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Friday, July 27, 2012

Podcast Review Lesson Reflections

“Podcast Review” Lesson Reflection
Allison Kauffmann

As part of my “Live Your Story” unit, I want my future sophomore high school students to recognize the fact that how you present your opinions matters. Students will be documenting their story over the course of the first semester through narratives and reflections. As members of a community (a community which includes the students in our classrooms), taking a stance on an issue and being able to defend yourself clearly is essential to progress and success in the professional world. The ability to think critically and freely about ideas and challenge the norms are necessary skills as well--but knowing how to compose those views in a persuasive, compelling manner is what I want to explore through this series of lessons.

Chances are, you have had some teaching experience if you’re reading this. At the least, since you’ve made it to a graduate-level class, you’ve probably been a high school student yourself. So you’re likely in on this fact: high school kids have opinions. Many of them. They have “opinionitis” and they have it bad. I see plenty on Facebook and Twitter every day (and these aren’t always even from high school students): 
“Guns don’t kill people...people kill people #aurora or “Dark Knight Rises was sicckkkkk.” (I guess I’m one generation ahead of the tendency of adding letters for emphasis; that must have been initiated with everyone right after I graduated high school.)

So how do we transition from loaded, spontaneous opinions our culture loves to give so freely on Facebook  to thought-out, well-represented opinions? Opinions, after all, are vastly important to how we appear to others--they are fundamentally how we judge and relate to one another. Can we get them to think about why they value what they do? What makes a subjective answer credible? How well does your opinion hold up with others? Why write more than your opinion--if you think something’s bad, why not just say it how it is: “that was bad. I hated it, and you should too.” With so many opinions floating around out there, how do you know which ones you agree with? Do you challenge those opinions? Can you resolve opinions with ones that differ from your own?  
 
By allowing my students to create their own podcast review on a subject they find compelling or worth investigation, I hope that each of the questions above will be addressed, if not answered in some small way. By digging deeper and feeling a sense of ownership over their opinions, students will learn how to question and interact with texts. 



The reasoning behind the lessons: How I got here
If I’m teaching a lesson on “How to Write an Effective Book Review,” they will probably tune out and go through the motions. They will do what they think I want, and strive for the letter grade. But if I want to get them thinking about what they value and what they would take a stand for, I need to get their real-world, real-time opinions. So they’re going to want to revert back to experience. We can start with what they are familiar with, then, and scaffold from there.

In my own everyday conversations, the most commonly solicited opinions are usually related to film, music, T.V., or books. So it’s settled, I am going to use those talking points that we naturally turn to in conversation. My students may not feel like talking all day about their opinion of Piggy in Lord of the Flies, but I know that they can talk all day about Jersey Shore or trending online information. But I also know they are capable of more than their statuses might belie; their format doesn’t always lend itself to deep conversations, so we are going to push beyond the initial opinions and figure out the why. Meeting them where they are, we are going to discuss how we gather our opinions, how we dig deeper than the surface of an opinions, and what a good review contains. Together, we are going to compare the outspoken ways of offering an opinion with how the New York Times presents opinions. We will comment on the overwhelming, instantaneous information presented to them on the Internet, and what makes a person’s opinions hold weight.

In these lessons, I plan on reading conflicting reviews together as a class to get a sense of some models to strive for and to challenge what a good review contains. They will debate within their groups whether they were personally convinced or persuaded to see the author’s viewpoint. The students will collaboratively analyze a review, noting how they are generally structured. They will also choose the effective techniques of online reviews and create guidelines to be used in their own work. By critiquing a few online reviews, I feel that students will be reading types of work they may already be familiar with or can relate to because they are written for entertainment. They are seeing firsthand a well-written, organized scrutiny that they (sometimes unconsciously) enact every day in conversation.  And they’re learning how to represent their thoughts in a credible way for an online audience. If I needed to further drive home the point that opinions matter, we might also read about how impactful the critics’ reviews really are in relation to box office sales or album purchases.
 
And then, if I’ve given them the right tools, they will hopefully want to take off those floaties and compose a podcast review of their own.  At the core of it, critically analyzing a text can be done using the same process as critically analyzing a piece of music or a T.V. show. So why not harness those digital newspaper reviews that they might peruse anyway as a springboard for analytic thinking? Instead of giving them a book to review, I am going to give them the option of reviewing a song, a T.V. show, a movie, or a play. They may not even realize what made them react positively or negatively to the work they are going to review, but I want them to discover the elements of what they are reviewing and analyze why they feel the way they do. Ultimately, I am giving them different paths to get to the same goal. I feel that their work will be so much involved and exploratory if they are passionately defending or criticizing a work of their choosing. (Plus it doesn’t hurt that reading their lively, unique work will be vastly more entertaining than 60 similar Lord of the Flies essays.)

I am hoping to publish a class anthology of these podcasts on the blog so that they can respond to each other and hear how many great opinions they all have to offer. I hope to foster meaningful discourse, providing a safe place for them to challenge ideas or discuss commonalities.

My goal is to set a fire beneath them, so that they feel confident in their opinions and can compile them in a rich, compelling way. By creating a shareable document with an online audience, they should feel ownership of their thoughts. And they should know that the thoughts matter, that they have a place in the online community.  



