Sunday, May 31, 2015

Viking Staff Standout: Mr. Radomski


IBM Selectric Typewriter. The first computer I ever used
looked a lot like this. (I still have a
Selectric in a closet at home; it probably works.)
(www.theatlantic.com)
One day back in 1968 or 1969, my 11th grade math teacher at San Diego High could barely contain his excitement. The district had lent our school a computer for two weeks! We were given an assignment to go over to this really little room and write a program for the quadratic formula. The computer was the size and shape of an IBM Selectric typewriter and had no monitor. If you wanted to see what you had typed in, you looked on the paper that was fed into the machine. I wrote my program, typed in some values, got an answer, and left. I was underwhelmed. Computers? No big deal. No future in them that I could see.
I’m nowhere near 100 years old, but I’m 63% of the way there. (Sixty-three is 63% of 100. See how quickly I did that—in my head even. I don’t understand how I got a D in that 11th grade math class.) When I think of centenarians, I marvel at how much technology has changed in their lifetimes. In my own life technology has gone from black-and-white TVs to Netflix and HBO Go; from analog calculators to the Apple Watch; from computers that took up whole walls to iPhones and iPads that do so much more. Remember that scene in the movie Apollo 13?
Slide Rule. Looks complicated, right?
(www.hpmuseum.org)
The height of educational technology when I was in that 11th grade math class was the slide rule. (Remember that scene in Apollo 13?) Slide rules let you perform calculations by sliding—well, rulers—and a plastic cursor that moved over the rulers. You had to know about logarithms. I wasn’t very good with a slide rule. I ditched school a lot in 11th grade. (Now I remember why I earned that D in math.)
I used a paper and pencil all through grades 1 – 12 and at City College. At UCSD, I was forced to use a typewriter. My students will tell you how poorly I type. (I got a D in typing too, in 8th grade at National City Junior High.) I made a lot of errors when I typed and had to correct them with slips of paper or plastic that had chalk on one side. Like white out—but chalky, dusty, time-consuming, demeaning. When they brought out electronic typewriters that held 1K of memory, I shouted Hallelujah! No more chalky correction tape. I didn’t care that I could only see 15 characters at a time in a little screen the size of a band-aid.
An electronic typewriter like this let me just backspace
over errors, saving me from lots of corrections. See the
little window above the keys. I could proofread the
whole document, 15 characters at a time, before I
printed it out. But the storage was only about 1K,
enough for about half a page of text.
(www.imgbuddy.com)
When I started teaching at Sweetwater High in 1987, we had a lab of Macintosh SE computers. Ooh, MacWrite was so cool. You could change indents and fonts and styles and print it out on a LaserWriter instead of a dot-matrix printer. In 1988, I came to Mar Vista Middle school, which had a lab of Apple 2E computers—and dot-matrix printers. But I was the newspaper advisor and so my classroom had two Macintosh SE’s and a LaserWriter. Ooh, my classroom sizzled with technology! Of course, kids had to take turns typing their handwritten news articles into the page layout application we used.
Macintosh SE. The case in the back was
molded so you could carry it. Note the two
floppy disk slots. This computer did not
have a hard drive, like most of our SE's.
This meant a lot of disk swapping because
the system software and the page layout
software would not fit on the same floppy
disk. (www.vectronicsappleworld.com)
Storage was always a problem in the late 80s and early 90s. Very few of the computers had hard drives (and hard drive capacity was measured in megabytes, not gigabytes or terabytes). We eventually had a bunch of hand-me-down Mac SE’s in room 304, which was originally an art room and looked like room 608. My newspaper staff needed three floppy disks to do their work—a system disk, an application disk, and a personal storage disk. To save an article, students had to eject one floppy disk, insert their personal storage floppy, click on the Save button, and then swap disks back and forth a couple of times.
The floppy disks we used in the 90s looked
like this. This is a 3.5 inch disk. They held
1.2 megabytes of data. I had trays full of these.
(See below) (www.en.wikipedia.org)


