Monday, May 23, 2016

Jennifer Anderson


In Kahoots with Jennifer Anderson
by Anthony Cannuli

Are you in Kahoots with your class?  Your first question is probably, what are Kahoots? Well, Jennifer Anderson, MS math teacher and coach, uses Kahoots with her math classes, and I had the pleasure of witnessing her students' passion, competitive spirit, and engagement first hand.  Not only was each student focused on learning and earnestly attempting to complete a math problem, each youngster was smiling, and the fun was palpable.  I left the room thinking, "That was one of the most exciting math classes I have ever seen.  Maybe I would have been a better math student when I was a child if such a thing existed."

Again, you may be asking, what are Kahoots?  Here is the answer according to getahoot.com: "A Kahoot! is a learning game created on the Kahoot! platform, which consists of multiple choice questions--as a quiz, discussion or survey--in any topic, language, or ability.  It's projected at the front of the classroom, and played by the whole class together in real-time (answering on their own personal device)."

I sat at the back of the room and watched the students join the game at the start of class.  They were able to create their own "handle," and, of course, middle school students took it to heart with names like "Muffin" and "Children of the Corn."  Ms. Anderson then started the game.  A question is posed (hers was presented in the quiz format) and the students must submit their answers. The student that answer the fastest with a correct answer gets the most points, so even if TWO students answer every question correctly, the one who did it faster wins.  The score for the overall class is then projected on the screen after each question.

One of the students I interviewed thinks Kahoot activities are a "good way to practice."  He stated that the program was not a good way to introduce a concept; however, he noted that during the review process, "It is a very stimulating and an interesting learning tool."  Another student thought that, "It promotes teamwork and thinking outside the box."  Ms. Anderson added that she liked how, "Kahoot lets even the shiest student participate and become fully engaged.  It is fast paced, fun, and competitive.  All students in the room try their hardest."

The "high fives" and "victory dances" were a blast to watch.  However, what struck me even closer to the core as an educator was the thinking that occurred in the room.  We all know, much like Shakespeare has written in Julius Caesar, the students love when they can compete "with hearts of controversy."  In plain English, they love competitions.  Much like Caesar and Cassius, the students were in a race (to score the most points).  However, they were encouraging each other to think about the questions that were posed.  I heard a lot of thinking out loud.  I think the game is secondary.  The learning, understanding, peer support and camaraderie are what really impressed me.

Whether we like it or not, we, and especially our young students, live in a technical world.  Anytime an iPad can be utilized in a meaningful and enriching way, the students tend to enjoy the process.  This generation does not take well to notes on the board and desks in rows.  Kahoots speak their language and relates to them on so many levels.  Check out Kahoots and watch the learning and excitement abound!

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Pauline McKean

Pauline McKean: Global Connections, Digital Tools 
by Mark Davies

Pauline McKean, The Hun School’s Director of Global Initiatives, has been putting Hun’s video conferencing capabilities to work this year, connecting students across the continent and across the globe.

McKean’s Global Issues class joined students from Brazil, Sweden, Taiwan, Ghana, the Philippines, Singapore and Canada to talk live with experts at the COP21 Climate Change conference in Paris. Students participated in discussions about activities that contribute to climate change, about the observable effects of climate change, and about which world populations are most directly impacted by these effects.

The Center for Global Education coordinates connecting schools with appropriate partners around the world for video conferencing. Topics include Islam and Politics, Global Water Crisis, Math and Art, and Ethics of Stem Cell Research.

Hun students connected with students from a partner school in Colombia in small groups using Google Video Hangouts and their iPads or MacBooks. Conversations were wide ranging and included questions about the current American presidential primary and its candidates.

For EX-Day, a special day where students drop their normal class schedule for unique and creative course offerings, Hun middle school students and headmaster Jon Brougham participated in a video conference session with students from a school in Ghana. 


The Wilf Family Commons’ new high tech classroom is equipped with a state of the art Polycom video conferencing system. This “room system” is on par with the best of class corporate technology. It includes an 80 inch video monitor, embedded speakers, built in remote control camera, and multiple ceiling mounted microphones. Additionally, services such as Zoom and Google Video Hangouts are available for use when lower tech options are more appropriate.

