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Into the Depths… of Student Research NCDPI/Instructional Technology Division and North Carolina School Library Media Association Objectives: Be able to • articulate the relevance of essential learning skills • describe the steps of a student research process • implement research process activities aligned to curriculum objectives • design a research unit collaboratively Pass the Envelope Please… Framework for 21st Century Learning Learning and Innovation Skills Creativity and Innovation Skills Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Skills Communication and Collaboration Skills Information, Media and Technology Skills Information Literacy Media Literacy ICT Literacy Life and Career Skills Flexibility & Adaptability Initiative & Self-Direction Social & Cross-Cultural Skills Productivity & Accountability Leadership & Responsibility Key Elements of 21st Century Learning • Emphasize core subjects • Emphasize learning skills • Use 21st century tools to develop learning skills (technology) • Teach and learn in a 21st century context (real world) Key Elements • Teach and learn 21st Century content – global awareness – financial, economic, and business literacy – civic literacy • Use 21st Century assessments www.21stcenturyskills.org “The guiding mission of the North Carolina State Board of Education is that every public school student will graduate from high school, globally competitive for work and postsecondary education and prepared for life in the 21st century.” http://www.ncpublicschools.org/organization/mission/ NCDPI Communications and Information Division 2007 Information Literacy “As society changes, the skills that students need to be successful in life also change. Basic literacy skills of reading, writing, and mathematics are no longer sufficient…A successful 21st century student must also be adept at managing information-finding, evaluating, and applying new content understanding with great flexibility.” Intel Teach to the Future, 2005. Student Information Literacy - ETS Data • 52% could correctly judge the objectivity of a Web site. • 40% entered multiple terms to narrow Web search results. • 35% selected the correct revision of an overly broad search. eSchool News This Week 12-4-06 [email protected] How do you recognize an information literate student? Inquire, think critically, and gain knowledge Draw conclusions, make informed decisions, apply knowledge…. Share knowledge and participate ethically and productively… Pursue personal and aesthetic growth http://www.ala.org/ala/aasl/aaslproftools/learningstandards/standards.cfm NETS for Students Basic operations and concepts Social, ethical, and human issues Technology productivity tools Technology communication tools Technology research tools Technology problemsolving and decision-making tools http://cnets.iste.org/students/NETS_S_standards.doc More Fun Than a Barrel of… Worms? You can't tear students at Newsome Park Elementary School away from their school work when it involves in-depth investigations with realworld applications. (Time 6:21) George Lucas Foundation www.edutopia.org How do you plan for a …? Problem Solving Using a Research Process Evaluation (product/ process) Question/ Problem or Task Sources Research Analysis/ Synthesis Use of Information Access Big 6 and Super 3 •What do we need to do? •What can we use to find what we need? •Where can we find what we need? •What information can we use? •How can we show what we learned? •How will we know if we did well? Jansen, Barbara A. The BIG 6 Goes Primary. Plan Do Review www.big6.com The Global Challenge “To be ‘competitive’ now, U.S. students must develop sophisticated critical thinking and analytical skills to manage the conceptual nature of the work they will do. They will need to be able to recognize patterns, create narrative, and imagine solutions to problems we have yet to discover. They will have to see the big picture and ask the big questions.” House, Gerry. "Closing the 'Reality Gap'." American School Board Journal Special Report, April 2006. Step 1: What do you want your students to learn? The Essential Question –Big idea –Constructed from information gathered –How, Why, What If? FAT Questions • Look for connections between information • Trigger forming an opinion about the information found • Use comparisons and looking for patterns • Require THOUGHTFUL answers IN 2 EDU: Information Literacy http://www.in2edu.com/downloads/infolit/index.htm FAT vs. Skinny Light bulb Dinosaurs Erosion Genetic manipulation Immigration A Book Character Essential Questions: Elementary • How does the wind help and hurt us? • How are animals alike and different from us? • Why are whales endangered and how can we protect them? • Why have we, in our society, forced animals to live in cities? • How can we accomplish our dream job? • How will learning about the stars help us to learn more about the Earth? D.J. Midgett Essential Questions: Middle and High School • What would happen if we did not have a trading relationship with Asia? (7) • How are we affected by the societal changes that have taken place in NC since 1970 (8) • How would our daily lives be affected by changes in the ocean’s environment? (HS) • How could advances in the Human Genome project affect us in the years to come? (HS) Variations on the Essential Question Why Does It Matter that… Why Is It Important that… Debra C. Rollins, Assistant Librarian James C. Bolton Library, Alexandria VA The Question Press Jamie McKenzie The Thesis Generator Joyce Valenza Research Process Resooures http://tinyurl.com/qtsrps Create Your Essential Question Supporting Questions • Help answer the Essential Question • Fact based • Who, What, Where, When Why have we, in our society, forced animals to live in cities? 