Dean Shareski has posted a great little PD video in the K12 Education YouTube group on a few power-pointers that anyone who does presentations would find useful. Take a look:

The TeachingHacks wiki is in constant development, but I have recently been working on the Video Sharing in Education area of it. I started out jumping into publishing on Video Sharing web sites, but realized that I was missing the most important learning component of this area – video production.

I’m going to be doing a workshop later this week on curricular uses of video production for Grade 6-8 teachers using whatever video capture devices that we can pull together and MovieMaker 2. We will be creating, recording, editing and publishing video shorts. When I organized this workshop last spring – I thought “okay” I can do it in a half day workshop – now I’m thinking I should have gone for the full day.

Working with video is always quite a bit of fun and when you see teachers engaged in the medium, you know they are going to want to work with their students in it too.

User Chart

The Google Earth: Educator Perspectives course went very well. It seemed appropriate having participants from across the globe join in this open weekend at KnowSchool. I have posted a chart with the country representations of the participants. It was great seeing educators from K12 and Higher Education educators sharing their ideas, exploring, and learning together. I hope to get involved a little more in facilitating events like this one. I found that I gained a more global perspective and new ideas through the discussion boards, and collaborative sharing.

It really is too bad that the content that has been created in KnowSchool open weekend course does not become CC licensed and available to all, instead of just the participants. There were so many great lesson ideas, lesson plans and new directions that would benefit all of us.

PD courses in school districts can be a very closed time/space sphere for educators to work in, it would be nice to see organizations open up those courses for those who miss the course and break some of the typical boundaries that we see reflected in out educational institutions. Perhaps we just need to agree when we participate in a course like this that we can share what we co-create.

I opened up the open weekend with this presentation that I remixed from Alan Parkinson SAGT presentation opening. Perhaps a little teaser for you to look at Google Earth again if you haven’t done so already (Be sure to look to look at the often missed new Featured Content layer – the Rumsey Historical Maps, as well as the other content is awesome).

Remember – The Google Earth Education Program offers schools and districts a free subscription to Google Earth Pro ($400 annually). Prospective schools and districts are encouraged to contact Dennis Reinhardt, Google Earth Education Director, at den@google.com.

The Google Earth for Educators course I am facilitating at KnowSchools is starting today and ends on Sunday evening. I hope that you will come by and join in the global conversation.

In the “Course Agenda” I included a Flash presentation that I created online using Toufee. It was a little tedious to work in the online environment rather than Flash, but I could really see how easy it would be for those who don’t own any Flash tools to create nifty presentations and widgets in Flash. I have included the Toufee presentation below:


Latitude and Longitude Game (Ontario – Grade 6)

Ontario Curriculum Expectations:
Social Studies: 6z46

Tools:
Google Earth
Computer Projector

Task:
Students are given latitude and longitude of a major city and are asked to find it using Google Earth, in order to gain a better perspective of latitude and longitude.

Procedure:
1. Teacher pre-selects a diverse range of cities from across the globe and collects latitude and longitude information through placemarks. (You might try this set of network links to get you started)

2. Students are grouped in teams and asked to go into full screen mode in Google Earth by selecting F11 and turn on the Lat/Lon grid by selecting Ctrl+L.

3. Teacher displays the placemark of a major city at approximately 60 mi eye altitude in full screen mode, without giving away the city name.

4. The groups always start in the default view of Google Earth and race to find the location of the city by using the latitude and longitude measurements, and then zoom out to try and identify the name of the city.

Reflective discussion should occur around what directions they moved the globe in Google Earth in order to find a particular latitude and longitude. Through discussions and synthesis you should be able to come up with a few rules with your students regarding the hemispheres relationship to latitude and longitude.

Assessment:

This game could be used as an introductory activity.

Similar Examples:

Latitude with Attitude Game

Three-Dimensional Structures (Ontario – Grade 6)

Ontario Curriculum Expectations:

Mathematics: 6m44, 6m50, 6m51

Tools:

  1. Google Earth
  2. Google SketchUp
  3. Google SketchUp 3D Warehouse

Task:

Students build three-dimensional models of famous buildings using different views of that building (i.e., top, side, front).

Procedure:

1. Teacher pre-selects a diverse variety of famous 3-d structures from the Google SketchUp 3D Warehouse, based on simplistic designs and makes a list available to students.

2. Students work in groups on their favourite or most interesting structure to gather visual research on what the building looks like. They might examine different images that they have found online or in books, and the views available in Google Earth. Students try to identify different faces of the buildings and perspectives.

3. Students then break done the pictures into the basic three-dimensional shapes of the images and do a rough sketch of what the building might look like.

4. Students work independently to create the outline of the 3-dimensional building by replicating the different views of the building. They might even create other buildings based on the visual research done by other groups of students.

5. The resulting three-dimensional building is placed into Google Earth where the actual building exists.

6. A teacher guided discussion on the faces and the actual three-dimensional buildings would complete the main part of the activity.

7. Students could then take a look at the same three-dimensional buildings that other people have created in the Google SketchUp Warehouse to enhance the closing discussion.

Assessment:

This activity could be used as assessment activity or a final project for the Geometry and Spatial Sense strand.

Similar Examples:

Maths in Las Vegas (Asks students to identify 3-d shapes from buildings)

A quick idea around Using Google Earth:

North American Explorers (Ontario – Grade 6)

Ontario Curriculum Expectations:
6z7, 6z16, 6z17

Tools:

  1. Google Earth
  2. Online Research and Information Literacy Skills
  3. Wiki or Collaborative Document(optional)

Task:
Students create presentations of the routes that Viking, French and English explorers had taken to North America and explain the reason for their journeys.

Procedure:

1. Divide the class into groups around one of either a Viking, French or English explorer that has been selected.

2. Students collaborate bringing together the online research that they gather using a wiki. This includes information, images, videos or files that support the students' point-of-view. Teacher looks at appropriateness of the data, ensures correct referencing and information acuity before moving on to next stage.

3. Students synthesize the information into specific locations in order to include them into placemarks.

4. Students transfer the data into location placemarks, which develop tours within Google Earth. Placemark locations should relate specifically to the information that is contained in the placemark.

5. Groups present their tours to the class or record in order to share with a wider audience for feedback.

Assessment:

This activity could be used as an introductory knowledge building activity or something assessed through a rubric.

Examples:

Explorer Movies in Google Earth

I'm holding an online course on Nov. 10-12 through Knowplace on using Google Earth as a classroom tool. Here is a more detailed view of the course as well as registration instructions for this Open Weekend. There is no cost to this course. So please come by if you are interested in using Google Earth in the K12 classroom or would like to learn more about it.

I posted my first online video to youtube as a response to Alan Levine's keynote address at the K12OnlineConference. That lead me to start using google video to post a clip for the Google Earth open weekend course. Push your comfort limits and you never know what you can do.

I'll embed the Google Earth video introduction below. Hope to see you at the course:

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