As I ask students to use realistic applications such as podcasts to write and publish their reviews, they will be creating something digitally stimulating and contributing to the greater, online community. Their audience changes from me (and who cares what I think, other than for a grade?) to their peers and possibly a more general online audience. As the anthology is shared online, it might become a place for future critiques, and they might even continue to share after the class is over. (I’m probably too optimistic, but it could happen with a little inspiration.) I also hope to use this lesson to facilitate further responses or commentaries within the class, in which students give interactive feedback to each other’s work using a program like Voicethread or WallWisher. My own writing shows a marked improvement if I am confident that what I have said is worth reading or influential to others; receiving feedback affirms that our voice has been heard by many, and (if the time and effort has been put forth) that what we have to say is valuable. 

I want my students to know that I have been there--tired, unmotivated, inept, lazy, you name it--but that this is going to be a process. We will all cheer each other on, surrounding each other with helpful ideas and troubleshooting tips. This is a chance for them to break free of the traditional writing format and show their true colors through opinions about issues they care about already. 


When the students begin to create their own podcasts, my Digital Writing Institute experiences will come in handy. I hope to give my students the space they need to think freely. My structure will be loosely defined and I will not focus on what the end product should look like. In fact, hardly any “shoulds” will be used. Although I struggled without strict guidelines in my own OWP podcast project, just getting a draft out was the best way to begin, in retrospect. I was not comparing my work with others’, and I was thinking about what a good podcast might contain. I didn’t rely on others’ opinions, but on my own judgement. Which, in turn, freed my process up so that I was creating my own standards and audience. I was making editorial cuts, as my students will be, and listening to my work again and again until I polished it. Because I knew people in my field were going to listen to my podcast, I think an internal compass arose--my intuitions and experiences listening to reviews instilled and fueled a need to create a professional-sounding piece. But, like my students, I also needed to work at my own pace and talk myself through the process. Thus I hope to give the class ample time to exchange notes and share their work along the way. It’s digital, after all, which allows for more saved drafts and more of a story to be shown of how you arrived at your final draft. I will be conferencing often to ensure that students are producing the best work they are capable of, as well as having them set their own deadlines for their project. 



I want them to delve in as wholeheartedly as possible, but I also want to meet them on their level and build on the skills they are starting with. I will include a screencast for those who struggle with technology, allowing them to review the main features in solitude; in this manner, those who are advanced may plunge forward, perhaps helping those who are needing help with technicalities. The advanced students are not bogged down and the novice students are not overwhelmed. I would rather them plunge in than spend the hour on learning the software step by step, as was made evident to me in my week in the OWP. Talking through ideas instead of giving students a restricting plan of attack is much more conducive to meaningful, memorable acquirement of those skills--and they may need to apply the audio recording skills they learn in this project to future projects (in my class, in college, and in the workplace). I feel that giving them a tutorial and forcing them to use the software in a certain way restricts their capabilities and limits the potential uses of the tool. Additionally, if students dive into their work they are less likely to focus on how people might judge their content and more likely to focus only on getting out a first draft to manipulate in the audio editor.  

Once they have recorded the technicalities to memory, students are allowed more mistakes, more mutability, and a more fluid thought process by recording and rerecording rather than writing and rewriting. The cut and pasting process in an audio format will allow for a new, interesting form of writing that pushes and inspires students past the typical drudgery of writing a 5 paragraph essay. I also hope to involve the podcast early in the processes of brainstorming to push students' thoughts in ways they might not have considered using paper. 


By using their voice to organize their thoughts in lieu of writing them down, students who have had adverse experience with writing in the traditional sense may be freed from the writing that limited their initial thought process.


By setting students free with the software, I am hoping that they will teach each other (which is always one of my goals in teaching!), discover tools on their own that might naturally and authentically enhance their work, and realize on their own why these tools might best suit their narrative. For many students (like me), they may not have known what they were capable of, and what forms their writing could take. They may discover their thoughts in a new light just by hearing them aloud, and think of a new stance they had not considered by simply reading their review on paper or thinking about it silently. And this may open doors to many other social forms of meaningful conversation. As a teacher, I want to facilitate as many authentic responses as possible and transcend the perception that online opinions are reserved for what someone ate for lunch (there’s actually Facebook group against this phenomenon!). I want my students to prove their generation’s stereotype wrong, and be able to defend their opinions in meaningful, interactive, publishable ways. 


Extension Applications
While I’m thinking of using this lesson to foster thought about why we think what we do, the implications for what else I could teach are vast. This could be an enforcer of using descriptive, colorful language to paint a picture for your audience (something we will be talking about earlier in the semester). Word choice is huge, and this could facilitate some highly creative thoughts. Or the project could function as a fantastic companion piece for teaching persuasive techniques. I haven’t nailed its function down yet because it’s so open and I want to be sure I use this lesson for the best purposes.

Although I would like to write out lesson plans for every idea I have thought of using in my classroom in the OWP, I have not yet formally plotted out every idea in agenda format. However, I plan on building upon the versatile, invaluable tools, techniques, and methods I learned from the class in the next few weeks as I plot out my English II class calendar. I can’t wait to share what I have learned with my students, and I know they will be just as inspired and challenged, but ultimately satisfied with their finished products as I have been. Without being able to fully express every implication I can take away from the class, you can view a limited, brief listing of lesson and project ideas that I would like to incorporate in my classroom next year.