Oiada International
A non-profit organization, providing educational and cultural programs and services that compliment a schools or organizations' core curriculum/program since 1997.

COP21 Paris Conference

The Centre for Global Education

Joanna Hallac

Joanna Hallac: Reaching the World, One Classroom at a Time
by Laura Bishop

This winter, we came together as a community of colleagues to explore some ways we might be able to incorporate global competencies into our curricula.  A lot of excellent ideas and brainstorming took place that day, and it became quite evident that we have access to so many resources at Hun that could be harnessed to expand both our students’ and our own understandings about the many dimensions of life in other countries.

Joanna Hallac's 9th Grade World Studies Class
Since it is not possible for all students and teachers to fly off to parts unknown to explore cultures abroad, the next best thing is bringing someone into the classroom who either has experienced life in another part of the world, or is currently experiencing it. Reach the World, is one such example of a program that grants schools in the United States that opportunity. Joanna Hallac has been utilizing this program for her 9th grade World Studies class, and to great effect!

Reach the World pairs classes with graduate and undergraduate students (most of them American) in countries around the world. Classes develop a dialogue with that American abroad about what they are experiencing as an American immersed in another culture. The dialogue is student driven, with students constructing questions related to what they are most curious to understand more about.

At first, Ms. Hallac's class was paired with a graduate student living in Morocco, with whom they had several conversations. They then moved on to speaking with Clayton, an undergraduate studying in Hong Kong through the Gilman Scholarship program, and continue to be in touch with him.

I had the opportunity to sit in on one of their Skype chats with Clayton and found the experience really enlightening.  Students engaged Clayton with questions on a wide range of topics, including Hong Kong’s colonial past, the cultural mix and interchange between Hong Kong and mainland China, family life and customs, public transportation and infrastructure, Hong Kong’s major role in world business and the financial markets, among others. One of the most interesting threads in the discussion focused on Hong Kong’s “Umbrella Movement.” Clayton gave a really succinct explanation of the conflict, the related issues, and the student activists’ demands.  

I sat down with Ms. Hallac to ask her about the experience from a teacher’s perspective.

LB:  What is the aim or goal of the program, as you see it?

JH:  To build curiosity and a desire to travel and experience other cultures...Cultural enrichment and to build interest in our immersion program…In History, to make sure students are culturally competent, globally aware, and have an understanding of what’s happening in places that are not “normally” visited; these places may be outside our students’ comfort zones.

Americans traveling can lend an American perspective or lens to their experiences. They can offer alternate perspectives of recent, major events (for example, the Moroccan reaction to the Paris attacks was different than those here). It’s also great modeling for the students. Overall, it speaks to what we’re trying to achieve with our strategic plan for global cultural competencies.

LB: How do you build these interactions into your curriculum?

JH: I have the students research background for each place—focusing on the history, and intersection of Western influence or relationship between these two places. It has been a useful vehicle for discussing Imperialism. What are the obvious remnants left from those imperial relationships? What are the connections between a country’s past and present?

LB: Can you describe the result you see with your students?

JH: They enjoy it. They come with questions for each session. It’s important to keep following up with it. For example, the recent clashes between street vendors and police over the lunar NYE; it’s good to use current events to build off of it. These discussions have lead to curricular connections when studying 19th century China. It is challenging to not make it an isolated experience, so care and mindfulness needs to occur where choosing the specific countries of contact is concerned. This will help to ensure that the sessions can be successfully embedded into the curriculum. The Umbrella movement is tied to history...How? We have the history of oppression from legalism and the Cultural Revolution, and then Communists re-exerting their control over people looking for answers elsewhere, and trying to practice free speech.

LB: What have you learned from these experiences?

JH: Be deliberate in how you connect the sessions to the curriculum and the broader missions of our department, and our school. Embed it thoughtfully. Looking at the current event piece is more interesting for the students; work back from that to look at the history. If we are going to move forward with this, all teachers need to be on board for embedding it in a meaningful way. Developing more concrete goals and objectives, for example, will be necessary, moving forward. A framework is important in order to utilize these experiences effectively.

