the value of a global learning environment. One of my goals here was to continue to open up opportunities for my students to become active learners. Just by participating in this class discussion and learning from my colleagues I have seen the value of others opinions and their ideas. Technology is not a tool that will only help my students learn but a tool that will also help me learn.
My remaining questions revolve around how to score these types of authentic assessments. Authentic assessments are terrific but much more difficult to grade than a forced choice assessment. “But assessments are useless unless you score them to evaluate students’ progress and determine whether your students learned what they set out to learn” (Cennamo et. al, 2009, p. 153). I have created rubrics before but sometimes feel they are too difficult for the students to succeed with or to easy and do not challenge the students. Does anyone have any suggestions or sites that are useful tools to help create rubrics that are challenging but fair to all students?
Resources:
Cennamo, K., Ross, J. & Ertmer, P. (2009). Technology integration for meaningful classroom use: A standards-based approach. (Laureate Education, Inc., Custom ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.