The blog will act as learning journal and a place where I have accrued some of the artifacts aligned with what I have learned in this course.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
All About Me
Thursday, June 5, 2025
The Challenges of Developing a Blended Course
While developing a blended course for a Kindergarten class, there were many considerations to be negotiated and problems to solve. Kindergarten students are in the Piaget’s pre-operational stage of development and require course content that aligns with their specific capabilities. Many of the educational apps vetted were not developmentally appropriate and finding ones that were took time and patience. Kindergarten students utilize symbolic thinking and are egocentric. They use pictures to represent objects and concepts, and they view the world from their own perspective. Their attention span is limited, and they effectively learn through social interaction. Understanding how kindergarten students learn was the key to successfully designing my blended course. For the at-home portion of the lesson, finding technologies that align with my student population was a trial-and-error endeavor. Several apps were vetted to ensure learner success. The apps chosen were novel, developmentally appropriate, and easy to access. Finding apps that were appropriately paced and aligned with the lesson learning objectives were difficult to find and required a trial and error approach while vetting. Cost was a consideration and an obstacle as well. Some apps charge for access and choices had to be made based on thumbnails as to whether the apps would be aligned with the needs of my learners. There were a few apps that I paid for that I wound up not using.
At home support was also a consideration that went into the lesson planning. Alerting parents and caregivers as to the use of technology by their children was a way to ensure student safety. Requesting that students are monitored at home while using technology acts as digital safeguard for children. A JotForm attendance sheet was sent to parents and caregivers to record student participation. An email was also sent with instructions for accessing the classroom blog which contains lesson instructions. Home language considerations were addressed by providing videos in English and Spanish on the blog. Special education students would require additional supports at home. Parents of these students received additional instructions as to how to support their children. During the in-class portion of the blended lesson, dual language students were paired with English language learners for language support. Special education students were provided a calming area, movement breaks, and sensory supports. The in-class portion of the lesson also contained student tasks that were sensory, which aligns with their learning style. To address their egocentrism and increase their expressive language skills, students were tasked with sorting authentic clothes collaboratively. To address their attention span, several of the tasks were gamified. To successfully design a blended lesson for the kindergarten population, it is effective to think like a five-year-old and ask yourself, “Is this interesting, can I touch it, and is it fun”. In my experience, lessons that clear these three hurdles are gateways to success.
What to do Should the Course be Taught Again
Should I reteach this blended course, I would increase the use of authentic materials such as instruments that measure weather. Authentic materials are novel and due to their age, kindergarten students have limited access to these at home. Instruments that measure the temperature and windspeed could be used. To help students appreciate and understand the views of others, I would ask parents and caregiver to create small, one-minute videos with their children during the at home portion of the lesson that could be viewed in class.
Considerations for Using the Course as a Professional Development Opportunity
If the course had been developed as professional development opportunity for peer professional educators, I would have included more information as to why the materials chosen were appropriate for the learner population. It is important for teachers and administrators to understand that alignment of learner needs with the lesson is a prerequisite for success. There are many opportunities to embed digital resources into a blended lesson, but if they do not align with how students learn their efficacy is lost. I would have also included an assessment of how the lesson went when delivered, the lessons learned and how to best leverage the technologies chosen.
All About Me
Hello, My name is Christopher Yack. My journey to teaching has been winding and circuitous. After graduating high school in 1990, I a...
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Hello, My name is Christopher Yack. My journey to teaching has been winding and circuitous. After graduating high school in 1990, I a...
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Start your lesson by viewing the 2 videos in the playlist below. Then play the Season Spinner Game, complete the Fall Clothing Sort, ...
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Seasonal Characteristics: Learning Objective: The student will be able to name one characteristic of each season. Digital Objective: The s...