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Showing posts from October, 2021

Blog Journal 8

    This past week we were challenged with the task of designing a website in the style of a k-12 educator. This website was to explain about the teacher (myself), homework, classwork, etc. I have only designed a few websites in my time, similarly for assignments but the tool Weebly was easier than anyone I've used. They made designing easy, fun, and rewarding. Looking at my work I was proud of what I had created and the application made that possible. I learned tons of new skills within the process but more importantly, I got a feel for how a teacher should set up their website to ensure that students feel that materials are easily accessible while maintaining of the level of professionality and fun. In the future, I will make a website for my students so I saw this as a practice for that. It not only made me excited about teaching but genuinely made me feel grateful that I had taken this class. I am so excited to be an educator and this course gives me an opportunity to dip my to

Blog Journal 6

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    For this blog, we were instructed to infiltrate a teacher's website and analyze it. Like Jason Borne in Mission Impossible, I made my way to the Leon High School faculty website page and found myself in a new world, the world of "Ms. Crooks Classroom". This website was great as it gave me ideas for my website which I will eventually make and had an easy-to-use format that made navigation easy. The website is completely made up of hyperlinks, you click on one to get you to the next page, and so on. This website consisted of different information about World History Honors,  US History Honors,  AP Research,  Contact Information, and more all accessible to both students and parents. The two history-based pages contained different outlines and information for the units while to contact page provided a way to better access the instructor. Overall a good website with easy usage. Not that it's necessarily my place but I give the site a 7/10 because I found it dull.     

Blog Journal #6

       My experience with Diigo has been a good one that is growing as we continue with the material in class. At first, I was hesitant to engage with the forum because I personally believe the layout lacks feng shui and seems a little outdated in its design. Beyond my personal problems with the aesthetics of the website, it has a relatively easy function which has made access to new materials near trouble-free. My relationship with posting has been minimal as I was confused about the distinction between Diigo and PBWorks but I intend to post more in the coming weeks.       Blogging is fun because I see it as a stage at times. I’ve always been a performer and I see something like a blogging forum as no different as any other audience. Blogging is traditionally done in a diary entry style format but I appreciate the idea that you can address the audience in a “meta” style. I’ve learned different ways of uniquely addressing the audience while maintaining a level of formality that keeps t

Blog Journal #5

    My earliest experience with twitter dates back to my brother's high school graduation. At this event, there was a jumbotron that displayed tweets from family members if they used a certain hashtag. With my parent's permission *wink wink*, I downloaded the app and wrote "happy graduation Andrew we love you". Around five minutes later my tweet was displayed on the screen and my Twitter fame began. Now I use the app for mostly news and some meme-related content. Me and my friends share news threads with one another and this has not only allowed me to have more access to news but also news that comes from a small journalist. Twitter would allow me to share different articles and stories with students in a manner that feels less formal than in other academic settings. Beyond that, they would have access to materials in a different way.     The digital divide is the gap that separates a generation of those who benefited from access to technology and those who did not. T