links to Marilyns
http://mightymousemarilyn.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/using-microscope.html?showComment=1345000220292
http://mightymousemarilyn.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/ipads-are-alwaysin-demand-we-usually.html?showComment=1345790028454
http://mightymousemarilyn.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection-3-gluegun-scissors.html?showComment=1345793524716
links to Flutura
http://fluturaveliu.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/refl-ection-1-date-07-08-12-asi-came.html?showComment=1345199191428
http://fluturaveliu.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/date-14-8-12-todayi-asked-to-help-on.html?showComment=1345360841965
http://fluturaveliu.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/third-reflection-using-technology-to-be.html?showComment=1345788415182
Links to Saira
http://sairathinkscreatively.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection_10.html?showComment=1345016804544
http://sairathinkscreatively.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection-2.html?showComment=1345193083058
http://sairathinkscreatively.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/0-false-18-pt-18-pt-0-0-false-false_23.html?showComment=1345781089572
Links to Kay
http://kaylovestotalk.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection-2-technology-in-sandpit.html?showComment=1345195244427
http://kaylovestotalk.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection-1-use-of-alaptop-today-one_8.html?showComment=1346127366109
http://kaylovestotalk.blogspot.co.nz/2012/08/reflection-3-using-camera.html?showComment=1346130773382
Isabel B
Friday, 31 August 2012
Final Reflection
Final Reflection
31/08/12
Technology – The process and
the tool.
It
was a challenge for me to think what could be technology outside ICT. It really
provoked thought and investigation for me around this topic. The challenge that
I was having was separating technology from other curriculums such as science,
maths, numeracy, creativity, and exploration. However I found out through this
course that these ‘other’ curriculums are actually intertwined with technology
and that technology is not a curriculum that stands on its own.
Technology is associated with the transformation of energy, information,
and materials. Technological areas include structural, control, food, and
information and communications technology and biotechnology. Relevant contexts
can be as varied as computer game software, food products, worm farming,
security systems, costumes and stage props, signage, and taonga.
(Ministry
of Education (nd) New Zealand Curriculum. Technology : retrieved from: http://nzcurriculum.tki.org.nz/Curriculum-documents/The-New-Zealand-Curriculum/Learning-areas/Technology).
So
with having this realisation I was able to see technology in a number of things
such as the magnifying glass. When the children were investigating on their
own, they were limited to what could be seen. The use of the magnifying glass
facilitated in their learning and it furthered their investigation and gave
answers to the questions that the children were asking. This experience has
sparked curiosity amongst the children so now they want to use the magnifying glass
outside just about every day, which is great but for me it is now using this
tool with different lenses on and facilitating children by “providing
strategies and ideas to extend their thinking and reasoning” (Dunkin &
Hanna, 2001, p.15), through the use of the magnifying glass.
Technology is definitely a word I will use
within my centre when using other materials, to familiarise children with this
term and to encourage children to look beyond ICT. However ICT has its place,
which I found out when using my laptop with a boy with autism. I see children as capable and competent and I
know for some children, it is easily seen by how they portray themselves and
their knowledge for their age however not all children come across with this confidence
or competence because of one reason or another. We see that “Children develop
an enhanced sense of self-worth, identity, confidence, and enjoyment as they
reach the goals of well-being in a responsive, stable, safe environment which
supports the development of self-control and self-esteem” (Ministry of
Education 1996, p.46).
I am
a firm believer of “ensuring that all children have the same outcomes. This
could mean using different approaches and teaching methods” (Hayselden, 2007,
p.11). One example is by using the laptop with this child and allowing room for
the same opportunity for learning through those different methods. I will definitely take on board the comments
that have been made and will look into seeing what sort of experiences D has had
at home and make it more meaningful for him while at the centre by perhaps
using the digital photo frame.
Being
in this course has helped me to think beyond what I already know and look and
investigate past what has been my comfort zone of knowledge about
technology. Since doing our assignments
I have come to realise that technology does involve “thinking about the
process, practical inventions, designs, searches for solutions, problem
solving, helping people, and researching for practical purposes” which all can
be seen in whatever is used in everyday life. Although we see different aspects
in using technology “Adaptation and
innovation are at the heart of technological practice. Quality outcomes result
from thinking and practices that are informed, critical, and creative”
(Ministry of Education (nd) New Zealand Curriculum. Technology: retrieved from:
http://nzcurriculum.tki.org.nz/Curriculum-documents/The-New-Zealand-Curriculum/Learning-areas/Technology).
I
am looking forward to using technology in my centre in the future and I am
excited about facilitating children’s learning through the technological tools
such as a magnifying glass, laptop, a paint brush, a pencil, cooking, and a camera, just to name a few, Knowing that this provokes questions,
curiosity, problem solving and wonderment. Thursday, 23 August 2012
To see or not to see
Reflection 3
20/08/2012
To See or Not To
See
It was a lovely day and the
children were outside engaged in different activities around the centre. I noticed a group of children gathering
around the tree stumps (we have several all in one place). There was quite in depth discussions happening
around one of the tree stumps with one particular group of four pre-schoolers.