I remember a year in the early 90s when one of our students had her own webpage. Mr. Matson, Mr. Kracha (yes, Mr.), and I were talking about it. We were so envious. We thought she must be a genius. Heck, I think Mr. Matson was the only one who had actually even been on the internet. I had no idea how you even accessed the internet.
Now our students have iPads—at least until they get to tenth grade—and they can do research on the net and edit videos and make slideshows and play games—well, that sucks—and explore the cosmos and chemistry and biology. As Shakespeare said in the play The Tempest, “O brave new world.” Imagine what educational technology will be like when our students are grandparents and try to tell their grandkids about iPads. How crude and comical they will seem to those children.
At last there will be no more keyboards. Hallelujah!
This is an 8-inch floppy disk. Capacity was in the kilobyte range. They really were floppy. I used one of these (or maybe a 5.25 inch one) in my first and only programming class at UCSD. I got a B, but I was so clueless most of the time that I gave up my goal of a double major in linguistics and computer science. (Well, that and the fact that I failed my first physics test and dropped the class.) We saved our files on these. I only needed one for the whole class.
(www.everyoneisstupidbutme.com)

Mr. Radomski is a veteran teacher at Mar Vista Academy. He teaches 8th grade English, and constantly amuses the staff with his quick wit and wisdom. He regularly attends technology trainings, and is not afraid to try new technology with students. Thank you Mr. Radomski for taking the time to write about your technology history! 


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Viking Staff Standout: Mrs. Link

As a first year teacher, coming in to a school that had a 1:1 student to iPad ratio was a bit intimidating. I wasn't sure how I was going to incorporate an iPad in to my daily teaching because although I had an iPad that I used for my personal use, I had never used it for educational purposes. It took me a few months to get comfortable teaching with an iPad but luckily I have wonderful students in my classes who would help teach me how to use certain apps throughout the school year as well as a supportive staff who was willing to help. If I had a question related to Notability, Canvas or Jupiter usually a student could help me out. Now in my 7th grade math classes we use the iPad for nearly everything. I am definitely not an expert when it comes to technology and I have a lot more to learn but I am constantly looking for new apps and ideas to try in order to make the content interesting for my students. Lucky for me, we have a number of teachers on our campus who are very good with technology and discovering new apps and they are quick to share the information with the rest of the staff. I am really looking forward to continuing to learn about new apps and how to use them in my classroom next year.


Another great change for the upcoming year is that our new textbook is available as an e-book and includes a number of electronic resources that will be extremely beneficial to our students both in the classroom and when working independently at home. Not only will the "homework help" feature make it easier for students to complete their homework but it includes a parent guide for parents to provide assistance as well.


The apps or programs I use the most often are Notability, Jupiter Grades, Brainpop and Kahoot. Every file, resource, or homework assignment is given to the students through Jupiter. Jupiter makes it really easy to upload a file or link and students can easily find it in downloads and open it in Notability. PDF files work best when opening in Notability and once open, students can write anywhere on the file with their finger or using a text box and it is easy to upload pictures or figures as well. Students complete all their Cornell notes using Notability and as long as their Notability is backing up to their Google Drive even if they have to turn in their iPad the work is saved.


Kahoot is definitely a favorite in my classroom for both the students and myself. Kahoot allows me to check for understanding and/or review for an assessment and receive immediate feedback as to how well the class as a whole understands the content. Students love it because it is interactive, allows them to compete with one another to answer the questions as quickly as possible but they must be sure the answers are correct if they want to stay on the leaderboard. The next app I would love to incorporate next year is Socrative because it is similar to Kahoot but allows students to work at their own pace while still competing with other students.

Starting as a first year teacher I was extremely nervous to incorporate an iPad in to my teaching but now looking back it's hard to imagine teaching my class without it.

Mrs. Link is a first year teacher at Mar Vista Academy. She quickly adapted to teaching with iPads, and has quickly become an all-star teacher. Her students adore her, and we love seeing her get involved in more areas of MVA. Thanks Mrs. Link for taking the time to write about your experiences with iPads in your classroom! 

Welcome!

Welcome to the MVA Viking Technology Blog!

This blog will be used by teachers, parents, and students at Mar Vista Academy to highlight the was we use technology at school. It is our goal to showcase our students' and teachers' best work, and share with the community how we engage, educate, and empower on daily basis through our use of technology.

As we close out the 2014-15 school year, we will be preparing for a summer filled with technology, learning, and gearing up for an incredible 2015-16 school year!

Comment below with what you would like to see featured on this blog. 

Happy tech-ing!
-Ms Venturino