The Proof is in the Pudding 
For Carrie Windham, grad student in Athens, GA, creating podcasts has an observable, concrete benefits for the students who attempt to do so. She interviewed university students around America about how they saw podcasting as an educational tool, and found that “a lack of familiarity with the content or equipment was not a barrier to success.” The students she interviewed loved that they could get creative and present content in “a way they choose,” and that podcasts can be shared so easily, for free, to virtually anyone who can access the Internet. What Windham found is one of my own major rationales for using the project--students discovered they “could showcase their projects to the rest of the community, expanding the reach of the classroom to their friends or members of the community.”


Troy Hicks, author of the hugely applicable book The Digital Writing Workshopalso found worthwhile, significant advantages to creating content in a digital, audio format. As he talked to digital writers concerning their own audio recording projects, they “talked intently about the ways in which the process of writing recording, revising, and rerecording made them more conscious of their decision-making process as writers.” 


Although I will be the first teacher at my high school to incorporate digital narratives into my curriculum, I am feeling invigorated and groundbreaking rather than anxious and burdened (as I thought I would be feeling two weeks ago). I will be learning along with my students, but I have learned the valuable lesson that you don't have to be an expert on every aspect of the subject to teach it--my students will surely be teaching me as well. As the discourse changes, I am happy to get the chance to jump on board the train rather than get run over, because I know that the train is heading down a path to richer, more interactive compositions in which the possibilities are endless. 

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Screencast

I tried my hand at screencasting today, and at the very least I learned what to do in the future. Here is a screencast I created on using Aviary's audio recorder Myna.


[Thanks so much, Christine Levey, for sharing this screencasting resource--I will definitely be using it to create several tutorials in the fall.]


Although it's very unpolished (I quickly talked myself through the process while learning the software myself), I think the software is extremely intuitive and simple to pick up on.  

Rough Draft

My rantings and ravings about what I hope to take with me in my classroom this year are almost complete. I've realized that I'm reluctant to finish, though, because that means my journey is almost over and my consistent blogging-thinking-writing process may not continue when I don't have a class to motivate me. But I also think I'm set in my ways now--the blogging floodgates have been opened--so I might continue to blog in spite of my cynical self. 


Here is a rough draft of my polished piece, complete with unintelligible highlights and random words that I haven't erased yet.  

Project ideas

Additional digital lesson ideas inspired and adapted from projects in the 2012 OWP

Students will...
  • create Twitter statuses to summarize a long passage
  • condense a narrative story and retell using Twitter statuses
  • brainstorm an Object Essay by creating a 5-Frame Essay without words using photographs of objects that are meaningful to their story
  • research different aspects of biographical or historical context for an upcoming novel unit, create a digital story in groups, and present the findings to the class
  • create a digital essay on a process
  • utilize podcasting in a literature station (students go around the room and complete tasks at unique stations, composing a podcast at one).
  • collaboratively compose a letter in the voice of a literary character, using a wiki such as Google Docs
  • create a digital story to teach each other a literary technique
  • make executive decisions on how to compile an anthology of their projects
  • create a photo/digital essay on a news story that interests them, changing the mode and summarizing the highlights
  • take a stance and compile ideas from every "Storytelling" class project to create their personal philosophy in a photo essay or podcast


Sunday, July 22, 2012

Fearing the wrong things

Source
Although running the risk of being cliche, I truly believe in this statement. And I think it is especially applicable to my life since the beginning of last week. It's a trap that we all fall in, and it's hard to break yourself of years and years of working toward the "right answer." 


Do you fear being wrong? 

What I set out to do

Source


Taking Eleanor Roosevelt's advice, I set out a few months ago to do something scary (to me) every day. This blog was first created an outlet and instigator for that theme. My hopes were to get out of my comfort zone and experience life a little more fully--without doing so, I would stay stagnant. The things that I wished I was better at would never get that way by just sitting at the same level...I feel like everyone has at least some little obstacles that they are scared of, that they need to overcome. Or at least get better about. 


Then I adopted the blog for class, and it became home to notes, reflections, and project updates for the Ozarks Digital Writing Project. I abandoned those initial goals I had set.   Unknowingly, though, I think that I have actually accomplished (or taken steps toward) what I first set out to do. I was expecting to work in our class, and to learn new tools that I could take with me. But I think I also did something scary every day...and loved it. 


On of the most valuable lessons I learned was from my own learning and from the setup of the class. I didn't even notice that I was learning and growing. I guess that's the point. I was really stuck with an (albeit small) insight when Keri asked, "What if you hadn't been allowed to talk with your groups during the process?" If it had been a lecture class, I would have done the readings, and written down what I felt were the highlights--what the professors seemed to emphasize as the "big idea." If I had taken a test or maybe a culminating paper on the material, I would have crammed, memorized, and then forgotten the "big ideas" as I drove off to enjoy my weekend. I was thinking how we were constantly on Facebook, Google Plus, and some sort of blogging platform. Those sites are usually the distractors, the bane of teachers' careers. But they were actually being used to facilitate our learning, rather than sidetrack us. When we harness those tools, we can actually get to the heart of how students respond and how they really think. 


