Sunday, March 27, 2011

Week 7: Designing a unit








Title: A virtual visit to The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Instructors
: Adrienne D’Angelo and Tiffany Wang

Audience: A handful of HS students some who visit the museum regularly, art interested in art history, and some who have never visited or are unfamiliar.

Objectives: The learning goals for this lesson are for the students to become comfortable using web 2.0 tools as a learning tool and to look at works of art and experience it through interpretation and discussion.

Goals: The overall goal of the project is to get students to look critically at works of art at The Met and think about art through interpretive questions and discussion. An overarching goal is to get them interested in art and possibly visiting the actual works in person or works at another cultural institution.

Pacing/Timeframe:
Each unit will last 20-30 minutes online for each work of art. A 5 minute introduction about the unit and how to use the tools will initiate each session followed by a 2-3 minute assignment of just looking at the work in Powerpoint (link below). The next 15-20 minutes will be spent in discussion in Skype about the work.

Please click here to view the instructions to use Skype

Activities: The course will be set over four weeks. Students will follow each week's instruction via Powerpoint (link below), and discussions with instructors through Skype. Each week the students will view a different work of art and have a conversation about the work for 20-30 minutes. After each lesson, students are encouraged to think more about the work and the discussion. If students are interested, they may do research on their own. The conversations will be fun and engaging. Participation, ideas and thoughts are the most important part of the course. We want to hear what the students think!

Please click here for weekly schedule of discussions, assignments and activities

Resources: Skype and Powerpoint will be used to teach the lesson. If light research is assigned, they will be encouraged to use the web to read. We will use Survey Monkey, an online survey software and questionnaire tool to collect student comment and survey results.

Requirements: Access to a computer with a webcam, mic, internet access and activated Skype account, Microsoft Powerpoint.

Assessment: After the course, students will be asked to fill out a quick survey email on Survey Monkey about the course. Again, we want students' thoughts and opinions.

Please click here to fill out the online survey


Thank you for an enjoyable and lively discussion!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

What are you most concerned about as you embark on creating a curriculum unit?

This is my first time planning a curriculum unit so I am most concerned about activity and assessment planning. Adrienne and I are designing am online and hybrid in-person visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art for High School Art History/Course students. Throughout the 4 week curriculum, students will be able to “virtually” experience and be in front of real works of art. Each week, students will have approximately 10-minutes to look at an art piece via powerpoint followed by a 20-minutes video-conferencing Skype discussion about that particular work of art lead by the instructor/museum specialist/expert in the museum field. We are also considering to add other activities to make the unit more interactive and fun. The objective here is to provide many of the identical educational and cognitive gains that an actual-real life field trip can provide.

However, since this is not a traditional class setting, I don’t know if the time frame that we have predicted now is enough for the students to get the best learning experience. I am also concerned about how to measure the success of the curriculum and how to make sure students have learned what we want them to learn.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Week 6 Reflection

Looking back at the Google spreadsheet, I didn’t change anything since my placements were pretty accurate based on the information that was available. However, after this week’s discussion about student-student interaction and online discussion as a learning tool, there are definitely areas in the actual curriculum and online discussions that I need to take a closer look at. My partner and I placed both of the schools that in the medium student-student activity mainly because both websites emphasized their students maintain close contact with other students within the same online course (discussion, chatting, blogging) to become part of a virtual learning community. Other than online discussions among fellow students, students also have time to get involved with other students in extracurricular activities including sports, church, work, or volunteering.

I “assumed” the student-student interaction took place because there were many discussions stated on the websites, but I don’t know how effective those discussions were. From this week’s discussion, I learned how online discussions can be meaningful if there is a controlled discussion where learners can follow topics that is being discussed facilitated by the instructor. At the same time, facilitators will set clear expectations and goals to the discussion so students will respond to each other with clear reflection on each topic. But without actually participating in the discussion, it's hard to judge whether the discussions were effective or not.