I got myself closer and observed for a little while and I noticed that this
group was doing an observation of their own. As I got closer I noticed they
were looking at the small bugs that were crawling up and down the trunk ,
crawling in and out of the grass, but because the bugs were so small there was
a bit of pushing and shoving for space to get a look at where and what these
bugs were doing. I asked the children if
they could think of something that could help them to see the bugs some
suggested glasses, some suggested to pick them up. I asked them what they
thought about using the four magnifying glasses that we have inside. “Adults
need to know how to support and extend children’s play without interrupting or
dominating the activity and should avoid unnecessary intervention” (Ministry of
Education, 196, p.83). The children were excited about that thought and after
much discussion amongst themselves, they decided two of them would go inside
and get them and the other two would stay and look after the bugs so no one
else would get them.
The children came back with
the magnifying glasses and all four created such excitement and enthusiasm that
it caused interest from the other children, so more children came over. The first four children had their magnifying
glasses and started to look at the bugs on the tree stump, but to their
amazement they started to see a lot more than just the bugs “Children develop
abilities to question locate, and test ideas and solutions as they explore and
make sense of their world”( Ministry of Education, 1996, p.98). I had asked the
children what they can see now. Their response was, I can see its mummy and daddy,
or I can see some more bugs. C was amazed when she noticed what was happening
as she lifted up and down her magnifying glass. C started to tell her friends
of what happens when she lifts her magnifying glass up everything becomes
bigger and when she brings her magnifying glass closer to the ground things get
smaller. C was thinking about the processes that happen when she does certain
movements with the magnifying glass and sharing the process with her friends
“The act of creating an analogy activates prior knowledge, produces new
knowledge, and enhances the ability to communicate knowledge to others” May,
Hammer, & Roy (2006); Heid ( 2008) as cited in( Cowan & Cipriani 2009).
Through this type of
technological experience, I believe that children relate and comprehend
different experiences when they are real. C shared her knowledge with her other
friends and they started to do exactly the same thing. At first they were laughing about what they
could see but then as the children started to really focus on the details they
started to have their own hypothesis about what they were discovering.
Bronowski (1993; 1998) suggests that “visual intelligence is a key element in
the thought processes of the most capable and creative among us (as cited in
Cowan and Cipriani 2009).
I actually did not realise
that a magnifying glass can be seen as technology until Smorti (1999) brought
out the definition that “Technology is about helping people and solving
problems and that it is the doing that is more important rather than the
product”. I found through this course
that not only does exploration encourage the use of technology it intertwines numeracy,
literacy, art, science, and language.
Friday, 17 August 2012
Laptop Experience
Wednesday, 15 August 2012
The Staple Gun
During this observation I noticed
this toddler trying to push the stapler down on the table, turning it upside
down, banging it down on the table, pushing different parts of the stapler and
just simply looking at it. After
thinking about the children that had come to the table while I was hanging up
the art work, I remember seeing this toddler with this group. I was
quite surprised how long this toddler was engaged with the staple gun. It
wasn’t until the toddler heard a pre-schooler asking if she could use the
staple gun that she actually became aware of her surroundings.
As I said before I was a
little anxious about a toddler handling the staple gun as it is a powerful
piece of technology, but I did not want to stop the learning that was
happening. I asked this toddler to sit by me at the table to which she did and
I started to scaffold her learning through showing her different parts of the
staple gun. A pre-schooler then asked “How do I get her art work to stay on the
wall”? How does the stapler work Isabel? I found this to be quite thought
provoking as I have not been asked about the stapler before.
I started to show step by
step how the stapler worked. I started off with showing them which was the
handle and how to hold the staple gun. They all wanted to have a turn at
holding the stapler, so under supervision I let them hold the staple gun. Most
had struggled to hold it properly as their hands were too small. A pre-schooler then asked “How do you get my
picture to stay on the wall Isabel? I
showed them the small U shape metal pieces in the container beside me and I let
them know that it is these U shape metal pieces which are called staples that
keep their art work stuck to the wall.
I turned the staple gun upside down and pulled
out the slide where the staples go and showed them where and how the staples
go. “How do they get out of the stapler?
So I asked one of the children to pass me a piece of art work. I held the
picture up on the wall and then I showed them what would happen if I pushed the
handle down and let it come back up again. Technology is about solving problems;
it’s about the thinking process and searches for solutions according to Smorti (1999)
I remember the heavy staplers back in my school days and
they were not gadgets that were freely accessible to us as children, so it was
mainly through observing teachers or adults on how to use it and fill it. I
grew up in an era to where you did not ask a lot of questions, so the way one
found out about technology, or what technology was, was through observing. Staplers
were as far as I can remember were not spoken of as technology but these days children
are encouraged to ask questions and teachers are encouraged to answer these
questions.
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