Tony's MD400 Blog
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Computer Delusion
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Class Experience
This class is a requirement for the masters in Special Education degree I am pursuing. As a counselor, I use technology a little bit differently than a typical classroom teacher; in fact, I would say that the way a second grade teacher is using technology is completely different than the way I do. I use it primarily to manage students information, and for communication with parents, teachers, and administrators. When I do lean on technology in a classroom setting, it is usually using PowerPoint or the internet.
However, I have picked up some great information thus far in the course. I think that in order to be an effective counselor, you need to know what is going on in the classroom, and seeing first hand the types of different things teachers can do with technology, and the different ways they are using it across different grade levels in very important. At the middle school level, getting the kids involved, and reaching the different types of learners in the classroom. If you look at all the different types of electronic mediums that kids use (Google, Facebook, Twitter, IM,Cell phones, iPods) then it only makes sense to tap into that.
While I do wish there was a little bit more focus on non-classroom teachers, I feel that seeing whats currently being done in the classroom is just as valuable.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
UDL Concept Map

Finally! Something I feel comfortable commenting on! After reading the UDL guidelines, and the blog post of Lisa Lingo, I got a little fired up. I have worked at the high school level for the first 7 years of my very, very young career. I have been in mostly urban settings, where there is great diversity, and often times, great poverty. Not every kid has access to content outside of school, and not every kid even speaks English. I have a problem with Lingo's assertions, as well as the UDL theory in general. In short, Lingo advocates for student freedom to learn at their own pace and style. While this does sound great, it's implications go far beyond the elementary school classroom where she exisists. Advocating for every child to have un-timed assessments is hard to swallow, if only for its real world implications. When the student gets to high school, and there is timing on tests, projects are due on certain dates, and there are penalties for being late, the student will run into trouble. In college, is the professor expected to have students turning in term papers when it suits them? What about the workplace? Last I checked in this challenging economy, people want to hold onto jobs. When a report or project is due, the boss expects to see it; the employee not having it or worse yet, expecting extra time to do it, is putting themselves at a competitive disadvantage. I just can't get behind Lingo's theory. With intellectual competition coming from China, India, and South America, US students needs to be able to adapt quickly and work under well under pressure, all while having the intellgence to be successful. How does a US student who can't take a timed test going to stack up against students in China that are 3 grades levels ahead in math, and in the long term, will be cheaper to employ?
I have seen children coming in from non traditional middle schools, and sometimes it takes 3 years for them to learn how to function in a traditional classroom. It just doesn't translate.
UDL is also a nice concept, but I don't see its applications in today's world of data driven results. How is a district, such as Norwalk or Bridgeport, expected to function within this model? Technology more then not is usually far behind the current curve; students coming from various SES's and cultures are going to have difficulty functioning in this model. And again, how does UDL translate in secondary education, post secondary education, and beyond? I fail to see how to get there under the current educational model of NCLB, under the constraints of todays economical crisis.
Copyright Law and teachers
Monday, July 12, 2010
MD400BlogPosting6Standards
InspirationforETIPS
This is a concept map for the eTIPS article that we read. It was designed with a program called Inspiration. In designing one of these things for the first time, I found it quite informative to see first hand how it was created. A number of teachers I work with utilize these tools with both regular ed and special education students. I designed my own, and chose not to use a template.
HWAssign4Adobe

I decided to use the picture of the exercise we did in the first class. Although Kate was scary good as a stand in for the Jabberwocky, I thought I'd actually try and find an actual dragon-ish looking thing. I used the Magnetic lasso to crop out Kate and found a corresponding Clip-Art image that fit into Kate's shape fairly well. I pulled in that imagine and used the clone feature to fill in any areas of uneven pasting in so that is seems like I didn't actually cut Kate out and the Jabberwocky was there the whole time.
Photo-shop is not an easy application in use; in fact, this took longer than I had thought it might. However, I had the chance to use a couple of tools I never had used before in PS.