Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
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Xmss ict lesson template carol ann martin
1. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
SUBJECT AREA: History GRADE LEVEL:
Name of Teacher: Carol Ann Martin Secondary 3 Express
LESSON TITLE: TIME ALLOTTED:
Authoritarian Regimes: Case Study of Nazi Germany Two Hours
LESSON DESCRIPTION: (Write a concise description of what occurs in this lesson.)
Grounded in Constructivism, this ICT lesson aimed at enabling students to construct their own knowledge and
formulate independent opinions. As self-directed learners, students were tasked with examining events and
phenomena of a new chapter â the rise of Hitler and Nazi Germany. The various discussion forums on Xmoogle
provided students with platforms to reason about cases, debate convincingly by selecting relevant information and
offer constructive feedback on their peers' ideas.
Also emphasised in this lesson was the concept of causation integral to the study of history. Through the use of a
digital timeline, students were made to draw connections between events of preceding chapters and those of their
new topic. This emphasis on causation granted them a more holistic understanding, especially of the long-term causes
of Hitler's rise to power.
CLASSROOM LAYOUT AND GROUPING OF STUDENTS:
(Where will the learning take place? How will the room be organized with the computers? How will the students be
grouped (class group, individuals, pairs, small groups, etcâŠ)
The learning took place in a computer lab.
INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES:
(Identification of the specific learning outcomes expected to happen based on Competency Standards.)
By the end of the lesson, students are to:
1. Create a digital timeline to identify patterns and causation across multiple chapters.
2. Analyse, evaluate and provide justifications whether Hitler's rise to power accrued more from favourable
circumstances or his own talents.
3. Offer constructive feedback on peers' arguments while developing flexibility in accepting and/or synthesising
alternative opinions.
4. Emphathise with certain aspects of Hitler's childhood and analyse whether one's social environment predetermines
or even justifies oneâs character and actions.
2. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
a b c d
Creativity & Innovation
⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Communication &
Collaboration ⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Research and Fluency
⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Critical Thinking,
Problem Solving and
Decision Making
⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Digital Citizenship
⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Technology Operations
and Concepts ⥠⥠⥠âĄ
Creativity and Innovation
Students demonstrate creative thinking, construct knowledge, and develop innovative products and processes using
technology. Students:
a. Apply existing knowledge to generate new ideas, products, or processes.
Communication and Collaboration
Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including a distance, to
support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others. Students:
a. Interact, collaborate, and publish with peers, experts, or others employing a variety of digital environments and
media.
Research and Information Fluency
Students apply digital tools to gather, evaluate, and use information. Students:
b. Locate, organise, analyse, evaluate, synthesise, and ethically use information from a variety of sources and media.
c. Evaluate and select information sources and digital tools based on the appropriateness to specific tasks.
Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making
Students use critical thinking skills to plan and conduct research, manage projects, solve problems, and make
informed decisions using appropriate digital tools and resources. Students:
c. Collect and analyse data to identify solutions and/or make informed decisions.
d. Use multiple processes and diverse perspectives to explore alternative solutions.
3. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Digital Citizenship
Students understand human, cultural, and societal issues related to technology and practice legal and ethical
behavior. Students:
c. Demonstrate personal responsibility for lifelong learning.
Technology Operations and Concepts
Students demonstrate a sound understanding of technology concepts, systems, and operations. Students:
a. Understand and use technology systems.
MATERIALS, RESOURCES AND TECHNOLOGY:
1. Materials and Resources for this Lesson (special devices)
ï§Xmoogle with embedded websites
ï§Instructions on creating a digital timeline
2. Technology Components for this Lesson
ï§ Computer with internet connection
3. Web Site for this Lesson
ï§ Timeline website: http://www.timetoast.com/
ï§ Websites on the factors for Hitler's Rise:
http://www.johndclare.net/Weimar1.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtG7Wa188dg
ï§ Websites on Hitler's childhood:
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/adolf_hitler.htm
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/hitler_01.shtml
http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/riseofhitler/success.htm
4. Computer Software for this Lesson
ï§Nil
STUDENTâS PRESENT LEVEL OF PERFORMANCE AND KNOWLEDGE:
( Do the students have the adequate knowledge to complete the lesson successfully? What pre-requisite skills must
the students have to complete the lesson content? Include technology skills.)
Students should be able to:
1. Access the internet (to create the digital timeline) - Browser and Google search engine.
2. Have basic typing skills - to post their comments on the discussion board.
3. Understand the basic features of Xmoogle - "posting" and "replying" a discussion thread.
4. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
INSTRUCTIONAL PROCEDURES / LESSON FLOW:
Students are prompted to login to their individual
Xmoogle accounts.
Step 1: Creating a Digital Timeline
ï§Students accessed the step-by-step instruction guide
embedded on Xmoogle (Figure 1).
ï§They then proceeded to create the timeline in pairs.
One student's computer was be used to screen the
instructions while the other's to create the timeline.
ï§Students referred to Chapters 2 and 4 of their
textbooks, selected poignant events and plotted them
on the digital timeline (Figure 2).
ï§Students published their timelines on Xmoogle and
could access each other's products to identify
similarities or information gaps.
ï§Students can choose to view the timeline as a "list"
that can be printed out for revision purposes (Figure 3).
Figure 1: Instruction Manual for Creating Timelines
Figure 2: Sample Timeline created by Students
Figure 3: Timeline viewed as a List
5. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Step 2: Analysing patterns and Causation from Timeline
ï§In order to scaffold students in making meaning from their timelines, they were provided these
guiding questions:
(1) Look at your time-line. What were the most tumultuous years in German history and why?
