I need to flesh out a rough idea I have for my fifth graders this marking period. I'm their technology education teacher, and have had the idea that they could get into a project that focuses on environmentalism, but which hits on the ISTE standards at the same time.
I've got my plans set for my 4th graders. 6th, 7th, & 8th grades are all dialed in. But I'm totally hitting a roadblock with 5th.
Here's what I've got so far:
- I'm about to do two lessons on internet research, focusing on how to determine the relability of an information source.
Thoughts on this topic would be great, expecially in light of our ongoing discussion about the read/write web. In the era of citizen journalism, how to determine veracity?
- I'm calling the project 'Earth 2060', and asking my 5th graders to imagine the earth in 50 years - within their lifetimes. It's a place where non-renewable energy sources have been depleated, and new sources of energy have needed to be instituted.
- I want them to work in small groups (I'm thinking groups of 3) to research select energy resources, including:
- Wind
- Solar
- Geothermal
- Nuclear
- Hydroelectric
- Coal
- Natural Gas/Oil
- Biomass
- At the end of the project, I'm anticipating that they will be able to:
- Pros and Cons of their energy source
- Defend the energy source they
- So, I'm asking myself:
- What will my students be able to do at the end of this unit?
- PowerPoint basics
- Internet research basics
- MS Word basics (table, list, insert picture, footnotes/endnotes)
- Use citations
- Articulate pros and cons for different types of energy
- Read charts and analyze data!
- Understand unfamiliar units of measurement (ex: Kwh)
- What will student know at the end of this unit?
- How different energy sources actually work.
- Energy needs are projected to increase
- There are tradeoffs for any type of energy (pros and cons)
- Different websites and information sources have different agendas and points of view.
- What will students produce to demonstrate their understanding?
- A PowerPoint presentation about THEIR selected source of energy, it’s pros and cons, and the ability to argue for it in the face of other alternatives.
- An accompanying paper articulating their main points.
- Possible: Research the history of a given energy source, and be able to articulate the positive and hopeful discoveries, along with the discoveries of it’s dangers and negative attributes.
- The PowerPoint & Word skills are ones that I think are necessary at this stage - foundational skills that they can build and expand on in other classes and later in their academic career. But they feel stultifying and dry. How to pep them up? (I'm thinking maybe of using voicestream as an extention for the PowerPoint - you can load a presentation right up in there...)
- Any one know of age appropriate resources for students to find this data? I've been hunting, and so many resources are over their heads.
Thanks, hive mind!
11 comments:
I like the idea of teaching about Internet source reliability. I often use a webquest about this. It has the students learn what to look for in a reliable source, they each take on one aspect and discuss the pros and cons of 4 websites that I provide. But all four websites are made up and fake. Look here
You may also want to check out other webquests to address the energy topic.
When in doubt, I Google...and I couldn't help but do so when you posed your question about determining the reliability of an internet source. Check out this blog post: http://sourcesandmethods.blogspot.com/2008/10/how-to-determining-source-reliability.html
Maybe something you find there will be helpful!
When I am between a rock and hard place, I always look for videos on the internet. Google searching always has brings up pictures or videos to bring into your classroom. I know with my school district it can get tricky because of our school internet filter. I would have the kids pick a resource and demonstrate the effects of it during and after it is used and put it in the powerpoint. Check out this page with the video for help:
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=Coal&hl=en&emb=0&aq=f#q=Coal+burning&hl=en&emb=0
Thanks for your thoughts and links.
Elizabeth, the resource you provided is very timely: after a presentation to my 4th & 5th grade classes on reliable websites, the school librarian and I got into an extended conversation about the prospect of having kids use multiple sources to try to determine the veracity of their research. She tended to think that only through life experience can one come to know what institutions are reputable (and what their reputations are) - and for young kids, it's best to defer to the librarian as the expert resource.
I love my librarians, don't get me wrong- but I'm still open to the possibility that 'the collective' can produce quality results. Please don't ask me to ask how yet. Just a feeling I have.
Brett -
Thanks for the suggestion of the videos. I was looking for pep, and I know that even for myself, I pay better attention to a presentation when it incorporates video. I'll nose around and see if I can't find some applicable videos.
I posted earlier tonight about the prospect of using my Delicious Network as a starting point for finding content instead of reflexively heading to Google. I wonder if this technique would work well for videos and other media...
Well young man,
This is your lucky day! I was just at a sustainable-renewable festival last weekend.
You can teach your students that they can trust the government websites because reliable information is their job. These websites often have teacher lesson plans for various grade levels...You may have to dig a little on these sites but I can get you close…
I live in Pennsylvania so I will give you those. Just put your own state into the address and you should get the equivalent site.
First, the obvious: NEA.org (National Education Association) ED.gov (Federal government website) http://www.pde.state.pa.us/ (Pennsylvania Department of Education) NOAA http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/welcome.html http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/ PA Department of Agriculture; PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources; PA Department of Natural Resources; Sustainable Forestry Initiative of PA; Endless Mountains RC&D Council; Cycle4ward Inc.;
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=k12_schools.bus_schoolsk12
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/kids/index.html THIS IS A REALLY GOOD ONE FOR YOU.
