Thursday, October 15, 2015

Why Every Teacher Should Download YouTube Gaming

Dear Teachers, 

Go download the YouTube Gaming app now. 

Not because you're a gamer (Your students are). Not because you like watching live streams of video game tournaments (Your students do). Not because you want to know how to find that last collectible in Uncharted 3 (Your students did).

Because you can now easily screencast from any Android device running Android 4.1 and up.

That's right. Screencast from your phone. Or tablet. Without paying or rooting.

Why?

How many of you teach your students to set up a binder or notebook a certain way? Use a calendar? Have under-used online resources for students and parents?

That's what I thought.

With YouTube Gaming you can stream or record anything on your device and easily upload to your YouTube Channel. Here's a quick video demo. Let me know what you're teaching with this awesome new tool. I'm off to record a demo of one of my favorite lessons for students: How to Set the Alarm on Your Phone.


Thursday, January 09, 2014

Leaving, Sans Jet Plane

So this is awkward.


After seventeen and a half years (not counting the three I was a student) at Antioch High School (give or take a couple minutes when I was ineligible to teach Theatre because I couldn't prove to California that I was a highly qualified English teacher), I'm leaving.

I've been offered a job as Educational Technology Coordinator with Butte County Office of Education. I'll be helping fourteen districts move forward in various ways with their technology integration. It's a Visiting Educator position, with a contract that ends in June of 2015, and they pay me through Antioch Unified, so I'm not really leaving on paper - it's just a Leave of Absence. But I am leaving.

I've been looking to get out of the classroom for a couple years now for multiple reasons:
  • We're at this crazy time in education where existing teachers need help learning to communicate differently than they have been for years because of the amazing advances in technology. I happen to have skills in that area.
  • I can help more students indirectly if I teach teachers.
  • Our students at AHS now seem to have more social/emotional needs than curricular needs and I no longer have the energy to fill that role with the level of quality that I feel it requires. (Read as: I'm getting old.)
There are all sorts of good times/bad times things that I could fill this post with, from how I got to work side by side with the master of creating a family atmosphere, to the time I took six students to perform at the Fringe Festival in Scotland, to how I was the one who closed down our school's Theatre program, but I thought I'd share with you the short list of things I emailed my famulty (the name we use when we talk about our staff) today in my brief "goodbye" email. 
  • Use the Help link. I do all the time.
  • Join and use Twitter. It's the best professional development you'll ever get. Here's why and how.
  • No tech is the magic bullet. YOU are the magic bullet and always have been.
  • Use tech that allows you to collaborate: cloud services, shared calendars, etc. We don't need to do any of this by ourselves anymore.
  • Publish. Art, writing, curriculum, whatever... post it somewhere. Others will learn from you and you'll grow as a communicator. I promise.
  • Use the Help link. It's so important, I thought I'd remind you.
That's it. That's all. 

I'm going to miss the school & my famulty, and I thought about posting all of the things I won't miss, but why complain? Instead, I'll just say, "So long for now, AHS."

So long for now, AHS.


Friday, December 20, 2013

Former Students Give Choir Teacher Emotional Musical Tribute

Former Students Give Choir Teacher Emotional Musical Tribute:

Here’s the news story on the perfect send-off for my former teacher and colleague. It’s been a pleasure to learn from and teach with him. Grab a tissue.



http://click-to-read-mo.re/p/4tky






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/70585325185

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Tonight’s commute. #nofilter (at Antioch Bridge)





Tonight’s commute. #nofilter (at Antioch Bridge)






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/70440812769

Saturday, December 07, 2013

What I’m doing today…





What I’m doing today…






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/69297179654

Obligatory first #snow shot of the season.





Obligatory first #snow shot of the season.






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/69281033703

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

These are a few of my favorite things. (at Coronado Beach)





These are a few of my favorite things. (at Coronado Beach)






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/68321842631

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Burbangin'

Since I’m stuck at the Burbank Airport for a few hours, I purchased some food I’d never eat anywhere BUT an airport. The young lady who rang up my order said, “You’re number 60 and you look gangsta in your hat.”