Writing used to be one of the "scary things" that I was working toward overcoming (by creating of the blog). At least getting past the drafting stage that stressed me out. (This class confirmed it--thinking up ideas is definitely the most challenging aspect of the drafting process for me.) Yet what used to be so stiff and frustrating suddenly began to flow as the week went on. Because there was no guarantee that I would publish the freewriting to my blog, I could write without a thought to judgements. I couldn't wait to write, knowing that this time I would likely reach those thoughts that had been trapped. My thinking began to flow, especially as I reaffirmed the thoughts by sharing them and building upon them at my table with like-minded learners. What I produced was unaltered, authentic reactions to the day's events. I couldn't regurgitate something that everyone else was saying, because everyone's experiences were different and unique to what they wanted to take away. We all worked at the pace we needed to set for ourselves, and we all learned what we needed to. 


I am so glad I got the opportunity to do those scary things every day. I learned it was worth it, and that it can only get better as I keep building on the "scary" things I overcame. 

Friday, July 20, 2012

Day 5 Freewrite

It's day 5 of class...how did we get to this point? I have felt such a range of energy levels that I don't think my body knows where it stands this week. I have felt defeated and powerful. Stifled by choice and free to create. I have been out of all loops in the social world, missing major news stories, and I have been more focused, thinking about things ideas that I wouldn't have before. Questioning everything move I make and ignoring practical functions of the day (meals, laundry, etc.) In other words...I've been conflicted. But it was completely worth it. 


Today I was dragging on the walk in to class. My shoulder hurts. I feel like I should have gotten further on my photo story. I burnt my tongue, and let me tell you, that's the worst blow of all of my trials and tribulations. But as I walked I thought about how I have felt this way every morning this week at some point before I get there, but I don't feel it when I reach the class. My thinking changes when I am surrounded by such passionate, proficient, motivating learners. Everyone cares and everyone exchanges such meaningful, interesting ideas. When I see the work and the fun and the true growth/enthusiasm of everyone around me, I am a different person. I will be lost when I don't have someone to share with, when conversations don't immediately turn to the process and what's the best way to facilitate learning, although I can share on the blogs of course. 


Last week or so, one of the bloggers I've been following (stalking, really) in an attempt to gain as many lesson ideas as possible wrote this post about her students using Google Docs to create tweets collaboratively. [By the way, she posts some fantastic resources--if you are a teacher, I recommend following her for some great reflections and ideas.]  I think this lesson is so incredibly versatile - I could see myself using the general framework for character studies in almost any novel (speaking to point of view or motivations) but it's not limited to literature. They could collaboratively tweet to summarize an article they will use for a research project (as Troy mentioned) or to tell a story using shortened, concise phrases. I love that I am finding resources to recycle! 


One more quick thought in this directionless post: I keep thinking (and speaking to people about again and again) about my photo story's quality. Did I capture what I wanted to? Probably not. Did I produce an aesthetically invigorating piece that will do what I say a digital story should do? Not a chance. But was this process about my deep and creative thoughts? Not really. I don't have any confidence in the piece, but I have to remember that this was a quick and dirty learning process. I used about 48 hours to create this, as did everyone else. So get past it, Kauffmann! I won't have a polished piece right now because that wasn't the goal of it all. By stating this aloud (or online), I'm just affirming what everyone already knew. So slowly I'm getting over my fear that people will see my work, and thinking about all that we've learned and how I've gone from nothing to something. Something that required choices galore, and certainly required me to think critically about my theme, sequence, and the way to represent my thoughts. I've had to combat and overcome challenges that my students may face. 


So how do we avoid stress over the product and teach the values of the doing the project? We have been trained to worry about the assignment, worry what our teacher wants...I remember a conversation I had with a friend in another class this summer about how hard it was to write the first paper because she didn't know what the professor graded like. And I thought about how we all felt that, but that it wasn't how it should be. Of course I can speculate about what should be all day long, but I hope to counteract this feeling that we have to write for an end. I want to focus on the means to the end. 





Thursday, July 19, 2012

Writing Territories


Writing Territories

Writing process - my growth over college
Blog/glogster/animoto/voicethread/wiki/docs/dropbox "how to" for Lawson 
Writing to learn, writing every day, unconscious discovery
Using digital narratives authentically, not tail wagging dog

College experiences

Band
Trip to Disney World
Chris
Learning Styles

Writing experiences

Writing with Shannon when we were around 7 on the typewriter
Creating the newspaper

Middle School 

In love with someone who batted for the other team
Ice skating

Childhood

Family

Grandpa's perseverance and ambitions, crying over a dream on the couch
The split
Claire showing me the cookbook

Grandma:
  • her memory
  • the frog 
  • pushing button / help
  • crosswords
  • tv shows
  • queen of Sheba? 

Hobbies/Interests

Pets
Sherlock

Travel

London
The bird lady
Mission Trip

Misc

Confusion about career, interviews
John's phone conversation 
passing out when dissecting the frog




Digital Storytelling Obstacles and (Small) Triumphs

Digital Story process

Yesterday we began creating a digital story. Like our 5-Frame Essays, not much direction was given (intentionally), other than the goal of telling a good story with an interesting anecdote and  reflection. The "so what" immediately became the bane of my existence. It became clear that this was the part I needed to beat in order to move forward. And I noticed a trend: this was what holds me up every time. It is so helpful to us as teachers, though, to experience both the difficulty and tremendous importance in choosing a topic and defining why it should matter to anyone at all. If no one can relate, or think about something in a new way, or take away some meaningful chunk from any portion, then it's useless. I'm just stating something we all know here, but I need to think about it again and again for it to become a second nature philosophy. And our students are going to be experiencing this frustration so how can we know how to help them without experiencing it also?