AND:
http://www.edutopia.org/sage-advice-how-green-classroom
http://www.sciencedaily.com/
http://readyclassroom.discoveryeducation.com/tt_68.cfm
http://www.globalchange.gov/resources/educators/toolkit
http://www.conservationtools.org/library/general/show/367
TO EXPLORE:
http://www.paenergyfest.com/
http://www.energizetheclassroom.com/
http://www.worksheetlibrary.com/teachingtips/icebreakers.html
http://wanderinweeta.blogspot.com/2009/09/early-bird-gets-worm-irfd-2009-1.html
http://www.sciencefix.com/
http://weblogg-ed.com/2007/kids-social-networks-learning/
http://www.350.org/ 350ppm CO2 is the limit that is safe for humanity. Climate action day is October 24th.
Sorry the hyperlinks did not translate.
Annamae
I guess it's time for a comment from the librarian in the room... I am wondering why this is not a collaborative project with either your librarians (who you love) or the fifth grade classroom teachers. Are you always on your own for research projects? Are you supposed to align your projects to state learning standards/District critical content as well as the NETS standards? I'm just curious, since this is what I do! Our state standards regarding research at the elementary school level require the use of both print/nonprint resources. Myriad learning styles are represented in grades 2-5, and some of my students are much more comfortable with print resources. Consequently, I introduce them all (books/encyclopedias/websites). Students must cite at least three sources no matter the grade level/research project, but they can choose which ones they use.
In my school, the librarian is also the tech teacher, so I integrate technology into many of my research projects as a way for students to demonstrate their learning. More questions! Have your fifth graders already typed reports in Word and made powerpoints prior to this year? If you would like to try something less static, I suggest Photo Story 3 for Windows. It is a free download from Microsoft, very kid-friendly, and results in a high-quality, "I-can't-wait-to-show-my-parents" project. I use it with my fourth graders as the culmination of their research on national parks. Partnered students research a national park of their choice, using guiding questions I create. Selected websites are placed on the school's fourth grade homepage, but your kids could search on their own as part of your teaching the concept of website relevance. They find appropriate images online (a secondary lesson is learning how to use folders to organize information on their network student drives) and print them out in contact sheets. Then, they use storyboards (one per photo) to create scripts for a travelogue. In Photo Story 3, they import their saved photos, narrate each slide from their storyboards, insert transitions, and "create music" underneath the narration. Title and credit slides are digital photos I take of each pair. However, my fifth graders take individual/group photos themselves, so I'm sure with a mini-lesson from you, your students could do that, too. When the photo stories are completed, we view them as a class; students can compare/contrast their national parks with others, and also learn how to improve their writing (expository and persuasive) and speaking (fluency). In fifth grade, we've also had students research, write scripts, and video "newscasts" on various topics. I can't wait to hear what you decide to do!
Annamae provided you with many great websites. You might also try using KidsClick, a subject directory for kids. It provides reading levels and info on illustrations. Nettrekker is good for this, too, but it requires a subscription. In terms of teaching website relevancy, accuracy, bias, etc., you might check out RADCAB.
Here are my links (not actual links; when I have time, I'll figure that out)!
Photo Story 3:
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/digitalphotography/PhotoStory/default.mspx
KidsClick:
http://kidsclick.org/midenvi.html
RADCAB:
http://www.radcab.com/
Additional energy site (I didn't see this on A's list):
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/kids/energy.cfm?page=3
Unfortunately, I don't have any magical answers for you.... but I am here to encourage your efforts. The project you are embarking upon is important in several ways: (1) the internet will most certainly be the way that most of your students get and continue to get much of their information/news/entertainment and (2) the topic of looking deeper into alternative fuels is relevant and timely since it is most likely that today's 5th graders will be the ones who are further developing and fine-tuning our use of alternate fuels in the future. Sounds like a great start.
Annamae -
You've provided me with a wealth of resources! I've added them all to my delicious account, and have begun to go deeper with a select few. Thanks.
librarygirl8,
Yes, currently I AM on my own for research projects. I don't particularly like it. I want to think that I'm moving toward greater integration with the regular ed teachers in the various grade levels I hit on, but it's tough: my role is as a specials teacher, like art or gym or music.
So from a scheduling perspective, I take approximately one quarter of the kids in the school for a marking period, then they are off to another special next marking period. Integrating research projects has been difficult, b/c I'd be doing the same lessons & projects with kids in the same grade level at different times all school year long. Lame excuse, but it's a genuine stumbling block nonetheless.
I'm required to hit just the ISTE standards - not those for any particular discipline.
Thanks for the excellent suggestions for the lesson, and for introducing me to RADCAB and PhotoStory3. These types of conversations and resources are just what I was hoping for.
Dawn -
Thanks for your insight and encouragement!
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