So at least I have that going for me.






via Tumblr http://seanjoneil.tumblr.com/post/67718432703

Sunday, November 10, 2013

My Guest Appearance on TheatreCast #36- Triple Threat

I was lucky to be invited as a guest today on TheatreCast. Nick & Danielle were a blast to hang out with! We talked about Google +Hangouts, Shakespeare, and how exciting a time it is to be an educator.

I can't help but be a little jealous of these guys and their great show. I miss the podcasting world that was such a huge part of what I was doing in 2005-2007 with ShakespeareCast. I'm constantly thinking of bringing that sucker back. If only there were more time to be had....

Friday, November 01, 2013

Is Your PLN Making You Lazy?

So I've noticed something recently. People in my Twitter personal learning network are beginning to misuse it and I don't think they're aware of it.

"Who are you to say how Twitter should be used for educational networking?!?" you ask?

Nobody. I only just hit a thousand followers and four thousand tweets a week ago after six years on Twitter and am making a career out of hanging around brilliant people until they think I'm one of them.
Thanks, http://twopcharts.com/howlongontwitter!
But I am an expert communicator, and I think we're getting lazy.

What's happening is that people - educators - are starting to ask searchable questions. Now from the asker's perspective, this may seem petty: "It's more fun to ask questions of a live person!" Fine. Have fun. But what do you tell a student when they ask a searchable question? "Google it." What do you reply in emails to colleagues? How many of you have used http://lmgtfy.com/ to respond to a question? (If you haven't, you should try it out.)

We should hold ourselves to the same standard we hold our students and not burden our busy PLN colleagues until after we've searched.

Thinking in terms of Bloom's Taxonomy, I want to have Twitter discussions around higher level questions that challenge me to apply, analyze, evaluate and create. I want to be able to reply with more questions and to attack problems collaboratively. I don't want to Google it for you.

So while it may sound petty, I'm asking you to respect your PLN. Ask the next question, not the searchable one.

Now excuse me while I go tweet what I had for lunch. @Seanjay if you're interested.

Thursday, August 01, 2013

Third Charm's the Time - How I Got Into the Google Teacher Academy

The Google Teacher Academy. A Google Certified Teacher. Wow.

I've been a teacher for 17 years now. I have a BA (Drama), an MA (Theatre Directing), and, of course, the Single Subject teaching credential (in English... hmmmm... what's wrong with this picture?) that allows me to teach high school students. I'm pretty proud of my two degrees but I've got to say... I tend to hide the name of the college where I bought- ...uhh... EARNED my teaching credential.

That's right. I'm near-embarrassed by my teaching certificate. There are several reasons for this (another blog post maybe?), but frankly that's not the point. The point is that if I were a wee bit crazier - and single - I'd get a Google Certified Teacher badge tattoo.

On my forehead.

So How Do I....?

I've had several colleagues ask how to become a Google Certified Teacher. First of all, I'd search "Google Teacher Academy" and "Google Certified Teacher" to find a wealth of reflective blogs that are much better written than this one. Then you can start at the very beginning: the official Google Teacher Academy page. After that, be sure to add +Google in Education to your Google+ circles so that their announcements will show up in your stream.

Then you apply. And apply. And apply.

The application itself is pretty straightforward. You'll want to check it out early and write up all your responses in a document you can save. The fun (read "ambiguous") part is the video. The video is on one of three topics. I chose "Classroom Innovation" for all of my entries. I applied four times but got in on my third. Sort of.

Attempt #1


It's obvious what the problem is here: it's all about me. Lesson learned.

Attempt #2


I LOVE this video. It took forever to make and I had to root my Galaxy Note to do it. It shows of student work. See? I learned. Any time I get to learn a new skill (like screencasting on a phone) while completing a task, I feel like I've moved forward. Different lesson learned. I'm going to pretend that I didn't get in with this one because of the music. It came up in YouTube as something that I had permission to use, but it's entirely possible that it didn't meet the guidelines about type of music used. Or it could just not be what they were looking for. Feel free to leave a comment with your thoughts.

Attempt #3

I applied for the Mountain View cohort, which would have been very nice because it's within driving distance from where I live, but the application was due during a super-busy time of my year. I missed the deadline by seconds. Literally. My computer clock that syncs from the internet said that it was 12:00am PST. Seconds.

