Author: kathleen

  • Preparing for Summer Staff Development

    Almost forgot about this people:  http://www.techark.com/

    Super rock solid web hosting.  I went with another company because they don’t do “Windows” stuff.  But I have Microsoft Office 365 doing my Windows stuff now, so I’m back.

    The biggest reason is that I LOVE LOVE Moodle, and have been using it for years to manage my classroom.  Before Moodle, I’d written my own classroom management system that didn’t do near as much.

    I’ve got two summer staff development opportunities.  I’ve got a workshop here in Dallas I’m doing on Gridworld, and one I’m doing for the CSTA CS&IT Conference and I think that the best way to do both, is to have all the materials in a Moodle for people to login and participate with while I’m doing it, AND I’ll have it ready for the future.

    So my Moodle site is up and running at http://www.mykweaver.org/moodle

  • Summer Workshop Project–Moodle

    I’m teaching two summer workshops so far – an hour session at CS&IT 2012 and a session at Region 10 on GridWorld.

    I’ve decided to set up a Moodle site – it’s pretty cheap if I can get it up and working – so participants can download handouts, etc. when they get home and communicate afterwards.

    I’m going back to a host I was with for a really long time – sadly my current host support has been deteriorating.  They can’t seem to support their old products and don’t seem to be moving them to their new products.

    Weird.

  • Why It Makes Sense To Ask (Some) Teachers To Teach (Somewhat) Larger Classes–> NO, IT DOESN’T MAKE SENSE!

     

    But most parents would also rather have their kids taught by a great teacher than an average one.

    Why It Makes Sense To Ask (Some) Teachers To Teach (Somewhat) Larger Classes

     

    I am a really great teacher until my class size hits a certain size – and what that size is, depends entirely on the students.

    Example:  my worse class this year had 25 students in it, and about 20 of them needed individual attention most of the time.  In fact, most of my energy was spent keeping the students on task – and I was never completely successful.  The minute one of the students got my undivided attention the students who needed me to keep them on task were completely off task. 

    I’m a really bad teacher when my class size hits over 25 no matter the dedication of the students.  I just don’t have time to do what I do best – dig kids out of their whole when they get stuck.

    So no, it doesn’t make sense for me to teach more students.

  • Nice touch–and Thank You!

    The entire administrative staff walked into my classroom, and the principal handed me a thank you gift for teacher appreciation day!

    I believe that they did that for each teacher.

    First time that ever happened in 20 years…..

  • Probably NOT buying another HP

    I bought an HP Pavilion to replace one that got hit by a thunderstorm.  Like the footprint, but here’s the most aggravating thing – first thing I do, is upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate but with the house disaster and all I hadn’t remembered to do that and then couldn’t figure out why I couldn’t remote in, like I could the old computer….

    Well, I done the upgrade with the old computer’s product key,which it took but then a month later starts puking on.  Well, that one couldn’t be used (I don’t get why, but oh well, I’ll buy another one).  But all the HP support stuff starts getting in the way.

    Almost bought the key from support, but it took over a freaking hour, on online chat to get that far, then they decided they had to “guide me” on the phone.  Well, at least they didn’t pretend by calling themselves, Allen or Don, or something dumb like that. 

    Now, we have to grade our non-English speakers every year, and I think I would have been generous if I had given him an average on listening, as he wouldn’t even listen when I told him I has having trouble understand him on the phone. 

    Ended up going to the Microsoft store the long way, and buying the upgrade that way.

  • Education should be fun

    Alfred has a good point at http://blogs.msdn.com/b/alfredth/archive/2012/04/28/fun-is-to-entertainment-as-education-is-to-training .

    A lot of CS teachers at both the high school and the college level don't see it.

    They have the luxury of a captive audience.

    I don't. I have to get kids in my door. We have two classes next year that promise some fun and some education and I can't wait!

    Sent from my Windows Phone

  • Just finished my 20th year of testing….

    Well probably not, we still have ACP’s, STARR tests, and probably the odd field test.

    But we did finish TAKS 11st Grade Exit test which is a big milestone.  We’ll do our last one next year.

     

  • iCLOUD TERMS AND CONDITIONS

    Except for material we may license to you, Apple does not claim ownership of the materials and/or Content you submit or make available on the Service. However, by submitting or posting such Content on areas of the Service that are accessible by the public or other users with whom you consent to share such Content, you grant Apple a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, publicly perform and publicly display such Content on the Service solely for the purpose for which such Content was submitted or made available, without any compensation or obligation to you. You agree that any Content submitted or posted by you shall be your sole responsibility, shall not infringe or violate the rights of any other party or violate any laws, contribute to or encourage infringing or otherwise unlawful conduct, or otherwise be obscene, objectionable, or in poor taste. By submitting or posting such Content on areas of the Service that are accessible by the public or other users, you are representing that you are the owner of such material and/or have all necessary rights, licenses, and authorization to distribute it.

    via www.apple.com

    Okay, this is fair.

  • Who owns your files on Google Drive? | Internet & Media – CNET News

    A quick analysis of Google's terms of service shows how the search company owns the files you upload the minute they are submitted, and can in effect do anything it wants to your files — and that's final. But there is a small catch.

    via news.cnet.com

    I knew there was a reason to hate Google.

    Now I need to know about Apple's iCloud.