Tag Archives: scratch

Learning how to use Makey Makey with Scratch

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At the recent ACCE conference, I attended as many ‘hands on’ workshops as possible as I am not at all confident with using coding and robotics. One of the sessions involved “Using Makey Makey with Scratch” with Meredith Ebbs, a NSW project officer. See her blog site for more – Observe, Learn, Do and KodeKlubbers

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This session showed how to use Makey Makey with Scratch. As we have 6 makey makeys in our school, I was keen to learn more. They are cheaper options to get into for coding and programming than many of the robotic kits.

Possible uses:

  • Setup makey makey as a keyboard convertor, then integrate Scratch to program the Makey Makey
  • Could use  for quick one answer surveys (eg did you enjoy this lesson “yes”/”no” as students exit the classroom)
  • Make artworks and poster interactive (eg enable audio to sound on posters)
  • Can be used to add LEDs etc into the boards
  • Adding split pins to posters, activates storytelling which has been recorded in Scratch and activated by the makeymakey

What I learnt:

A good way to start using Makey Makey is to set up a keyboard using aluminium foil covered cards that are attached to the makey makey with crocodile clips. (Cards are required for each of the arrow keys and one for earthing). Then google for a “pacman game”. Use the foil covered cardboard and appropriately attached crocodile clips to the Makey Makey to play the game.

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Some suggested resources:

  1. http://bit.ly/ACCE2018Makey – fantastic online document including all resources shared together with Meredith’s actual presentation
  2. CSER MOOC – free online open source PD
  3. Follow Colleen Graves on twitter

Some other useful extras

  • buy a caterer’s bulk pack of aluminium foil
  • photo below shows some other useful items

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The picture below shows an object useful to use as a voting lever as students eg leave the classroom for evaluation or to vote in a simple survey.

 

Some code that might be useful

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An hour of code

This is Computer Science Week, Dec 9-15th 2013. I love the notion of the hour of code. I have never learnt code formally but have had to tweak html code on many occasions as a blogger and web2.0 user. As a teacher of year 11 IT, students are required to study and use a programming language.

The hour of code is designed to be a  one-hour introduction to computer science, designed to demystify “code” and show that anyone can learn the basics to be a maker, a creator, an innovator. You can learn about code here and here. 

Yesterday, two of my classes spent an hour on code. The year 6 class worked with Scratch. We watched the introductory video together, discussed creating an animated holiday card an animated holiday card. As a class we looked at the tutorials and links on the right hand side of the tutorial site ie how to delete a sprite, how to make it move etc. The students then worked at their own pace.

Here are some other great sites and resources

  1. pencilcode
  2. or start here with angry birds etc
  3. Lots of tutorials
  4. Paper binary strips
  5. Build iphone apps
  6. Videos and posters
  7. suggested approaches

Tech Talk Tuesday: Block Based Computer Programming: Scratch 2.0, Kodu and more

Block Computing

Block Computing

When: Tuesday May 28th, 2013, 4-5pm, Melbourne Australia time (gmt+10) See timeanddate for your day and timezone

Here is the link to the recording.

About this session: Marc Grossman from London, United Kingdom will be our guest presenter. Scratch 2.0 has just been released and Marc will demonstrate this wonderful free tool which allows students to learn programming in a collaborative, user friendly way. Marc will also share MS Kodu and MIT App Inventor. MS Kodu is a visual programming language made specifically for creating games that may be played on the x-box.

Marc will also demonstrate

  •  MakeyMakey which has just arrived from the US for him.  It’s a control board that works very well with Scratch.
  • Mention will also be made of Code Club an after school club aimed at 9-11 year olds but older groups can do it as well. It’s UK based at present but they have plans to go global in the next few weeks.

There has been much media coverage of late in regard to students and a need for them to learn code. A great site – code–  has been set up to help educators and students.
Please click on this link to join the webinar. Please join us and share in the conversations.

A Glimpse into “A Day in the Life of a Connected Educator”

It started as a normal, fairly mundane school day………

Well connected teachers will  find there are many ways to learn, share and teach, teachable moments arise constantly and interruptions to normal routines may become the norm. Yesterday was one such day, when normal classes were planned and a relaxing night at home anticipated, but….

World Museum Scratch Day Saturday, May 18th

Year 8 students are participating in  the Squares, Circles and Triangles project for the World Museum Project to celebrate World Scratch day. Students take photos of shapes in the real world and add them as a sprite to Scratch, highlighting the shape first and then sharing the whole picture. See an online animated sample.

Circles-Storage  tanks for firewood

Circles-Storage tanks for firewood

However, this project is quite challenging and as I am not confident with the programming elements, we had to impulsively skype my wonderful online colleague – Lorraine Leo from Boston, USA to help us in our dilemmas. My laptop webcam shared the screens of students with Lorraine so that she could see what the student was doing, speak to them and help them solve their problems. The lesson time was not long enough. So a sample student project was emailed to Lorraine for further investigation in consultation with Yoshiro Miyata, the creator from Japan.

