Classroom Teacher

Exploring Dragon Naturally Speaking and Classroom Technology

  • Dragon Naturally Speaking Reviews ▼
    • Nuance Dragon Home vs Professional 15 review
    • Dragon 15 Bad Review
    • Nuance Dragon NaturallySpeaking 13 Premium Review
  • Classroom Tech Ideas
    • Show 2 different screens:
      laptop vs projector / TV
    • Add arrows and notes onto a screenshot
  • 21st Century Learning Skills ▼
    • 6 Cs of Education
    • Goal Setting for Students:
      powerpoint, lesson, worksheet
  • About this site
    • Disclosure Policy
    • Privacy Policy

Technology Projects for the Classroom

December 18, 2008 - 3 Comments

Tomorrow is the last day of school before the Winter Holiday Break. So, ofcourse we’re eagerly awaiting our two weeks off so that we can play on the computer more and work on some side projects.

(On a side note, one of our students did an incredible job on her student wiki, updating her KWL chart for our Integers units at midnight. Another one of our students is hacking a remote control to make an infra-red pen to use with a wiimote smartboard. So, I don’t think I’ll be the only one playing on the computer this holiday…)

Google implements a philosophy based on the 20/80 principle: 80% of your success is created by 20% of your effort. (Or, conversely, 80% of your time only produces 20% of your results.)

Alex K, a Technical Soluions Engineer over at Google talks about the “20 percent time” in action: “The 20 percent time is a well-known part of our philosophy here, enabling engineers to spend one day a week working on projects that aren’t necessarily in our job descriptions”

This holiday break, we’re looking forward to focusing on some “20 percent time” projects that aren’t “necessarily in our job descriptions,” but will hopefully lead towards some fruitful results that aid our teaching practice. Here are some of the projects we’re looking forward to experimenting with:

  1. Wikispaces.com offers free wikis for educators. We just finished our Grade 7 and Grade 8 Math Units on Integers and had our classes use wikis for the first time. As the unit progressed, students synthesized their understanding in a KWL chart format. (Things I Know, Things I Want to Know, Things I Learned.) On average, it took 10 minutes to mark each student wiki, but using the wiki allowed us to provide feedback by inserting guiding questions directly into their KWL chart. The best part is when students correct their work, it’ll be easy to compare their latest version with the previously marked version because wikispaces keeps track of older versions. This holiday break, we’ll be brainstorming ways to get students truly collaborating with each other instead of working in isolation…
  2. WordPress 2.7 has been released and we’re dying to give it a test run. The feature we’re looking forward the most to is that it may be the last time we have to manually upgrade our WordPress software. (We never have to manually upgrade when we’re using BlueHost, but we do when we manage our school website.)
  3. WordPress also has version control which allows you to see and compare older versions of a post (much like you can do with a wiki.) Comparing revisions of a piece of writing is one of the big reasons why we like experimenting with wikispaces for writing in our LA class. At first glance, WordPress 2.6 offered this feature, but seemed to be limited to comparing HTML code, instead of comparing the visual editor of a post. We’ll have to see if we can get WordPress to allow us to compare different versions of a piece of writing… it might just replace our wiki experiment.
  4. Johnny Chung Lee at Carnegie Mellon University has found a way to modify a wii remote control and convert your regular data projector into a cheap smartboard. We’ve created a few infra-red pens and we’re going to see if we can get this to work. (Our infra-red pens required no electrical background knowledge. We have a student who has built their own engine, so I imagine they’re pretty handy with a soldering iron. We’re not…)
  5. We use grade marking software to keep track of our marks. Every month, we send home a mark sheet outlining our students’ current status. This holiday, we’re going to experiment to see if there’s a way to automate or streamline the process and keep parents more in the loop. Perhaps posting things online behind a secure website or using a mass emailing system. Something to think about.
  6. The Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat of Ontario is pushing thinking-learning critical pathways. We’ll be reflecting on how to integrate that into our program, as well as how to integrate technology and media into our 6 week program.
  7. Marketing this blog to try to increase readership.
  8. Adding to our list of 101 ways to bring technology into the classroom.
  9. Actively soliciting companies to donate old laptops to our school so we can blog in the classroom. (The computer lab is awfully booked these days…)
  10. Taking a break.

Happy Holidays to you and your family.


Dragon Naturally Speaking Home vs Professional 15 Review:

  • Nuance offers two versions of their voice software. Read this blog post comparing Dragon Professional vs Dragon Home 15.
  • UPDATE (Tue, Dec 10, 2019): By the way, I still use Dragon Professional 15 to blog and write things down – even though I type at 100+ WPM. The last post I dictated was this one about a free New Year’s Resolution writing activity.

Comments

  1. George Lobay says

    February 10, 2009 at 9:13 pm

    The post “WordPress plugins we use on our school website” is corrupt, you guys need to fix it!

    Reply
  2. Mr Kuroneko says

    February 13, 2009 at 2:42 pm

    Hi George, thanks for pointing out the error with our post on WordPress plugins we use on our school website. We use the WordPress Download Monitor plugin and gave a line of code in the post that was causing some problems.

    An error on our end; we haven’t had any problems with the WordPress Download Monitor plugin so far.

    Thanks for keeping us on our toes. Cheers, Kisu.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

I use Dragon Professional 15 (OFFICIAL WEBSITE) to write documents and dictate blog posts.

  • Comparing Nuance Dragon Home vs Professional 15
  • Dragon 15 Bad Review: PROBLEMS to know about before you buy
  • Nuance Dragon NaturallySpeaking 13 Premium vs Professional 15 review: A story about helping a friend using voice recognition software for the first time.
  • 10 things to know about Dragon Naturally Speaking Education Version BEFORE you buy
Use Dragon Speak Naturally: Side by side comparison of Nuance Dragon Home 15 vs Nuance Dragon Professional 15 showing multiple user profile option in start window

Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)

Classroom Technology

Picture of a Windows laptop screen showing one thing and the projector screen showing a different screen

How to project computer to TV and show different display on laptop / projector / TV

How to Draw on a Screenshot: Quickly Add Arrows and Text on a Screenshot (Windows)

screenshot of iPad showing general and accessibility options to lock ipad to one app

How to lock your iPad screen so students can only use 1 specific app

Recent Comments

  • Grade 8 Teacher on Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)
  • Grade 8 Teacher on Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)
  • Grade 8 Teacher on Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)
  • Clara Chen on Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)
  • Ben on Dragon Naturally Speaking Review: Dragon Home 15 vs Dragon Professional Individual 15 (NEWEST VERSION)

Copyright © 2025 · ClassroomTeacher.ca uses Dragon Naturally Speaking · Log in