Archive for April, 2012

Socrative – A free student response system

April 9th, 2012

I know that schools are pushing for more technology use and one of those ways is through student response systems, “clickers” that students can key in their responses and get instant feedback. The positive is that teachers can assess the entire class at once instead of just the one or two students that get called on per question. The negatives are the cost and, closely related, the proprietary nature of the devices. (You have to use that company’s clickers on their software.)

Socrative gets around that. This is perfect for the computer lab or a mobile lab. The teacher creates a classroom and a quiz. Socrative generates the room number. Students then go to Socrative and type in the room number. They type in their name and then are presented with the quiz.

I did my test run with a laptop and my phone, with the laptop being the teacher station. My phone showed a message that said it was waiting on the teacher. Once I was ready on the laptop, it automatically updated on my phone and I answered the sample question. The teacher station then saw what I got and started a grade report. Students don’t see how their classmates scored, which is good. They are able to see if they got the right answer if you set up the quiz to do that. There is also a game mode called Space Race where they are divided into two teams and their right answers fuel their rockets. It’s not a huge motivator, but it still beats a worksheet.

What is great is that the reports export to Excel. There is also a quiz creation template in Excel that you can import so that you can make a backup copy and not have to rely solely on an online copy. The fact that it’s free definitely helps.

With more school districts moving towards a “bring your own teachnology” policy for portable devices, I see a lot of potential for this.

Adding a weather forecast to your Google calendar

April 3rd, 2012


In your main Google calendar’s general settings (accessible from the gear icon), there are fields to fill in about your calendar. If you put in your zip code and then check the weather forecast button, it will add a little weather forecast graphic to your calendar. I think it’s useful, if only for the month of April in Arizona. Soon the forecast will be redundant: a slight chance of melting.

Investigating the Mafia by Carla Mooney

April 2nd, 2012

I’m always on the search for engaging nonfiction for my students and I just finished reading Investigating the Mafia by Carla Mooney.

What I appreciate about the book is that it does not glorify the Mafia. This is not The Sopranos or The Godfather. Mooney describes the history of the Mafia and what they’ve done, but more of the focus is on how the FBI and prosecutors work to stop organized crime.

There are lots of photos and inserts, which I appreciate in a nonfiction book like this. Even better, the photos are interesting without being gruesome. It’s enough to help the pacing of the text.

The reading level is spot-on for junior high students and the organization of the text makes it easy to progress from one thought to the next.

The thing that really surprised me about the book was that, even into the 1960’s, members of the U.S. government denied the existence of organized crime families. In the 1980’s, the use of RICO laws helped expose the Commission and the five families of New York.

For students using this for independent reading projects, I would connect this to fiction like Son of the Mob by Gordon Korman or Don’t Look Behind You by Lois Duncan.

GMail Tap

April 1st, 2012

Google always has great April Fool’s Day jokes. Some were pretty far-fetched, like the mind control features of Google Docs, but this GMail keyboard is pretty convincing: