Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Let TED do the Talking Lee Anne Morris Assistant Professor - Coordinator The Eighth Floor Technology Integration Instructional Design.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Let TED do the Talking Lee Anne Morris Assistant Professor - Coordinator The Eighth Floor Technology Integration Instructional Design."— Presentation transcript:

1 Let TED do the Talking Lee Anne Morris Assistant Professor - Coordinator The Eighth Floor Technology Integration Instructional Design

2 Housekeeping? 0 Can you hear me now? 0 We encourage you to be active in the chat area. 0 Maybe tell us where/how you are viewing this class! 0 Can you raise your hand? 0 Can you un-raise your hand? 0 Am I recording? 0 http://soltraining.wikispaces.com/home http://soltraining.wikispaces.com/home 0 Any Questions?

3 What is TED? TED is a nonprofit devoted to spreading ideas, usually in the form of short, powerful talks (18 minutes or less). Technology, Entertainment and Design TED began in 1984 as a conference where Technology, Entertainment and Design converged, and today covers almost all topics — from science to business to global issues — in more than 100 languages. Meanwhile, independently run TEDx events help share ideas in communities around the world. TechnologyEntertainmentDesign

4 Why We Like TED... ?

5 TED The TED Commandments 1. Thou Shalt Not Simply Trot Out thy Usual Shtick 2. Thou Shalt Dream a Great Dream, or Show Forth a Wondrous New Thing, Or Share Something Thou Hast Never Shared Before 3. Thou Shalt Reveal thy Curiosity and Thy Passion 4. Thou Shalt Tell a Story 5. Thou Shalt Freely Comment on the Utterances of Other Speakers for the Sake of Blessed Connection and Exquisite Controversy 6. Thou Shalt Not Flaunt thine Ego. Be Thou Vulnerable. Speak of thy Failure as well as thy Success. 7. Thou Shalt Not Sell from the Stage: Neither thy Company, thy Goods, thy Writings, nor thy Desperate need for Funding; Lest Thou be Cast Aside into Outer Darkness. 8. Thou Shalt Remember all the while: Laughter is Good. 9. Thou Shalt Not Read thy Speech. 10. Thou Shalt Not Steal the Time of Them that Follow Thee Shared in Tim Longhurst blog post: http://www.timlonghurst.com/blog/2008/05/16/the-ted-commandments-rules- every-speaker-needs-to-know/http://www.timlonghurst.com/blog/2008/05/16/the-ted-commandments-rules- every-speaker-needs-to-know/

6

7 Big 6 - Research Skills

8 Ideas for Your Classroom? 0 Prime the Pump 0 Spark Conversation 0 Make Ideas Accessible 0 Highlight an Essential Question 0 Make Traditional Lessons Come Alive 0 Learn Presentation Skills One Example: Introvert or Extrovert? Is that the question? Another Example: TED Radio Hour

9 TED Ed Clubs Bring TED to your classroom with TED-Ed Clubs! TED-Ed Clubs supports students in presenting their big ideas in the form of short TED-style talks. Some students may even end up on the TED stage! http://ed.ted.com/clubs

10

11 TED Studies Created in collaboration with Wiley, TED Studies use TED talks as a jumping-off point for a structured educational experience. They're designed to help students, professors, and self-guided learners explore important topics in higher education. On TED.com, each TED Study includes a curated video collection, as well as an introductory essay and summary analysis. An expanded version of TED Studies — including special modules on each talk with questions, assignments, key terms and recommended reading — is available by license for academic settings.

12 Post TED Talk Post TED Talk Give students a task that encourages them to use the ideas or language, etc. from the TED Talk. 0 Interview the speaker–ask 0 Interview the speaker–ask the speaker questions based on what you heard. Role play as a journalist and speaker. Students should try to use phrases used to persuade the journalist or make a point. (who-what-when-where-how-why) 0 Explain what you mean 0 Explain what you mean– give each student the definition of a difficult word or concept brought up in the video and students discuss asking each other to explain what they mean. 0 Debate 0 Debate– Pick a few controversial statements and divide students in to ‘for’ and ‘against’ teams. They should work together to think of how they are going to justify their points and then have a debate. 0 Write a review 0 Write a review– What did they think of the TED talk? Did they agree or disagree with the points made? Was the speaker convincing? Did they find it inspiring? 0 Presentation 0 Presentation– Write and present your own talk on a similar topic. 0 Explain to a lower class 0 Explain to a lower class– How would you explain the ideas in simple terms to a class a level below you? 0 Do Research 0 Do Research – find resources and research to prove or disprove the speaker

13 TED Talks 0 50 Ted Talks Every Educator Should Check Out (2014)Ted Talks 0 The “Best” TED Talks (Well, Really, The Ones I use with My Classes“Best” 0 12 TED Talks for Teachers to Watch Before 2010 12 TED Talks for Teachers to Watch Before 2010 0 875 TED Talks in a Neat Spreadsheet 875 TED Talks in a Neat Spreadsheet 0 Teaching With TED (wiki with talks categorized) Teaching With TED 0 How to use TED Talks in the ClassroomTED Talks in the Classroom

14 Why We Like TED... ?

15 TED is not the only game in town 0 Ignite 0 Ignite are a series of talks, available online, that are somewhat similar to TED Talks. Presenters get 20 slides and five minutes to make their point. It’s somewhat similar to Pecha Kucha presentations. The topics do not appear to generally be as wide-ranging as TED Talks, and seem to be more “geeky,” but some look pretty interesting. Ignite 0 Big Think 0 Big Think has over 600 engaging interviews with “thought leaders.” In many ways, it is similar to TED Talks. One nice advantage is that they host the talks on their site, so it should get through school content filters. Big Think Big Think https://www.njea.org/news-and-publications/njea-review/january-2012/teducation

16 Resources & Parting Ideas 0 https://delicious.com/lamorris/TED https://delicious.com/lamorris/TED 0 http://soltraining.wikispaces.com/HOME http://soltraining.wikispaces.com/HOME

17 Evaluation 0 http://soltraining.wikispaces.com/SOL+Evaluationhttp://soltraining.wikispaces.com/SOL+Evaluation

18 What Do We Teach?  Classes that focus on integrating Technology in the Classroom... Such as,  Mobile Technology  Web 2.0 and then some  Google Stuff  Photoshop, In-Design, Publisher  Productivity  Smart and Promethean  Online and Blended Learning Full class Schedule http://eighthfloor.org / http://eighthfloor.org /

19


Download ppt "Let TED do the Talking Lee Anne Morris Assistant Professor - Coordinator The Eighth Floor Technology Integration Instructional Design."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google