1. What is city wildlife? 2. Where do they live in the city? 3. What do wildlife in the city eat? 4. How does mankind "feed" these critters? 5. What plants grow wild in the city? 6. What wildlife is found in your backyard or on your school ground? 7. What changes have we caused in our environment that affect wildlife? D.J. Midgett How does learning about the solar system help us to live in our world? • What is the solar system? • How do scientists study the solar system? • What information have we gained from investigations of the solar system? • What new resources or inventions have resulted from studying/exploring the solar system? Create Your Supporting Questions How Do You Help Students Ask the Right Questions? Brainstorming – K-W-L and K-W-H-L – Graphic organizers/Mind Maps/Concept Maps – Kidspiration/Inspiration – Bubbl.us Used with permission for educational purposes The Questioning Toolkit Jamie McKenzie Kaleidoscope Questioning Resources The Question Conjure-Upper Organizing Questions • Group questions into categories • Align categories to supporting questions • Model how to categorize • Circle keywords D.J. Midgett Kaleidoscope Questioning Resources W hat is the life span o f stars? W hat is the distance o f the clo set star? A nd o thers W hat are the 5 different kinds o f stars? W hat instrum ents are used to o bserved stars? W hat is a co nstellatio n and ho w w ere they used? H ow w ill learning about stars help us to know m ore about earth? W hy is the clo sest star im po rtant? Thanks to D.J. Midgett Step 2: InformationSeeking Strategies What information sources can I use? Which information sources are best? With permission of Debbie Abilock Used with permission of Kathy Schrock With permission of Kathy Schrock Who Owns the Site? www.easywhois.com Courtesy of Joyce Valenza http://lmnet.wikispaces.com/PowerPoints Joyce Valenza http://lmnet.wikispaces.com/PowerPoints Courtesy of Joyce Valenza http://lmnet.wikispaces.com/PowerPoints Courtesy of Joyce Valenza http://lmnet.wikispaces.com/PowerPoint Credible Sources Credible Sources Count! Vaughan Memorial Library, Acadia University OR The Haggis Hunt Kaleidoscope Knowledge Flow Step 3: Location and Access Where can I find each source? How can I find information in each source? Information Seeking Skills • Online catalog skills • Italics/sub-headings/outlines • Captions for graphics • Interviewing skills • Boolean strategies Used with permission: Jerry King http://www.jerryking.com/ and From Now On http://fno.org. Boolify: An Educational Boolean Search Tool http://Boolify.org Narrowing Search Hits • Site:edu • Site:org • Site:gov Photo Courtesy of NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office Example: gr. 8 Sci – Marine resources sustainability “oyster disease prevention 2006 research North Carolina site:edu” Global Warming… vs. • Image results • News results • Wikipedia Global Warming database • Miami U – Ohio • Society of Environmental Journalists • Earth Trends – World Resources Institute Step 4: Use of Information What information in each source is useful? How should I record my notes? Jerry King http://www.jerryking.com/ and From Now On http://fno.org. Note-Taking Skills • Skimming and scanning • Highlighting, underlining • Distinguishing fact from opinion Trash-N-Treasure NoteTaking • Show question with underlined keywords • Scan article for appropriate heading • Put slash at end of first sentence: “Does this sentence answer the question?” (If not, it is “trash.” Go to next sentence) Jansen, Barbara A. "Reading for Information: The Trash-N-Treasure Method of Teaching Note-Taking (Grades 3-12)." Trash-N-Treasure cont’d • If YES, underline first phrase, “Does this phrase answer the question?” • If none of the words in this phrase answer the question (trash), go to next phrase. Trash-N-Treasure cont’d • Repeat with next phrase until it answers the question “Identify the words in this phrase that are needed to answer the question.” Circle and keep the necessary “treasure” words only! http://www.kyvl.org/html/kids/homebase.html Kindergarten Wind Booklet Les ter a n d B o w en N am e: _______________________________________________________ T h in k a b o u t g o o d th in g s a n d b a d th in g s th a t h a p p e n w h e n th e w in d b lo w s. Illu stra te yo u r id e a s in th e c o rre c t b o x e s b e lo w . G o o d T h in g s D.J. Midgett B a d T h in g s Careers Information Career What do you do in your job? What did you have to learn? What is your work setting? What are the good/hard things? How do you use your pay? Kscope Hovercraft – Importance Page Fourth Grade: Communication Invention