****

I was curious to know what some of the students thought about their experience of the Reach the World program, so I was fortunate to grab a few minutes with two students from Joanna’s class: Martin and Kendall.

Martin was intrigued by what he learned about Hong Kong: “I’ve never been to an Asian country. So, he introduced that part of the world to me. My experience was very vague before. He has spoken to locals about the protests and he was able to share opinions they gave him; these are things you don’t hear about, so it’s nice to learn about those opinions we don’t hear about. It’s the closest thing we can get to Hong Kong without going there…”

“In general.” Martin explained, “it opened my eyes to learning from people in other countries. It opens up your eyes.”

Martin’s participation in the dialogues with Clayton led him to pursue the topic of Britain’s colonial rule over Hong Kong: “For our Imperialism paper, I focused mainly on Hong Kong and how their interactions with and colonization by the Brits affected their country’s trade, and overall interaction with the world. The causes of the Opium Wars were a major focus of my paper.”

Martin endorses the program, and hopes other students will, too. “It really piques your interest,” he said. “Maybe this kind of stuff isn’t really your thing, but even if it isn’t, it opens your mind and it’s more fun than just taking notes on a lecture and reading. It gives you a cultural perspective.”

When asked if he could name another country he’d enjoy learning more about through Reach the World, Martin did not hesitate with his answer: “A Middle Eastern country such as Lebanon or Iran…or a predominantly Islamic country, like Indonesia. I’m Lebanese, and my mother is a practicing Muslim. People always talk about women being oppressed by Islam, but in Indonesia there are a lot of women in government. It would be interesting to focus on what life is like for women and others living in countries that are not radical or extreme. The depiction of Muslim countries is radical and oppressive, when in reality there is a much wider variety of experience in the Muslim world.”

Kendall also felt that the experience was especially worthwhile due to the chance it gives students to learn about a country through someone’s firsthand accounts in real time: “It’s interesting because instead of reading about something, you’re getting an idea of what day to day life is like there from someone’s experience…It’s just really helpful and more interesting. I like that we can ask him a variety of questions about his experience. I learned a lot about the Umbrella Protest, the TPP—I did not know what that was before-- the Lunar New Year conflicts… and I learned a lot about our country, too, throughout.”

For Kendall, the conversations with their contact in Morocco were particularly engaging. “I would recommend this program to other classes because it changes up your day, and because it gives us a chance to learn about countries that we normally wouldn’t learn much about like when we took two days out of our schedule to discuss Morocco.”


“After this experience I became interested in visiting Morocco at some point in the future.” she said with a smile.

Cheryl Beal

Cheryl Beal: Bringing Students Closer to the Eyewitnesses of History
by Melissa Dorfman

Cheryl Beal uses innovative ways to bring students in her English 4 Holocaust elective closer to those that experienced the horror of this most tragic event in world history. iWitness is an educational website sponsored by the USC Shoah Foundation. It “provides access to more than 1,500 full life histories, testimonies of survivors and witnesses to the Holocaust and other genocides for guided exploration. iWitness brings the human stories of the Institute's Visual History Archive to secondary school teachers and their students via engaging multimedia- learning activities.”

Another tool that Ms. Beal and her students use is “Echoes and Reflections.” A site that supports "students’ development of the skills to examine the effects of prejudice, bigotry, and antisemitism." The site seeks to "encourage the use of visual history testimony in the classroom, thereby exposing students to the narratives of those who were witnesses to history and providing opportunities for them to examine their own personal narratives.” Ms. Beal's students recently completed a project incorporating these resources to examine an aspect of their choice on the Concentration Camps of the Holocaust such as culture, education, and religion. Student groups were able to choose their own preferred method to present these topics. They needed to use primary resources and were encouraged to use the supplemental resources described. Ms. Beal has created a very innovative and important project for the students of this new and thought provoking course!

