Reflection that goes with assignment:
I am a full time student so I generally take more courses than part-time students. I started the program less than a year ago in August 2010 but will have thirty hours by this August. I wondered if this course would have been more beneficial at the very beginning or if it was better after two semesters of courses. I think I may have been overwhelmed if this was my very first course. However, I greatly enjoyed this course because it taught me how to develop the road map of guidance I will need for this program. It allowed me the freedom to choose my path but the doctoral documents helped me have the structure and planning support that I need. I often felt completely inadequate when designing the items that went into the professional dossier, but it ended up being a great source of motivation. I am now confident knowing what needs to be done and driven to improve these documents by overall enhancing myself throughout this program. In the 2011-2012 school year, I plan to complete my research and teaching internships with Dr. Feinberg and to complete my research coursework. I hope to take my comprehensive exams by the end of 2012. I plan to attend conferences in 2011 and present at conferences in 2012. I also hope to have at least two-three papers submitted for publication by this time. I am thankful I had the opportunity in this class to create the professional dossier that I will continue to update and use to evaluate my progress. I am also thankful for the guest speakers, the interviews I conducted, and the readings on mentoring. The wealth of knowledge I have gained in the short three weeks of Maymester is pretty amazing! I am eager to start my reading from my annotated reading list.
Let me know if you are interested in seeing the professional dossier and I can email you the word attachment.
Welcome to my Blog!
I plan to share information I learn through my studies related to education. I hope my posts will be informative and inspiring to current and future educators!
Friday, May 27, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011
New Month of May
April was a busy month with spring semester coming to a close and I did not have too many posts. I am hoping to deliver a new post once a week.
I wanted to share a list of education websites I have been putting together for educators. I am designing the list specifically for history educators but many of the websites apply to teachers within all fields. Please take the opportunity to go through the list and possibly visit some of the links. I encourage people to offer suggestions of worthy sites I do not already have on the list. I would like this list to grow and be continually updated. You can also see my contact information provided on the top so you have numerous ways to reach me. Check out my technology blog I created for a class this past spring where you can find course readings and reflections.
Jean O’Keefe – twitter: jeanoke16 – jeanoneducation@bogger.com – jeanonteched@blogger.com – jeanoke@gmail.com – (312) 259-5576
http://www.khanacademy.org/ Learn the flipped classroom approach and access educational teaching videos
http://zinnedproject.org/ Howard Zinn: A People’s History - Resources, Activities, Lessons
http://docsteach.org/ : National archives of documents/primary sources with some with accompanying lessons
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/ : radio, television, podcast archive
http://www.choices.edu/ : history and current news for the classroom
http://www.icivics.org/ : The Democracy Lab
Lessons and interactive games (students can award the points they are in games to service learning projects who then get funded by organization)
http://www.antiprejudice.org/: Prejudice. Discrimination. Stereotypes.That’s what we fight.Students. Schools. Community.
www.donorschoose.org: award teachers money needed for classroom projects
www.rethinkingschool.org : organization with great publications and resources on how to reform schooling
www.prezi.com: create presentations similar to power point
http://www.evernote.com/: online note taking system
www.carbonite.com: backup everything online for a price per year
http://hootsuite.com/about organize all your social and professional networks here so you have one spot to view them all
http://www.zotero.org/ tool to help you collect, organize, site, and share you research sources
http://www.xtranormal.com/ if you can type you can make a movie with animated characters
http://www.socialstudies.org/cufa College and University Faculty Assembly
http://www.go2web20.net/ web 2.0 tools
http://education.washington.edu/cme/ Center for Multicultural Education (Seattle, Washington)
http://www.blogger.com/rearrange?blogID=253340431943588608 Summer Seminars: Professional Development NEH
http://www.neh.gov/projects/landmarks-school.html Workshops: Professional Development NEH
http://www.fpri.org/education/historyinstitutes.html Foreign Policy Research Institute: History Institute for Teachers
I wanted to share a list of education websites I have been putting together for educators. I am designing the list specifically for history educators but many of the websites apply to teachers within all fields. Please take the opportunity to go through the list and possibly visit some of the links. I encourage people to offer suggestions of worthy sites I do not already have on the list. I would like this list to grow and be continually updated. You can also see my contact information provided on the top so you have numerous ways to reach me. Check out my technology blog I created for a class this past spring where you can find course readings and reflections.
Jean O’Keefe – twitter: jeanoke16 – jeanoneducation@bogger.com – jeanonteched@blogger.com – jeanoke@gmail.com – (312) 259-5576
http://www.khanacademy.org/ Learn the flipped classroom approach and access educational teaching videos
http://zinnedproject.org/ Howard Zinn: A People’s History - Resources, Activities, Lessons
http://docsteach.org/ : National archives of documents/primary sources with some with accompanying lessons
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/ : radio, television, podcast archive
http://www.choices.edu/ : history and current news for the classroom
http://www.icivics.org/ : The Democracy Lab
Lessons and interactive games (students can award the points they are in games to service learning projects who then get funded by organization)
http://www.antiprejudice.org/: Prejudice. Discrimination. Stereotypes.That’s what we fight.Students. Schools. Community.
www.donorschoose.org: award teachers money needed for classroom projects
www.rethinkingschool.org : organization with great publications and resources on how to reform schooling
www.prezi.com: create presentations similar to power point
http://www.evernote.com/: online note taking system
www.carbonite.com: backup everything online for a price per year
http://hootsuite.com/about organize all your social and professional networks here so you have one spot to view them all
http://www.zotero.org/ tool to help you collect, organize, site, and share you research sources
http://www.xtranormal.com/ if you can type you can make a movie with animated characters
http://www.socialstudies.org/cufa College and University Faculty Assembly
http://www.go2web20.net/ web 2.0 tools
http://education.washington.edu/cme/ Center for Multicultural Education (Seattle, Washington)
http://www.blogger.com/rearrange?blogID=253340431943588608 Summer Seminars: Professional Development NEH
http://www.neh.gov/projects/landmarks-school.html Workshops: Professional Development NEH
http://www.fpri.org/education/historyinstitutes.html Foreign Policy Research Institute: History Institute for Teachers
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