D.J. Midgett Gina Webster, Walkertown MS Winston-Salem Forsyth Schools Reading Rockets Inquiry Chart http://www.readingrockets.org /strategies/inquiry_chart Copyright for All • Copyright Kids http://www.copyrightkids.org/cbasicsframes.htm • Copyright with Cyberbee http://www.cyberbee.com/cb_copyright.swf • Visit to Copyright Bay http://www.stfrancis.edu/cid/copyrightbay/ • NCDPI Copyright video and Carol Simpson book Step 5: Synthesis How should I organize the information to meet the requirements of my task? Second Grade Dinosaur Triceratops Trading Card • Description – 15-20 feet tall – 25 feet long – 5-7 tons • Diet – Plants such as palms and cycads • Fossils Found – Western Canada & U.S. D.J. Midgett Kaleidsoscope TechKnow Park – Week 27 Other Products • • • • • • • Dramatization Video production/PSA Web page Podcasts Hall of Fame News article (current or historical) Advertisement Other Products • Timelines: A Timeless Teaching Tool • Rubistar Ideas • Project-based activities http://citationmachine.net Step 6: Evaluation Is my project complete? How can I do things better? Geometry in the Real World Students at this Washington state high school are pursuing a challenge: to design a state-of-the-art high school for the year 2050. (Time 7:42) George Lucas Foundation http://www.glef.org Rubrics • Presentation Rubric – NCDPI http://www.ncsu.edu/midlink/rub.pres.html • Rubrics 4 Teachers http://www.rubrics4teachers.com/ So You Think Weather is a Breeze? PRESENTATION CHECKBRIC Scoring Guide 3 - exceeds requirements 1 – falls short of requirements 2 - meets requirements 0 – does not address requirements Requirements Score Teacher Comments The presentation answers the question: Where in the world can the best weather be found? The presentation includes reasons for selecting the location. The presentation includes evidence as to why you believe the location has the world’s best weather. Used with permission - Intel Teach to the Future, www.intel.com/education Assignment: Create a PowerPoint slide to show the big ideas of your career. CAREER: ___________________ GROUP MEMBERS: _______________________ __ We wrote correct ideas. 4 - WOW! Your work tells more. __ We put in the most 3 - Great job. That’s just important things. it. __ We did first grade work. 2 - Oops! You forgot something. __ Our picture shows 1 - Uh-oh! You did not the job. do it. Reflection Reflection • Most helpful/least helpful source? • Activity most challenging? • Most important thing learned? • Do differently next time? • One new research skill? Downers Grove North High School Library L is te n a s th e te a c h e r re a d s th e q u e s tio n s a n d c o lo r th e fa c e th a t fits h o w y o u fe e l. YES 1. D id y o u c o o p e ra te w ith y o u r g ro u p d u rin g th is p ro je c t? 2. C a n y o u a n sw e r th e q u e stio n s o n th e g ra p h ic s o rg a n ize r c h a rt? OK NO K Wind Booklet Rubric 3. C a n th e c la ss b o o k te a c h so m e o n e a b o u t th e w in d ? 4. D id y o u e n jo y th e re se a rc h a n d w rite u n it a b o u t th e w in d ? D.J. Midgett Comment My Group 1. I / my group asked good questions. 2. I/ my group did good work. 3. I/ my group can answer questions about our career. 4. I/my group worked well with others/ each other. 5. I/my group enjoyed learning about this career. Me 6. What would I/my group do differently next time? Michelle Palmer-Weaver, NCDPI Scaffolding the Process! • Provide easy access to resources at first • Start with whole class modeling, then small group/pairs before individual research • Focus on one part of the process at a time IN2EDU: Information Literacy So Much To Do! It’s About Collaboration • Regularly scheduled time to plan • Structure designed to focus discussion on curriculum objectives, instructional strategies, and outcomes • Team participant roles (team leader, recorder, time keeper) Let’s Review #1 Ask the right questions #2 What sources are best? #3 How can I find the information? #4 How can I record the useful information? #5 How can I put the info together and share it? #6 How well did I do? Nancy Larkin Buncombe Co Schools Special Thanks To: • Debbie Abilock, NoodleTools/NoodleTeach • Mike Eisenberg and Bob Berkowitz, Big6.com • Susanna L. Davidsen, Managing Director, The Internet Public Library, U of Michigan School of Information • Bob Houston, 21st Century Information Fluency Project • D.J. Midgett, Media Coordinator, Washington HS, Beaufort Co, NC • Nancy Larkin, Buncombe Co Schools • Jane Bandy Smith and Linworth Publishing • Kathy Schrock, Guide for Educators • David Warlick, The Landmark Project Questions In compliance with federal law, NC Public Schools administers all state-operated educational programs, employment activities and admissions without discrimination because of race, religion, national or ethnic origin, color, age, military service, disability, or gender, except where exemption is appropriate and allowed by law. Inquiries or complaints regarding discrimination issues should be directed to: Dr. Rebecca Garland Associate State Superintendent Academic Services and Instructional Support 6368 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-6368 Telephone: (919) 807-3200 :: Fax: (919) 807-4065