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Uncategorized – Michelle Schira Hagerman https://mschirahagerman.com At the intersections of literacies, technologies and teaching. Wed, 09 Dec 2020 02:32:27 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://mschirahagerman.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/cropped-Metaphor1-32x32.jpg Uncategorized – Michelle Schira Hagerman https://mschirahagerman.com 32 32 Remembering Denise https://mschirahagerman.com/2020/12/08/remembering-denise/ https://mschirahagerman.com/2020/12/08/remembering-denise/#respond Tue, 08 Dec 2020 09:30:00 +0000 http://mschirahagerman.com/?p=2145 I was the last person to sit beside her. In that moment, I hope that she felt warm and safe; loved and carefree. I hope that she felt happy. Together, we were all singing. Loudly — like 18 year olds do when everything is right in the world, and nobody is watching. We were in the back seat of Andrea’s car.  Driving back from that restaurant on the beach — the one with the big wooden deck overlooking Lake Erie. In summer, we would have enjoyed the lakefront breezes but it was December. The icy winds had started to come in, so we sat indoors and probably made too much noise. We were a big group — three car loads of teenagers. Out for an evening. We both had the house salad. End of term was close. University applications were coming due. Denise and I were both trying to get our calculus grades up. Limits and differentials.

I remember the song. And the explosion. And darkness and the cold. My friend Kenny. His voice telling me it was going to be okay. An ambulance. My parents rushing in. I didn’t know. There was an accident. Denise? I asked. Was she okay? She had been right beside me.

Thirty years ago tonight. She was right beside me.

She always will be.  

Photo: Barbara Dredge Seitz. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/199313784/denise-m_-coudenys

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Fear No More: Developing Digital Literacies for Courageous Citizenship https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/09/16/fear-no-more-developing-digital-literacies-for-courageous-citizenship/ https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/09/16/fear-no-more-developing-digital-literacies-for-courageous-citizenship/#respond Fri, 16 Sep 2016 11:42:38 +0000 http://mschirahagerman.com/?p=1591 I have the privilege to present some ideas about digital literacies and digital citizenship to Ottawa-area teachers and preservice teachers at the University of Ottawa today. To download slides with my presenter notes, see below. I also include for you use the list of references that I used to write the talk.

Download slides: digitalcitizenship_sept16_v1

References

 

 

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How to embed a Twitter Timeline on a Google Site https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/09/09/how-to-embed-a-twitter-timeline-on-a-google-site/ https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/09/09/how-to-embed-a-twitter-timeline-on-a-google-site/#respond Fri, 09 Sep 2016 17:10:30 +0000 http://mschirahagerman.com/?p=1587 I had a tweet from a student last night asking for “quick tips” on how to embed a Twitter feed on a Google site. As a teacher candidate in a school using Google apps for education, I am sure her choice to use Google sites to “integrate more tech” was, at least in part, driven by the tools available to her in her teaching context. This is fundamental to the work that classroom teachers do with tech — we must always come to understand what we can do to support student learning with what we’ve got. I was thrilled to receive the question (evidence of emergent TPACK!) and wanted to help. But of course, I had no idea how to do this.

My go-to strategy is always to just Google a solution. And, as luck would have it, I found a terrific tutorial at Monkey Raptor. Using the code and the tips provided there (thank you, Monkey Raptor!) I was able to successfully embed a Twitter timeline widget on the Google Site that I recently built to support our edtech initiatives in the Teacher Education program at the University of Ottawa. And, I created a screencast to show how I did it. Lots of little steps along the way — but I hope that others can benefit from this little how-to video.

One thing to know, you can create a timeline widget like the one I created for aTwitter handle too – you just have to select “profile” and then “handle” when you create the Twitter widget rather than “search”. Since this is a community site, I chose to embed the timeline of our community hashtag #UOttawaEDU but if you’re integrating a timeline on a classroom or professional portfolio site, then it would make more sense to integrate tweets by you or by your class using your @handle 🙂

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My Tuesdays with Bernie https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/06/30/my-tuesdays-with-bernie/ https://mschirahagerman.com/2016/06/30/my-tuesdays-with-bernie/#respond Thu, 30 Jun 2016 23:19:27 +0000 http://mschirahagerman.com/?p=1529 How To Image for BBL

I was at the Faculty of Education awards ceremony in February when Bernie asked me to help him design a hybrid graduate seminar. He had taught the course several times, but wasn’t sure how to revise it so that half of the classes would take place online. Bernie knew that I had some experience with such things and he wondered if I could help him out. He had won a little money from the University to hire a tutor, so it would be like a consulting contract, really.

To be honest, I paused to consider how I would find the time. There were articles to write, a tenure file to build, and I really, really needed a rest. Eight years of no-holiday life as doctoral student, instructor, graduate program coordinator, mother of two young children and now, new assistant professor, were catching up to me. And yet, something in my exchange with Bernie told me that I should find the time somehow.

I had met Bernie a few times at meetings and knew that he was a well respected musician, music educator and scholar in the Faculty of Education. Rumour had it that he was also the most successful grant writer in the Faculty. I also knew he was a committed teacher — though a Full Professor, he was teaching in the summer? And he was seeking support to make the course the best it could be? I figured I would learn a few things simply by being in his presence.

I showed up to Bernie’s office on a Tuesday afternoon. Whereas my office is a jumbled mess of journal articles, travel receipts, unpacked boxes and diplomas on the floor, still taped up with bubble wrap, Bernie’s office is tidy and comfortable. He has a lovely table for meetings at center and a throw rug on the floor. His degrees are curated on the wall above the door. The iconic image of the Beatles walking across Abbey Road hangs between French and English versions of a resource that he created to help music educators.

I realized quickly that Bernie would teach me more than I would teach him. And he did. Our discussions of hybrid course design were balanced with collegial mentorship. One day, he told me that it took him 14 tries to get a major grant; another one took 10 tries. The name this academic game, he said, is perseverance. You just have to take every piece of advice that people give you on your reviews and use it to improve your next application. His transparency about his own process allowed me to feel like maybe I could be successful too. I mean, if the “magic recipe” is just hard work – well, that I can do.

I also appreciated the pace with which he approached his work. Methodical. One thing at a time. I admired the way that he worked doggedly to complete the tasks that he set for himself each week. It took him 6 tries to create an introductory video he liked. It took him a few hours of time to create a dossier of exemplars for students to download. He made Sign-Up Genius forms for activities in his class and learned to find, copy and insert YouTube Video embed code. Usually, I’m trying to do several things at once, always splitting my attention. In this project, I didn’t see evidence of Bernie’s workflow being chaotic, like mine. As a result, I’m trying to just be in the moment. Focus on the single task at hand and work more methodically in pursuit of particular goals.

Over a series of 11 sessions, mostly on Tuesdays, Bernie had created a hybrid course for his students that included a range of dynamic features. We covered a lot of content about how to create a hybrid course design in BlackBoard Learn. This document summarizes the work we did together on his course, but it certainly doesn’t represent the genuine mentorship I received as Bernie’s tutor, myself. I’m glad I made the time for this.

Thank you, Bernie.

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