Lorraine from USA  (in laptop) virtually teaches Amy how to solve her problem with Scratch

Lorraine from USA (in laptop) virtually teaches Amy how to solve her problem with Scratch

Brendah from Sth Africa shared her lesson on learning cell references in MS Excel with grade her 2s with the HLW Skypers Group in the chat area of skype. Joe McNulty of Pennsylvania USA, joined our conversation. Within 6 hours he had shared a google document containing more mystery picture challenges that his year 7/8 students had created for Brendah’s young students. It was on impulse that I decided to use these tasks with my year 3/4 ICT class after lunch. Students were highly engaged colouring in reference cells to reveal the mystery pic. They discovered a house, faces, a flag, a rainbow etc if they followed instructions carefully.

A rainbow in progress

A rainbow in progress

Images of Brendah’s and my students working on the tasks were emailed to Joe who then shared them with his students, resulting in them being even more motivated in creating further tasks. Joe has now put some of these up on his google site.

Home at last!

Enjoying the last remnants of my evening meal, I noticed a message in my HLW Skypers Group popup seeking people to ‘jump’ in and join a hangout with Reinhard  Marx and a class from Germany. The students were about to share their learning about “German Islands and the drinking water situation”.

The group skype request from Reinhard

The group skype request from Reinhard

I joined the hangout on my laptop as our desktop computer has been playing up and fully expected to be ejected from it due to my poor bandwidth. Surprisingly I was able to stay in but not able to use my video, nor see the screen sharing from Germany, but….. I could hear and speak to them. In the hangout were Endang from Western Java, Indonesia and Linlin from Taiwan. With me being from Australia, the foreign participants all came from islands – some small, some large and learnt about islands in Germany.

where islanders get their water from

Islands of Germany water

Students from Germany had prepared Powerpoint slides. Reinhard shared his screen with us via the Ghangout. Groups came forward and spoke to the slides and their pictures in clear English. Linlin and I then spoke about the importance of water, issues where we live and how we conserve it.

A small group shares with us

A small group shares with us

Next, a skype message came from Endang to see whether I could help her Indonesian students speak English to a native speaker. Two students introduced themselves to me, answered my many questions and then asked me questions. The chat in skype helped ensure that we understood each other reasonably well!

English speaking girl

An ordinary day turned into a very exciting one in an amazing global classroom! How was your day?

Processes involved in global collaboration

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Global education is a personal passion. Tonight’s #globalclassroom twitter chat looked at “Scaffolding learning from class to world” – a fascinating topic that Laurie Renton in a blog post What is Global Taxonomy teased apart for us with a number of questions. One question that sticks out firmly in my mind is “Is there a progression of global collaboration?”

I experienced one step in that progression today – talking to a class of students through an interpreter. My friend, Lorraine Leo was the main presenter from Boston, USA and the class of students were in Japan. This was my first experience of working through an interpreter and an interesting one.

How it looked!

  1. Professor Yoshiro Miyata, who I met through Lorraine, and creator of the World Museum Project, invited me to speak to some students along with Lorraine, using skype or google hangout. However, google hangouts are heavy on bandwidth, so I asked for skype. Unfortunately, I could not use my video due to poor sound quality
  2. Lorraine shared her screen with Japan and talked about her use of Scratch with her class and beyond by sharing images. This included our collaboration recently on the World Dot Project.
  3. Lorraine would speak a few sentences and then pause for Yoshiro to interpret.
  4. Then, it was my turn. I spoke a little, paused and could hear Yoshiro interpret. When I felt he had finished I started speaking again. I have no knowledge of Japanese, so it was very much a guessing game, especially as I spoke to a blank screen.

Up until now, I have found classes where teachers have some grasp of the English language – enough to get by in simple connections. However, this was the first time that English was not spoken. Teachers who are interested in genuine global collaboration, will need to learn how to work with an interpreter and how to do so in all situations – virtual and face to face! Another competency for me to work on!

Have you ever worked in a situation that required an interpreter? What advice would you give?

International Dot Day

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A Dot by Levi (year 11)

Several weeks ago, Lorraine Leo mentioned the existence of International Dot Day on September 15th and that she would be involved in a Scratch World Dot Project a World Museum project organised by Yoshiro Miyata. It was promptly forgotten, until I noticed active tweets alerting us to the upcoming event. Read further to see our involvement, what we did and how we did it:-

  1. I researched the meaning of the day and signed up for Dot Day through Fable Vision.
  2. Grade Prep/One and Year 4/5 created dots with Doodle Buddy on the iPad for Dots Around the World (Chrissy Hellier’s project)
  3. Year 7 and some 4/5s created the dots for the Scratch project.
  4. The classes watched the Dot on youtube
  5. Chrissy Hellier from Bangkok and her class skyped us. Chrissy showed us the book and read sections to us. See Skype Linkup with Bangkok
  6. Students created their dots using Doodle Buddy on the iPad.
  7. Lorraine Leo from Boston USA helped year 7 students, on an individual basis, create their dots using Scratch,using skype on the iPad. Going Dotty with a Mobile Teacher
  8. Year 11 students wanted to be part of it too.
  9. The images were shared in a drop box folder and on flickr. See our flickr images

Year 4/5 Dots can be seen in the following presentation.

