Sunday, May 22, 2016

Week 3: Digital Images


Gif was created using makeagif. Youtube video:Hitesh Gusani, "Timelapse Butterfly Coming Out of Pupa," via Youtube, June 4, 2012, Creative Commons Attribution,
Original image was taken from Wikipedia: "Butterfly", May 10, 2016, Public domain.
Butterfly Image was taken from Pixaby.com: "Butterfly," April 22, 2016, Public Domain
Other Images: Picktochart






Lesson: Digital images are helpful for kindergarten students to have a visual representation of the information they are learning about.  With these different images, I plan to show students different aspects of butterflies, including: their body structures, life cycle, and interesting facts about butterflies.  This will be spread out throughout the week.  After they have seen and discussed this information, they will write a sentence about anything they have learned about butterflies as well as draw a picture to represent their sentence.


Objective: After this lesson, students will be able to recall visual and auditory information about butterflies to demonstrate their learning.

Application: The design principles from week 1 apply to both my lesson plan and digital images.  Two aspects I focused on were the Coherence Principle and the Segmenting Principle.  For my lesson plan and digital images, I applied the Coherence Principle by reducing extraneous processing by eliminating extra information that does not focus on the topic at hand.  For example, my lesson is spread out throughout the week with different topics on different days.  Spreading out this information allows for students to focus exactly on the days information without overstimulation.  For my digital images, I included information and pictures only relevant to our topics.  For example, my GIF focuses on the metamorphosis of the butterfly from the chrysalis.  This allows us to talk specifically about this stage of the life cycle without including extra irrelevant information.  I applied the Segmenting Principle in my lesson plan by breaking up the information into separate days, this allows students to focus on different aspects of butterflies on separate days.  For my GIF, I segmented the life cycle of a butterfly into different stages, this GIF focused on the metamorphosis into an adult butterfly.  I believe that breaking down the life cycle into different GIFs would be really helpful for students to focus on the different aspects of the life cycle. 

Reflection:  Before reading about access, I would identify myself as a person that lacked awareness.  Although, I have been educated through my education classes on educating those with disabilities, I haven’t had a student with an impairment in my classroom.  Therefore, I never really applied access principles into my classroom.  However, I realized that as a teacher of kindergarten students, their computer capabilities are limited and I need to adapt my lessons and information to meet their needs.  I feel this applied to the idea of access.  I really enjoyed making the digital images this week.  Although, I believe I am tech savvy, I just never had an interest in creating images.  After this week, I believe I will use digital images more often, especially GIFs.  GIFs are a perfect way to show students little snippets of information you want them to focus on without showing long videos.  


4 comments:

  1. Hi Ellen,

    I loved your infographic- I never knew those things about butterflies so I learned something today, thank you! I agree that at the kindergarten level, images like GIFs could be so useful; I hope the kids enjoy what you incorporate and more importantly learn from it :)

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  2. Ellen,
    I have a 5 year old in my house that would really enjoy this type of lesson. He is really into science and he really likes the metamorphosis concept so I think he would find your gif very interesting. I like that you are using the design principals we learned in class, i.e. keeping your piktochart simple so that younger students don’t get overwhelmed. Also, the little clip art feet and world are great ways to connect younger students to the facts you are providing. My son would be able to memorize the facts based on the clipart as opposed to just reading the facts out loud and having him memorize them.

    Thanks
    Eric

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  3. Hi Ellen,
    Nice use of the images, you captured my attention right away. I liked the GIF of the butterfly coming out of the cocoon. I liked the colors and the style of the infograph. The two principles that wrote about are perfect for this lesson. I can just see the kindergarten students getting ready for the bus and in line they would be talking about the butterfly life cycle. Wonderful lesson and use of images!!!

    Marcia Schick

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  4. Hi Ellen,

    I think that you did really well with the GIF! I love that it is coming out of the cocoon. I also really enjoyed your infographic. I think that it would be the perfect thing for younger students to use in the classroom. I also think that you followed the principles that we learned about in Week 1 very well! Wonderful lesson!

    Krista Wilson

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