Author Archives: Angeles Picone

Another project :)

For my Approaches to Latin American history last class we had to rethink a timeline we did at the beginning of the semester. Everyone plunged into creative memes and drawings. I had little time, but I did not want to be less creative. I made Weirdos and Losers (or a short history of Latin America) in Piktochart. I did it from scratch so it took longer than I thought. I am fairly satisfied with the result (I think it could have been a little better).

The “infographics” is here

What I couldn’t do is to print it in several pages to make a huge poster. Suggestions?

Thanks!

Final Project: Online syllabus

For our final project, I created an online version of a syllabus I have to submit. I did it on WordPress. I favored clarity and attractiveness. My main objective is that students have this available within an easy click. Blackboard is OK, but you have to click so many times through the menu that is unbearable. With an online syllabus students can consult it without needing any downloading/printing, and with handy menu to find what they are looking for faster.

My main problem is the theme. I have chosen Motif because it is a full-width theme and it has the menu on the top bar. However, I cannot find a way to remove the widgets from the side. If you go to the theme, they do not appear on the demo. When I tried to customize them, the widget section is empty.

I am still balancing colors/fonts with the contents. Because of all these are pages, there is very little room for formatting. Also, I want to eliminate the comments from all pages but I don’t know how.

I tried to include other tools we’ve worked on during this course such as about.me/twitter widgets. Although the syllabus per se is not finished, I would LOVE any suggestions that you might have to improve it. I won’t probably be teaching this class, but I thought it was a great opportunity to polish curriculum-building skills.

Thanks!!!!

 

Yeah, I wanna be a tech nerd. And teach.

First of all, apologies on the post. I had written it but forgot to post it (and then I lost what I had written).

Technology is part of our lives. People may resist it by not having a Facebook account, avoiding smartphones, or barely using e-mails. Yet, technology does regulate the most basic chores of our lives: traffic lights, shopping, buying a plane ticket to go the middle of nowhere… Students today accept technology as part of their lives but, in my experience, they do not know how to use it for boosting their learning.

In past projects with highschoolers, I have learned that students enjoy exploring their own technological skills and applying them for school. For example, when studying the difference between Romanesque and Gothic art in the Middle Ages, a group of boys used Minecraft to “build” two cathedrals. For showing it to the class, the character would walk around the buildings as a student recorded everything with his phone (they did not have the program for screen recording).

I think the use of technology should be across the the curriculum, in the same reading and writing is. In the past I have used Prezi for presentations, Mimio for working on grade 2 fine motor skills, Edmodo for managing classes (schools did not have platforms), and TodaysMeet, to name a few. Ironically (or not), the only professors that used technology the most when I was in college were soon-to-retire ones: one introduced us to the world of libraries, information, and databases; the second one was an art historian who used Powerpoint and the internet for everything; and the third one made us blog for every class.

The purpose for my registering for this program is precisely to give my amateurish, self-taught tech tools a more professional framework. More importantly, I want to know the resources available at Emory. It is very easy to come up with ideas, but it is harder to know who to ask for help. I am currently designing two syllabi: a survey and a thematic one. Therefore, I think the time for doing this course is excellent: right at the beginning of my college teaching career.