Friday, November 6, 2015

Dara Martin

Dara Martin's Petrie Dish
by Ted Shaffner

Dara Martin treats her English classes like a petrie dish, constantly adding ingredients to the mix to see how they will change the composition. The true spirit of innovation is not necessarily about technology or even new ideas, but about teachers continuing to reinvent themselves so they can approach the material in new ways, bringing it to life for themselves and their students. In the video below, Ms. Martin talks about what innovation means to hear, and explains three new experiments she is working on this year: the Music Free-Write, Hot Topics, and the Six-Word-Symbolic-Selfie, all of which help her students learn how to balance structure and freedom, as well as give them ownership of the material and find their own voices. Ms. Martin's students know her as a hard teacher, but they are also well aware of how much they grow as a result of how deeply she engages with them.


Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Mark Davies

Computer Science, Online Learning, Differentiated Instruction
by Mark Davies

This year, The Hun School of Princeton offered computer programming classes to upper school students in a differentiated instruction, blended learning environment.


There are many models of online and blended learning. Some schools join a consortium, like Global Online Academy. This kind of membership gives students access to a whole catalog of courses that are taught, in most cases, entirely online. GOA’s model also requires faculty from member schools to participate as instructors, teaching a course online to students from other consortium schools. Other models, like Online School for Girls or Laurel Springs School, allow students to take a single course or attend school entirely online.


The benefits of online and blended learning are many, but one of the greatest appeals of this model is the opportunity to provide students with a learning experience that is not currently provided by their school. Not every school can provide a classes in multivariable calculus, app design, or neuropsychology,but most schools have at least some students with the interest and aptitude for these kinds of courses.


"The term blended learning is defined by the International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL) as: “any time a student learns at least in part at a supervised brick-and-mortar location away from home and at least in part through online delivery with some element of student control over time, place, path, and/or pace; often used synonymously with Hybrid Learning.”


At Hun, it had been a challenge to consistently provide classes in computer programming, but with the blended learning opportunity provided as a CodeHS member school, we were able to accomplish this task, and we were able to do so while meeting a wide range of student ability.


CodeHS was started by a pair of Stanford University Computer Science majors in 2012, their senior year at Stanford. They based CodeHS on their experience as section leaders and teaching assistants for several Stanford’s introductory computer science classes. The curriculum is delivered entirely online. Students watch demonstration videos and complete programming activities in the online code editor that runs in Google Chrome. They are provided feedback by online tutors and graded on their work with the CodeHS gradebook feature. As the class teacher, I am also provided the same access to lessons and tutor support, and I am provided sample syllabi and other supporting materials. 



In addition to the course content from CodeHS, students worked on programming challenges with a small mechanical orb called Sphero. Sphero can be remotely controlled by an iOS or Android application, and it can also be programmed with any one of three programming apps; orbBasic, MacroLab, or Tickle. Programming the Sphero device provided an opportunity for students to actually use the introductory programming applications, concepts, and practices in a less abstract context.


Our programming class time was either spent working independently on CodeHS activities, reviewing CodeHS lessons with PearDeck as a whole group, or working in small groups on Sphero programming. Our once-per-cycle extended class time was perfect for Sphero related work. We often used the large room that was formerly our student activity center where students could spread out and work in pairs or small groups designing and completing Sphero challenge tasks and offering feedback to other groups on their activity designs. The final project for the semester involved students making those real world connections to computer science concepts through Sphero programming.


Truly differentiated learning was another benefit of the blended learning experience with CodeHS. Students who were motivated and capable could work ahead and extend their learning while getting valuable feedback and support from the online tutors - feedback and support they would not have otherwise gotten from a traditional classroom instruction model. Students who were not as inclined to work ahead and who generally worked “at pace” also had their needs met as we took the time in class to review lessons and activities as we completed them online. Also, there was considerable opportunity for peer support as students worked in class, sharing with each other insights and strategies for completing the programming challenges.


Tiberiu Dragoiu-Luca

Around the World in 80 Days
by Ted Shaffner

In his physics class, Tiberiu Dragoiu-Luca has the students do a project where they design a trip around the world, which allows students to learn and practice skills related to his course material -- such as kinematics, acceleration and deceleration, uniform and harmonic motion -- and also to explore different global locations through their trip planning. In the video below, he describes his project, and we also hear from some of the students who have completed the project. The students clearly feel that this is different from many other science projects they have, because they have more ability to express their personalities, but also practice the skills they learn in class.