The funny part here is that I used everything word for word - even the same video - for the next application: Chicago.

Attempt #4

After spending so much time on that last one, I cranked this one out. Just me talking about my take on innovation in the classroom, some pics and boom. Not even the full minute. Lesson learned.


I should have a reflective blog post up in the next week or so, but I wanted to get this out there because there are many amazing educators who should be applying for this great experience including my new Twitter pal Erin Bortz, who gets credit for forcing prompting me to get this post done. ;)

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Creating Our World

This post is an rush-to-publish piece of work by +Delaine Johnson and me for the Google Teacher Academy session on Creating Your World. We were tasked to "create a new core content area." Here's our proposed course:

WAC: Writing + Art + Coding
We need to create a new core course to address 22nd century skills. Writing, Art & Coding combine to form the future of communication.

Here's a (really quickly cut together) video of reasons why this course is needed:



Sources:

Writing Across the Curriculum Overview
http://youtu.be/3ZQoU5wVeEA

Diane Ravitch on the Arts
ARTSEDGEKC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3v2TQgePZzc&feature=share&list=PL65070CF7C3F716AF>

What Most Schools Don’t Teach - Short Film
Code.org
http://youtu.be/dU1xS07N-FA

Friday, October 12, 2012

Why I Just Killed My Own Theatre Department

Thespian Troupe #2041's Charter
When I left the San Francisco Shakespeare Festival to work in public education back in 1996, I stepped into a thriving two-teacher department at my Alma Mater. I still tell people that if I weren't teaching at my old high school, I wouldn't be teaching: it's too hard. Antioch High has a rich 55-year history and our Theatre Department is no different. Our Thespian Troupe was formed in 1960 and alumni include such successes as two-time Academy Award Winner Michael Semanick.

Over the past 17 years (and many before that), our department has done countless musicals, straight plays, and student written & directed shows. Experiences during my tenure included everything from yearly fieldtrips to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival to a student production as part of the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Today is our last day.

Things have changed over the years, and I'm not just talking about demographics. Both middle schools that feed into our school dropped their drama programs (Theatre found me in 8th grade) and their music programs are almost non-existent as well. Our ninth graders have increasingly been assigned required electives like Academic Literacy, Health, and Algebra Support classes. A few years ago, the district decided to start a performing arts academy without utilizing any of our currently-teaching performing artists.

And then the magic happened.

Technology is Communication is Theatre


I've been a technology enthusiast long before SF Shakes handed me my first pager that could text. I think that my training and work in communication is fed by the possibilities that technology presents us. One day three years ago, my Principal backed me up when I disagreed with a District-level colleague about an online grade-book communication system. Without going into the ups-and-downs since then, the entire district is now using the tool that I was recommending, I've been our school Technology Coordinator ever since, am now leading workshops on texting and mobile app design at conferences from Monterey to Florida, and am Director of Antioch High School's Media/Tech Academy. It's been a crazy three years.

Good Grief


At the beginning of last school year, my Principal offered me the choice to add an additional Acting One class (which would help build my program) or to put me in charge of a Cyberhigh class. I deliberately chose the tech class and quietly began the five stages of grief that I've had the last year to slowly move through. With the work of opening an academy and another place in the district that interested young performers could choose to go, I knew the end was near.

And then it showed up early.

Two weeks ago, the computer teacher in our academy announced her retirement. As of today. I knew that next year I'd be teaching tech classes and we'd have to decide what to do with the theatre classes (which were down to three), but with this news I was going to have to take over her classes: needed to - both for the academy and for the kids.... and probably for myself. I've never thought of myself as a career high school teacher (again, it's too hard). Instead I get to start a new career as a high school teacher. Subtle difference, but different nonetheless.

Good Bye


Today we dissolved the three theatre classes. Dissolved.
Just typing that was tough.

As for me, I have a part time job teaching theatre and directing at the local Community College; I'm not losing my art. As for the kids, there are a handful of my Advanced kids that are hurt because they're losing their home, but most of my students are just bummed that they're losing a "cool teacher." We'll still have the Thespian troupe meet after school, and if they want to do a show, we'll hire someone to come in and help.