As I wrote, edited, and just sat there to think about my story, I realized that I needed to write the script first. That was the problem with the podcast and the 5-Frame essay. Getting my thoughts together before I made editorial choices in iMovie was essential for my style. The ideas I was coming up with were too large, the implications and directions I could take them in too vast. I needed something more lighthearted, and as I talked over my ideas with Keri, not as heavy as my complicated, roller-coaster relationship with my mother in law. I chose a story about my grandfather's eccentricities and where they stemmed from, but I just couldn't get into it. After I got home, I decided that I needed to feel comfortable and at home in my topic. So what's something I return to in my writing? My dog. The most stereotypical, overdone subject of all, but that's what I felt good about. Then I decided I could combine my 5-Frame Essay's concept with my photo story; for some reason just thinking of that put me at ease, as if I just met my one good thought quota and I could check out for the night. I wrote out a general script and storyboard, combining ideas of compensating for my empty apartment and how my dog's absence was one of the loneliest parts of the scenario. 


Reflection on the projects

I find it interesting to see all of the different products coming out of these projects. The stories being told are lighthearted, dramatic, or touching. We all seem to be at different levels, just from conversations I have had about using technology and success with it, yet each exhibits a high level of creativity and thought behind what is going on in the story. I've heard a lot of apprehension and frustration, but I have also seen a lot of quality work. Just something worth noting. 


The flip side of throwing students in to learn the process is what happens when they are not motivated, confident students such as ourselves? What happens if a student works on a project only to create something subpar or without higher-level thought? Will they need to redo the project after seeing quality ones around them? How do we motivate them to push themselves? I think, like we've done in this class, some teaching should be involved on storytelling and what goes into a "good story." On the other hand, they are certainly learning the skills and obviously there must be some thought behind their choices. So how do we teach them to not focus on the assignment, but on the learning? Much reflection? Digital writing changes everything, but doesn't change the heart of why we write. But expressing ideas can be...you can get to the root of an idea more effectively or at least in a refreshing, interesting way. 

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Storytelling: a gift or a practiced art?


Freewrite from Wednesday Morning

I'm always more ambitious the day after...maybe the goals set in, maybe I feel more in control. 


Ira Glass...teaching storytelling is a different ballgame. I wonder how it fits into avoiding assignments and aiming for teaching. 


The building blocks are using an anecdote and sequential story and then raising a question or reflection. What is the bigger meaning? The traditional formula limits students to the guidelines and they worry about meeting their requirements...is this my topic sentence? 5 paragraphs to support? Storytelling is a narrative...a natural, magnetizing, intriguing story has suspense and a deeper thread connecting its parts. Thought goes into it. It is primal...it is so fascinating to me that telling a great story is still a necessary, valued, challenge that we attempt to master even in 2012. 


What struck me when hearing Ira Glass speak about storytelling was the ruthlessness. I loved his honesty and curtness--he gives us a nugget of truth by telling us to "abandon crap." Loved it. We have to be tough on ourselves, and if we're not struggling most of the time, there's something wrong. If it came easily, I would feel like a great writer, but I would be oblivious to the fact that I don't have ambition or that I'm not pushing the limits.


So teaching failure is essential. It's OK to flop. Really! Non graded assignments and a lot of support will help build student's confidence and willingness to try all the time.


Figure out what's not working, that's the core of it. Be "ruthless to make something better live."


Starting with the action and providing suspense  -- how do we teach this? Do we start with an image? Do we listen to great stories? Share great stories? Write and freewrite and repeat? I know we must avoid the typical format of the paper, but I'm not exactly sure where to go next. 


They can't get stuck in the hows, but in the whys. And practice. Choosing the topic should take a long, frustrating amount of time. Setting up questions in the stories should take thought. Working on those questions...


Part of me thinks that for Glass, this is an innate talent. But I know he also crafted his work tremendously. Which makes it feel more powerful and makes me feel better that there is a lot that goes into writing--for everyone. So how do I...I...who struggles with authenticity during a freewrite...get over this fear and dive into the murky waters?   

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Process

I started the photo essay with some trepidation. I've got to be honest...today I had a bit of an "off day." I was dragging before I even started working on my project, and for whatever reason I couldn't right it before the day was over. I kept telling myself to get my head in the game, but couldn't seem to muster up any deep thinking about any component of my project. I didn't have a conceptual framework, just pictures.


As I created, more and more frustrated me. Animoto was the first program I attempted to use. It worked fairly well after I found the tiny print (probably meant to be ignored) showing how I could create a 30-second movie for free. But when I began to add pictures, the fact that I didn't like the pictures I was adding coalesced with the fact that my Flash Player kept crashing started to get under my skin. I blame this on my 5-6 year old Macbook, although it's doing remarkably well for how old it is in computer years. So, no big deal - I was a little irritated, but I scrapped that project and switched to Google presentations. Google has some well-crafted templates one one page I came across. But for some reason I could not find the original page after searching for a while, and the slides I viewed on the main page were too much like PowerPoint. So I switched back to Animoto, which I used to produce my barely acceptable rough draft.  