(2) Look at your time-line. Which were the relatively more peaceful years (1918-1933) in Germany
and why?
(3) Did designing the time-line help you understand the content of Chap 2 and 4 better? Explain why
or why not.
ï§Despite not having been taught Chapter 4, all students were able to identify and explain the patterns
of peace and instability in German history (Figure 4).
ï§Question (3) provided valuable feedback for the teacher to assess the effectiveness of digital
timelines as a studying technique (Figure 5).
Figure 4: A student's response identifying patterns and trends from the timeline
Figure 5: Reflections from students demonstrating their understanding of causation from the timelines
6. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Step 3: Self-directed Research & Evaluation
ï§Students were given an outline of the chapter on Xmoogle, highlighting the key concepts and issues.
ï§Students were also given a guiding question to provide focus to their search:
"Was Hitler's rise to power due to luck and favourable circumstances or due to his talents and
abilities?"
ï§They were then tasked with exploring the various pre-selected websites embedded on Xmoogle to
find out more about the reasons for Hitler's rise to power (Figures 6 and 7).
ï§The websites were varied in media types ranging from print sources, podcasts to videos.
ï§Students were then prompted to evaluate the various factors for Hitler's rise to power, arrange their
points with supporting facts and post their views on the discussion board (Figure 8).
-
Figure 6: Print website embedded on Xmoogle Figure 7: Video embedded on Xmoogle
Figure 8: Studentâs post on the discussion forum
7. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Step 4: Peer Editing
ï§Thereafter, students responded to their peer's posts (Figure 9).
ï§It was heartening to see how students provided in-depth and very useful feedback to their peers, either by
Improving one anotherâs essay structure or identifying loopholes in reasoning.
Figure 9: Studentsâ feedback on their peersâ responses
Step 5: Emphatise with Hitler's childhood and discuss the idea of one's character being predetermined by the
social environment.
ï§Students had to piece together aspects of Hitler's childhood by exploring three pre-selected websites
embedded on Xmoogle (Figure 10).
ï§Guiding questions were posed to focus their research:
1. How did his childhood experience shape the man he eventually became?
2. When, where and why did he start hating the Jews?
3. What are your feelings towards him after knowing his past and why?
ï§Students then posted their answers and thoughts on the discussion forum (Figure 11).
ï§Teacher's role was integral in this forum in terms of drawing parallels to moral values and character
education, especially in response to Question 3 above (Figure 12).
Figure 10: Embedded websites on Hitlerâs childhood and relationships
8. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Figure 11: Studentsâ responses to Question 3
Figure 12: Teacherâs feedback to Question 3 - on whether Hitlerâs troubled childhood justified his future actions
SUPPLEMENTAL ACTIVITIES:
1. Additional activities to expand the lesson
Students can be tasked with identifying other key questions on the topic and initiating their own discussion
threads. For instance, one student started a thread on whether Hitler's signature moustache had any
bearing on his charisma (Figure 13).
9. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
Figure 13: Student-initiated discussion thread on the significance of Hitlerâs moustache
Later, upon further research, the class discovered that Hitler's "toothpaste" moustache was in fact a form of
social resistance. In the past, German aristocrats would sprout long, flowy beards as a sign of their
nobility. Hence in the 1920s, working class Germans started having "toothbruth" moustaches to show their
resistance against the upper class. What started as a cheeky thread turned out to have a greater sociological
significance.
2. Remediation activities for the student needing more instruction and practices
Students can pose their questions in the forum specially set up for this purpose. Peers and teachers will
then contribute to answering these questions.
âClinicâ forums were also set up for Source-based and Structured-Essay Questions for students to pose any
queries on Xmoogle. These forums will be available online the entire year.
3. Assignments
As homework, students were tasked with writing a Structured-Essay question on a modified version
of the same discussion topic:
The following factors were equally important in allowing Hitler to rise to power:
(i) Legacy of the Treaty of Versailles
(ii) Hitlerâs charisma
(iii) The Great Depression
Do you agree with this statement? Explain your answer [12 marks].
10. XMSS LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE: Using ICT in Teaching and Learning
ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION:
How will you measure the studentâs success? Formally or informally? Formal evaluation of student work requires that
a grade is taken while informal might be monitoring of work, or class discussion. This section should contain a
description of the assessment process, the criteria for achievement, and performance levels. The criteria should
directly align to objectives and instruction. Describe your plan for providing feedback to your students.
1. Feedback via Discussion Forums
Teacher can monitor students' progress on the discussion forums and respond with feedback and suggestions
for improvement.
2. Structured-Essay Question Assignment
Upon submitting their essays, the teacher can then assess the extent to which students have rigorously
thought through the issue and synthesised the competing views articulated by their peers. Students will be
given a formative mark.
STUDENT PRODUCTS:
What artifact(s) or products will result from the lesson? (such as a report, newsletter, diagram, slideshow, drawing,
etc.)
1. Digital Timelines
Students can continue to add on to the digital timeline for all future chapters. They may choose to print out
the timeline in a list form for revision purposes.
2. Forum Posts
As seen in the sample of forum posts earlier, students can participate in continuous discussions on the topic or
even initiate new discussions. The various posts can be compiled by students and kept for revision purposes
especially for novel perspectives on the topic.
3. Structured Essay Question Assignment
This essay serves as a culmination and synthesis of all discussion ideas and perspectives on the topic.