But it won't be me.

Across campus there are 130 ninth graders calling.



Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Why I Love My School


I was crossing our main arcade a few minutes ago and happened to look up towards the office. Hidden behind the tallest stack of books I’ve ever seen was the smallest Freshman I’ve ever seen, inching his way down the hall. John Sisk, Custodian Extraordinaire, came out of a side hallway on his way to his next task that you or I would be loath to do but that he does regularly.
Without a beat, John shouted towards the well-hidden over-burdened boy, “You headed to 900?” The boy uttered what can only be described as a book-muffled “Yeah” as John approached him. By this time I was across the arcade and the pair were hidden from my view, but I stopped and waited. Not fifteen seconds later John and said boy passed by, walking side-by-side, sharing the oppressive load of academia that was previously the lone boy’s burden.

Thank you, John, for reminding me what it’s all about.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Failure Is Not An Option: It's Imperative.

This is a journal entry as part of my participation in the 3D GameLab Teacher Camp.


Prompt: How might a teacher apply even ONE characteristic of games and game environments (choice, progress bars, etc.)  to a typical unit or module of instruction?

Failure Is Not An Option: It's Imperative. 

Of all the various characteristic of gaming, I think the attitude towards failure is not only the easiest one to change, but will have the greatest effect on student performance. Think about the current classroom environment that is so focused on having correct answers that even teachers are cheating on standardized tests for students. There is no learning in knowing the answers: the learning comes with the attempts to find the answers. Let's pretend that the current educational environment will allow us to change this focus on "the right answer."

The classroom needs to become a place to fail, not to succeed. For games, the challenge of discovering the answer is why we play: why we fight that fight over and over, try that race again and again, or keep doing that puzzle until we've solved it. Imagine an environment where we marvel at the attempts, not the final grade. Teachers become tools for learning, not dictators and police officers.

I've written about this before, but in theatre, the very nature of rehearsal is failure: you try things, some work and some don't. You go back and attempt to discover more things that work... celebrating your successes, sure, but using the failures as food for more attempts. I'm pretty sure if we turned the classroom into rehearsal for "performance" on the standards, we'd be taking a step in the right direction.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Too Late to Educate?

This is a journal entry as part of my participation in the 3D GameLab Teacher Camp. This particular quest had me watch the following video and reflect in a blog post.


Too Late to Educate?

Watching David Perry's TED Talk helped me define a feeling that has been growing in my gut for about three years. If you haven't seen it and have 20 minutes, here it is:


To give you a little context, I'm 41 years old but have a couple of things going against me:
  1. I'm a theatre artist. With degrees in Drama and Theatre Directing, I've been accustomed to the term "play" being a part of the fabric of my work and life. Communication is my forte, collaboration and performance-based assessment my norms.
  2. I'm a high school teacher. There's a passage in Frank McCourt's book Teacher Man: A Memoir (that I'm going to paraphrase until I can listen to the whole thing and grab the actual quote) about how after you teach high schoolers for a while, you become one of them... you're sort of trapped in their thinking and world of communication. I've always loved and identified with that idea and I think it's helped me get through times when my "adult" friends don't understand why I'm not thinking about the world in the same way they do.
  3. I hold three positions at the same school: Theatre Arts Director, Technology Coordinator, and Media/Tech Academy Director. I know, I know: "Just put down 'Teacher' and you'll feel better." Hardly.
What's happened lately is that despite my being "ahead of the curve" with regards to educational technology (and I'm reminded regularly: recently a national foundation asked to use my template from a popular Web 2.0 tool to help out their other members), I've been hit with bouts of melancholy with regards to my work. Nevermind that change happens so slowly in public education, nevermind that money and access DO have everything to do with it regardless of how innovative you are, and nevermind that we are moving forward despite all the challenges: 

We're too late.

That's not despair; I'm not that good a writer. It's just reality. My evidence? Anecdotal. Limited to my experience. But nonetheless relevant.