By this point it was lunch time, and I welcomed a break. My eyes were heavy and my brain was flatlining. After lunch I had renewed zeal. After talking to others in my writing group, I gained some conceptual ideas as well as the video formats that are most compatible with blog posts (really practical information that I needed to know!) I took several photos and decided where my story needed to begin. Using iMovie this time (which, to me, was much more customizable and user friendly), I adjusted the photos to narrow my story and soon I had a coherent narrative thread running through. It's amazing how a little manipulation and pausing to reflect can really influence the entire project within a matter of minutes. I still didn't feel great about it...it just wasn't meant to be today. 


I did, however, learn the process. I learned what worked for me and what didn't -- I personally should have come up with a concept and taken time to brainstorm or reflect before I started throwing pictures in there. My reticence stood in my way today, which made me think about how I could counteract this in the classroom. I certainly think that creating a photo story was worthwhile. On any other day, I would have absolutely loved it...but my final product was bad and my sluggishness kept me from moving forward or backward to start the recursive editorial process. Taking unrelated objects and events, I created transitions. Creating those connections and synapses in my rusty brain forced me to examine the pictures and what they stood for. I made meaning out of a landscape or object, just as I would when analyzing literature. I created metaphors and a general theme. I had to summarize information and communicate using unexpected methods. I learned the creation tools of three different programs, which I will definitely be able to use in the future. I had to push through writer's block and technical obstacles. 


On our last break of the day, I sat outside by myself to recharge. [I am an introvert, which means that social interaction does not invigorate me, like extroverts; although I like it, it drains me dry.] I had two minor epiphanies that I probably already knew but needed to think about at that moment. I realized that it was good that I struggled, and that I am not a filmmaker. And, are you ready for this wallop of wisdom and insight?: My project can have flaws -- this is a draft! I kept hearing it from everyone throughout the day, but all of a sudden I just felt it. I became OK with the fact that my story was not 100%. I do not usually struggle with these types of projects. Technology is where I thrive, where I am asked for guidance. So, as we said today, it was all that much harder to bear that I wasn't getting it all the way today. But I think I'm slowly getting it through my head that I don't have to master it. When teaching, I don't think you can master every piece of technology, and I have to be more realistic about my abilities. The other thing I realized was that today, I am tired. I have been tired all day, and it has affected my work. Obviously I had been aware of the fact that I was tired, but recognizing that this was not my normal, hardworking self was a relief. 


To feel comfortable, I hope to add some depth and thought to the photo essay. I need more time considering sequence and I need more time to just view the story and see which parts are not effective.  But I consider today's failures and doldrums to be small triumphs in disguise. Learning should not come easily, and I want to keep pushing this and asking questions tomorrow.

5...er...18 Frame Story "Coping with an empty apartment"

Photo Essay

I began with no story, just around 40 pictures I had thrown around, cluttering up my desktop. After a bit of reflection, though, these feelings emerged. It's a little bit tongue in cheek, but this is my take on the emotions of staying in Springfield as my husband moved today to Kansas City for his teaching job. I will be joining him in a few weeks, but I decided to make this video a little melodramatic, since that's how I was feeling this morning as he left. I will probably edit again (I've got that "2:30 feeling" right now as I work), but this is my photo essay at this point:







My Process


I started the photo essay with some trepidation. I've got to be honest...today I had a bit of an "off day." I was dragging before I even started working on my project, and for whatever reason I couldn't right it before the day was over. I kept telling myself to get my head in the game, but couldn't seem to muster up any deep thinking about any component of my project. I didn't have a conceptual framework, just pictures.


As I created, more and more frustrated me. Animoto was the first program I attempted to use. It worked fairly well after I found the tiny print (probably meant to be ignored) showing how I could create a 30-second movie for free. But when I began to add pictures, the fact that I didn't like the pictures I was adding coalesced with the fact that my Flash Player kept crashing started to get under my skin. I blame this on my 5-6 year old Macbook, although it's doing remarkably well for how old it is in computer years. So, no big deal - I was a little irritated, but I scrapped that project and switched to Google presentations. Google has some well-crafted templates one one page I came across. But for some reason I could not find the original page after searching for a while, and the slides I viewed on the main page were too much like PowerPoint. So I switched back to Animoto, which I used to produce my barely acceptable rough draft.  


By this point it was lunch time, and I welcomed a break. My eyes were heavy and my brain was flatlining. After lunch I had renewed zeal. After talking to others in my writing group, I gained some conceptual ideas as well as the video formats that are most compatible with blog posts (really practical information that I needed to know!) I took several photos and decided where my story needed to begin. Using iMovie this time (which, to me, was much more customizable and user friendly), I adjusted the photos to narrow my story and soon I had a coherent narrative thread running through. It's amazing how a little manipulation and pausing to reflect can really influence the entire project within a matter of minutes. I still didn't feel great about it...it just wasn't meant to be today. 


I did, however, learn the process. I learned what worked for me and what didn't -- I personally should have come up with a concept and taken time to brainstorm or reflect before I started throwing pictures in there. My reticence stood in my way today, which made me think about how I could counteract this in the classroom. I certainly think that creating a photo story was worthwhile. On any other day, I would have absolutely loved it...but my final product was bad and my sluggishness kept me from moving forward or backward to start the recursive editorial process. Taking unrelated objects and events, I created transitions. Creating those connections and synapses in my rusty brain forced me to examine the pictures and what they stood for. I made meaning out of a landscape or object, just as I would when analyzing literature. I created metaphors and a general theme. I had to summarize information and communicate using unexpected methods. I learned the creation tools of three different programs, which I will definitely be able to use in the future. I had to push through writer's block and technical obstacles. 


