Sunday, March 26, 2017

Blog Post for PBS Teachers' Lounge

I was thrilled to contribute a blog post for PBS Teachers' Lounge, published on March 24, 2017. It was based off of a PA School Librarian post entitled "Virtual Field Trips," but it goes into much more step-by-step detail as to how a beginner can create a successful virtual field trip for their students. Here's the post: http://www.pbs.org/education/blog/foreign-language-virtual-field-trips-a-travel-guide-for-beginners. After creating the post, I learned about a PBS virtual field trip that students could take using 360 degree video content from their Civil War series Mercy Street. The brief video is available from the free Littlstar app, and the lesson can be extended to include a discussion and a written activity or assessment. I had the opportunity to forge a new collaboration with one of my social studies colleagues, so this is why I am so thrilled to learn about new and engaging PBS virtual reality content. Hopefully a post on this lesson soon!

Reading Graphic Novels

When I was first asked to teach a group of students how to properly read a graphic novel, I wasn't quite sure what to teach them. But as I began to research the topic, I realized that students who have never read a graphic novel or comic book could easily be confused by panels, thought bubbles, or dialog bubbles that do not always follow our traditional straight lines of left to right text. Get Graphic, a website created by the Buffalo and Erie County Public Libraries along with their partners, offered a lot of help on the topic: http://www.getgraphic.org. These fantastic librarians put together an easy-to-follow guide on how to properly read a graphic novel, along with definitions for terms, and examples of pages. I uploaded some of these materials into Nearpod and created interactive activities in which students had to number dialog bubbles to demonstrate their knowledge of how to read a graphic novel page. After the lesson, several students ended up checking out graphic novels from the library, so I was excited to be able to introduce this genre of literature to students. I was especially excited to see how engaged some of the boys in the English classes were in the novels they were reading. Some started side-conversations about funny moments in the text or neat illustrations that they wouldn't normally see in their required reading. I hope I have the opportunity to teach similar lessons to this one in the future, as the students were engaged and excited about what they were reading! Additionally, as someone who rarely reads graphic novels, I learned a lot and was even inspired to read one of the graphic novels I had just purchased for the library.
Students number panels to demonstrate understanding of how to read a graphic novel.

Students answer brief questions about the experience of reading a graphic novel