Assignment 3 Webpage
QR codes can become a great addition for my future classroom. I plan on teaching secondary education, but depending on the specific age-group specific courses would depend on how I would utilize QR codes. They could be helpful for having the LMS (or LMS-adjacent, for example Canvas or Google Classroom) for the course so the students could have easy access to it. There could also be QR codes for commonly used resources that students can use; for instance, if I teach a high school AP class (or in general a course where the standards are different than the state curriculum), I could have a QR code for study guides, review videos, and the AP site. Overall, if I ever need students to go to a specific website inside or outside of class, I will most likely have QR codes so students can scan them instead of typing out the links.
Case:
Your school recently implemented a new educational technology initiative, providing each kindergarten classroom with a set of tablets loaded with literacy and numeracy apps. The administration encourages teachers to use the tablets daily to build digital literacy and track student progress through data analytics.
Ethical Dilemma: Should you reduce tablet use in your classroom to preserve play-based learning, even if it means going against the school’s technology goals, or should you follow the directive and maintain daily tablet sessions, even if you believe it may not serve your students’ holistic development?
Addressing the Case:
Since in today's age the assessments for these kids are typically on electronics, I would most likely allot some time for the educational technology each day, most likely 10 to 20 minutes at most. While learning via technology is not nearly as effective as teaching through play, unfortunately testing students' knowledge of the standards starts when they are roughly in kindergarten and if they are not familiar with the technology, the results could inaccurately label the kids' progress through the material. That being said, especially if there is practice daily, there should be minimal time spent daily on these technologies. 20 minutes would be by far the maximum that kids that young should have to do learning that is not beneficial to them, and the time spent should be closer to 10 minutes daily so there isn't that much time utilized that can be more beneficial developmentally to the kids.

I love how organized your website is, especially the different subcategories under resources. It's all organized and easy to read, there's goo contrast and alignment, and carries the same themes throughout the entire website.
ReplyDeleteYour website fits the theme of World History so well! The classroom culture flyer is really cute too! It all flows really well and everything is really easy to read and follow!
ReplyDeleteThe colors are very easy on the eyes and its organized! The drop down is also nice so the page doesn't feel cluttered.
ReplyDeleteI really like your website. I love how organized and I love all the resources that you added for students. The only bad I have to say is that I wish there some more different pictures in there.
ReplyDeleteYour website design is amazing and perfectly fits the world history subject! I think you did really well specifically in the aspects of contrast and repetition, as your formatting and continuity made your website easy to read and understand!
ReplyDeleteYour website is very colorful and well-organized! I love how you used a picture for the classroom rules and incorporated student resources.
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