On our last break of the day, I sat outside by myself to recharge. [I am an introvert, which means that social interaction does not invigorate me, like extroverts; although I like it, it drains me dry.] I had two minor epiphanies that I probably already knew but needed to think about at that moment. I realized [1] that it was good that I struggled, and that I am not a filmmaker. And, are you ready for this wallop of wisdom and insight?: My project can have flaws -- this is a draft! I kept hearing it from everyone throughout the day, but all of a sudden I just felt it. I became OK with the fact that my story was not 100%. I do not usually struggle with these types of projects. Technology is where I thrive, where I am asked for guidance. So, as we said today, it was all that much harder to bear that I wasn't getting it all the way today. But I think I'm slowly getting it through my head that I don't have to master it. When teaching, I don't think you can master every piece of technology, and I have to be more realistic about my abilities. The other thing I realized [2] was that  today, I am tired. I have been tired all day, and it has affected my work. Obviously I had been aware of the fact that I was tired, but recognizing that this was not my normal, hardworking self was a relief. 


To feel comfortable, I hope to add some depth and thought to the photo essay. I need more time considering sequence and I need more time to just view the story and see which parts are not effective.  But I consider today's failures and doldrums to be small triumphs in disguise. Learning should not come easily, and I want to keep pushing this and asking questions tomorrow.


Photo Essay

It's all about the process...I am letting go of my worries and showing my work as it develops. I have created a Photo Essay using Animoto. Although the transitions are not ideal and I cannot adjust the features to get exactly what I want, this is a demonstration of how I gained some skills and new knowledge about photo story creation. It's interesting to place photos together in a surprising way...I considered transitions and sequence quickly. 


Here is what I threw together. 




Try our video maker at Animoto.

Final Podcast

After listening to my podcast, I narrowed my focus and edited for clarity. Using Garage Band, I created a more scripted, thought-out podcast on the advantages of digital writing and my initial questions and thoughts on the subject. Feel free to listen to my final product and respond to it with your own questions, concerns, or comments. 


Monday, July 16, 2012

The journey is the destination.


In class earlier today, we discussed our goals for the digital writing course, what digital writing meant in our own terms, overarching questions we had thought of so far, and the differences (and if there should be divergence) between teaching digital writing and teaching the fundamental aspects of writing in a general, traditional sense. [A forewarning, in case you noticed a sudden shift from writing about dog-love to writing seriously about podcasts and other random classroom philosophies : this is the pattern most of my blogs are going to take now.]


I felt the urge to clean up my freewriting from today and post a more coherent, readable document, in case I want to find anything later this week. (Organizing and revising a blog post, incidentally, is one of the issues below that I hope to find more about in the next few days.) So here are my main "take-aways" from what I mulled over today in class. 


Goals for this class

Over the next two weeks, I hope to...: 
  • Beg, steal, and borrow great digital writing ideas and resources; tailor those ideas for my own individual classes and students, and use those as a launching pad to brainstorm new ideas. 
  • Reflect on what works and what doesn't.
  • Grow in digital presence and writing abilities
  • Explore my writing process and take away implications from the perspective of the learner.
  • Discover and become fully able to provide a rationale for digital communication.
  • Overcome fear/negativity towards blogs and be able to fully defend use of them.
  • Explore guidelines and instructions for several forms of digital writing.

Questions I hope to explore

Many times, finding a well-posed, provoking question can be just as profound and compelling as finding an answer (if that's even possible in the cases below). Here are some of my initial questions, although I'm sure they will evolve over the week: 
  • How can I get past distractions/technicalities? What is the balance of teaching software or online programs without bogged down? What's the most efficient path to enhancing learning instead of distracting from it? 
  • How can I fully utilize the intended purpose of wikis in my classroom (using them to see the writing process as an evolving, dynamic document and as a reflective tool)? 
  • How can I get students to take over the classroom and teach each other? 
  • What are some ways to counteract the negative, superficial stereotypes that blogs have gained? How can I get students to move past the bad wrap blogging has gotten as a non-legitimate place to rant? Can there be premeditation and a structured writing process in blogging? If so, how can I stress this to students? 
  • How can I facilitate authentic responses to online discussion or writing? 

Just an observation, after writing this...I am still writing without much concern for cohesion and without pithy, thought-provoking reflections. I definitely thought that if there was ever a time, this would be the place and setting in which I would be more reflective...I thought I would be getting to the truth of the matter, but either the English language or my brain seems to be unable to capture the thoughts running around. I definitely know from experience, though, that writing is a muscle which needs exercise. That time and effort I have not given recently, so I've got to try harder and practice and humble myself to realize that I can't have it all without putting in the work. But recognizing that fallibility, I'm realizing right now, is something I need to be aware of. I need to put myself in the place of my students so that I can guide them from my own writing process. So this is trial by fire, and I can blaze the trail and report back to my students about how (and why!) to keep writing when other leisurely temptations seem more exciting or when the writing just isn't flowing. 