My acting classes are a hotbed of experimentation... of the technological kind. I try everything. How is it relevant? It's all communication, baby. I poll my students about things like what device they'd want to check out of the library instead of textbooks. Taking photos of things and tagging them properly is regular practice. Next month my acting students are going to make apps that collect information on their favorite performer so they'll no longer have to "Google" Justin Bieber and can learn a new medium of demonstration.


Everything.

The problem is that I'm just trying. These kids are going to miss out. The seniors are going to be gone in two months and some will step backwards into a lecture hall where they won't excel either. When they say "Aw, that sounds cool! Why couldn't MY classes be like that?!?" as I explain how I'm going to work in these tools and techniques for next year's academy (at least as best I can given what I'm given), it breaks my heart.

Problem is, even the kids who do get to have "classes like that" will be behind the curve. Technology changes/grows/moves/progresses so fast that education will never be in front of it. We move too slowly, for various reasons that aren't all bad. Sure you have "Amazing Online School" here and "Smarten Up Through Gaming School" there, but as hard as I... we? ...we work, there will always be huge groups of kids that we miss. As sad as that sounds, the key is this: The fact that it's too late is the reason to keep going, not a reason to stop. I just have to keep telling myself that.

Spring break is almost over. Time for this teacher to get back to learning.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

No Such Thing as a Very Long Engagement

Bear with me...

A couple of years ago I started to use PollEverywhere in my classes, allowing the students to text in responses to questions, thoughts on topics we were covering, etc. It worked beautifully! Students were engaged like never before, I was getting instant feedback that I could use (and did) to tweak lessons in an effort to ensure maximum learning, etc. It was amazing.

For three weeks.

After a few days, participation waned. It got to the point where I'd have to say, "C'mon everyone: let's get out those cell phones!" knowing full well the vat of irony I was swimming in.

It turns out that everything has a shelf life. For today's students, you can't have engagement without change. I bring this up here because I sort of had the same thing happen with my 3D GameLab experience. I'm sure if you checked my time in the system on Monday, you'd think I was off work. On the contrary, I was doing many of the first quests on the projector in front of my classes to demonstrate the new environment I was exploring. I was thrilled with the system and my mind was abuzz with ideas for adapting lessons into quests. Over the last three days, I've been online significantly less. There were a couple of factors contributing to this (workload, week before Spring Break, large grant to finish writing), but it made me think of my PollEverywhere epiphany.

I'm now thinking about use of the 3D GameLab system itself and how it's definitely another tool rather than a complete learning environment. This sounds like a no-brainer in hindsight, but an important point nonetheless.

What are your thoughts? Can you see students coming into this environment for all of your classroom work over the course of a semester or year without becoming as jaded to the technology as with anything else? Can we make our quests engaging enough to avoid drops in level of participation? Maybe there's a balance that we'll have to discover with each class that participates...

I'd be interested to see the results of student feedback after a few weeks in the GameLab...

This is a re-post of my journal entry as part of the 3D GameLab Teacher Camp. There are some great comments in the forum where it's originally posted, but unfortunately I can't transfer them here.

"Cool! It's a game? ...So it's NOT a game?"


This is a re-post of my journal entry as part of the 3D GameLab Teacher Camp. There are some great comments in the forum where it's originally posted, but unfortunately I can't transfer them here.

This is a reflection on something that happened last Monday when I started exploring 3dGameLab in front of my students. Their first reaction was positive: they were fascinated by the gamer aspects of the environment. The question was: "So it's a game?"

When I started doing some of the quests, the general attitude changed to "So it's not a game," with the appropriate air of let-down that teachers know as the doorway to disinterest.

This got me thinking less about the GameLab environment and more about my own assignments. Do the potential quests I have in mind match the potential established by the online environment? Will my students be disappointed to find "just another journal-entry quest?" (Don't get me wrong, I personally love being XP-Paid to write a journal because I never take the time to otherwise.)

Those of you that have been using this with students: have you had to step up your assignment "game" or is this just the result of my demonstrating the platform on a projector and students not actually being in the system yet?


The Game's Afoot...

So I'm doing some professional development on quest based learning and gamification and one of the recurring quests is to journal. I'll probably cross-post a lot of them here. Hope you find them interesting!