Podcast Trial Run

Podcast rough draft 

Adventures in Podcasting

Since this was my first time attempting to create a podcast, I had many apprehensions. "Podcast...that's pretty involved, right? Only experts do those, and I'm not even sure what it encompasses." I felt a little like I was experiencing my first day of school...the jitters set in, though there wasn't really any rational reason for it. So I jumped in...the waters were easygoing, though, and minus a few hiccups it seemed fairly straightforward. 


Adam and I first drafted some questions we thought would be informative; they had to produce enough meaningful content for developed discussion and cover the topics we had been thinking about in class so far. Since Adam and I have had varying experiences with digital writing (he being more of an expert online presence and me being a novice), we kept the questions fairly generic. After some revision, we settled on asking each other the following three questions (in various forms): 
  • What are some overarching questions you have about digital writing? 
  • How have you incorporated digital writing in past classroom environments? 
  • Do you think we as teachers should approach digital writing differently than traditional writing?
Next we had to figure out some technicalities of the software. Learning by trial and error, we each attempted to record using our knowledge from other programs. Adam's recording software was on an iPad, while mine was on a MacBook. No major issues arose -- we didn't completely break any hardware -- but we did run into some obstacles. This may have been a positive experience, as I know I will be dealing with inevitable roadblocks in technology when students begin to go out on their own to write. We did not ask questions, as I'm sure a high school student would do, but changed several settings and hoped for the best. This feeling of ineptitude with technology was new, since I generally feel at home with it. I personally didn't mind, since we had time to complete the assignment, but I noted the confusion and frustration that could at any minute rear up for a students unfamiliar with related technologies.  I feel that watching a quick tutorial on YouTube might be the best solution to cover the broadest range of experience levels. If anyone was still struggling I could have students help each other or I could walk them through the process. This was one example of a time when learning the technology was paramount to the lesson, though not the complete focus. I would like to spend less time learning technical features and more time recording, but I know that with more use the technology would become secondary.

We threw out the first few rounds, since the recording looped on itself or recorded in multiple layers. We also didn't know how in-depth to make it, but we did mostly impromptu speaking which made it laid back...it was a good introduction to podcasting, since we weren't as worried about what to say, but the process of recording it. It didn't have to be perfect, which was a useful lesson to learn in conjunction with editing.

Because we are in the preliminary stages of creating the podcast, it is difficult to judge my process and the difficulty this project posed. I am still learning how our conversation will turn into a cohesive interview, and what features we can take advantage of with Garage Band. I have a general idea of the final product, but it's all up in the air at this point. 

Classroom applications

I would love to use Voicethread for responding to literature or to comment on other student projects. It seems to accommodate auditory learners...many like to talk through their thoughts and cannot write as fast as they think. I also love the idea of students reading a piece of their writing aloud to hear their voice or errors that they wouldn't catch just through reading their writing silently. 


Sunday, July 8, 2012

writer's block

Confessions of a perfectionist writer

This is going to read more like a diary entry, but it needed to be written at the time. I needed to work through some of my issues with writing, so here they are--my personal thoughts. There's your disclaimer...hopefully the next post will be a bit more professional and coherent.


Writing. All pretenses aside, capturing my thoughts on paper and, more often, online has been one scary, unpredictable horror movie for me in the past. One that is too realistic with ups and downs. Sometimes I don't know the scary part (or the happy part) when I see it. Which makes it all the more unreasonable that I majored in writing. But I think--I know--I can leverage my transforming writing process to use in the classroom, and share my triumphs and failures to help my future students. I've been rereading The Reading/Writing Connection in the Secondary Classroom and I have found some inherent truths that leapt from the page and screamed, "This is you, Allison!" The keys to a successful and efficient reader/writer (which are emblematic of the troubled, fearful writer) boil down to confidence, rereading, and questioning. But confidence in particular has been something I struggle with daily in every form of my own writing, namely within my voice. 

I write and feel relief, but just know that it is poor writing. So I put the writing away without looking--I can't look at something that I know could be better. So, really, I have a terrible issue with perfectionism and the fallible language I use to write with (or maybe my ignorance of the words). I do feel like I have it in me to write well, but it takes so much time and stressing and head-clutching that I shy away from any form of heavy writing. Though I may have captured a thought, it has to be in the correct words--not close, but correct. And when it's not good enough (and most of the time, it's not for me) I feel inauthentic and dishonest. As in the words of my grandma's favorite mantra, "when she was good, she was really, really good and when she was bad she was hor-rid." 




My actions become irrational when I am writing something I think is accurate. My husband will come over to say kind words but I make him leave (and sometimes bark at him like a Marine) because I have to finish the thought or I will feel terribly incomplete for the rest of the hour. I usually lose the thought unless I hurriedly scrawl it down immediately. 


I was considering my writing process the other night as I wrote a poetry analysis paper, because it was causing me unduly amounts of anguish.  Reflection caused me to realize how many times I have written a line that was copied word for word from my thoughts, reread it, and realized it did not capture the thought. A sentence can use the exact, formulaic combination and selection of words for the job (at least to the best of my knowledge), but the thought is still just not quite captured. 


But writing something and getting it almost perfect is extremely gratifying, which is why I keep coming back for more. I write to inform, to discover, to communicate, and to offer myself catharsis. And I think those are reasons enough to keep trying to get it right. Communication is vastly important in every profession, and I feel this urge to keep working at it and keep feeling that sigh of relief when I come close to conveying a particularly complex idea.