Where can you see the final outcomes?

  1. Student work is now proudly displayed at the World Dot Project (allow this site to load as it will take time).
  2. Work from Year Prep/One, Four/Five and Year 11 can be seen from the video on Dots Around the World

Reflecting on this project:-

  1. I love the notion of encouraging creativity
  2. A Dot is such a simple concept but students came up with so many different ideas and applications
  3. Many times, I bit my tongue, as I was about to say that is not right, why dont you do this etc. I just let the student creativity flow.
  4. The younger students just use any colour combination, they have not been taught to keep with certain colours etc and don’t you just love them?
  5. Not all students could read or write well but they could draw a dot. It catered for every ability.
  6. It plummeted us into the world of technology where we could learn, share and teach others around the world.
  7. It forced me to use technology (skype on my iPad) which I may not have done otherwise. Now I want to try and use this more.
  8. Communication and collaboration tools used included: twitter, skype, blogs, email, gchat, google+, youtube, slideshare, facebook. dropbox, scratch, flickr

Thanks Peter Reynolds for writing the Dot, fablevision for promoting the idea and to all those who created the projects and encouraged us to add our dots to them.

Happy Dot Day and long live creativity!

Going ‘dotty’ with a mobile teacher!

Hands were up all over the classroom from students new to Scratch trying to Imagecomplete their sprite. Patiently the teacher moved around the room, answering those questions.  But………….. the teacher ……..

  1. was not in the physical classroom, but moved around the room, on the screen of an iPad using skype
  2. lived 1000’s of kilometres away in Boston USA (my class is in south eastern Australia)

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Taking it back an hour…..Sometimes, I think nothing more amazing can happen with technology in the classroom, but it continues on! I had just been chatting on skype to Lorraine Leo who had encouraged me to get students involved in the World Museum Dot Project for International Dot Day. However, I am not at all confident or competent with Scratch. Then, the bell went and it was time to teach year 7 ICT.

Thinking this was a great and simple way to introduce students in Year 7 to Scratch, the students as usual push the software tool to the boundaries to create what they want their desired outcomes. And so, the students had lots of questions. Most chose to use the editing pad in Scratch but a few created a dot in MS Paint, some sprites had to be cropped, some had mutliple sprites using them to combine into one etc! Unfortunately, I could not answer the questions and my first reaction was to skype Lorraine and see if she was still online. This is a class of 26 students and I had to lend one of the students my laptop as he did not have access to a desktop or netbook. 

Yikes! that meant I could not use my laptop to skype, as I usually do! I suddenly remembered my iPad and quickly logged onto skype on it. The front camera was used to introduce the student to Lorraine and then the back camera was used by the student to show Lorraine their screen whilst talking through their questions and problems. As Lorraine finished speaking to one student, she was passed onto the next. Sometimes a second student had to hold the iPad still, so that the requesting student could use the keyboard and computer screen to do what Lorraine was telling them.

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Three heads, four hands collaborate to solve the problem!

At one stage, two girls took Lorraine out into the corridor so they could quite clearly hear her instructions. The 50 minute lesson soon finished and most students completed their sprite ready for me to upload to the World Museum site.

Highlights of the first time use of skype on an iPad in the classroom.

  • The intriguing part was that they students did not bat an eyelid or even look  amazed! They just treated Lorraine like their teacher in the physical classroom and not the virtual one that she was, one who lived worlds away, in another day and another time zone.
  • the mobility of the iPad meant that the students could remain in their seats and share their work
  • the problems were solved NOW. Time was not wasted trying to find answers etc.
  • the two camera options on the iPad were fabulous to work with in this environment.
  • individualized learning at its best.

Thanks Lorraine for being a great team teacher for us and giving up your precious night time. We are successfully ‘dotty’ now! Have you used a mobile teacher? If you have an iPad how do you use the functionality of the two cameras? How can we take such an experience further?

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Happy Birthday Scratch!

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Happy birthday Scratch, complete with popping balloons!

Today is Scratch’s 5th birthday. Scratch is a programming language for both young and older learners! Have a look at how students are saying ‘Happy Birthday‘ to Scratch at the World Museum’s Let’s Celebrate Scratch’s birthday. (This may take a few minutes to load.)  This is a project put together by Professor Yoshiro Miyata of Japan. Many balloons are floating, and if you click a balloon, it will pop and say a birthday message for Scratch.

Students from across the globe have downloaded the scratch sprite  from the World Scratch Birthday Project and uploaded their sprite back to the public gallery. My grade 4/5 students used this sample project to wish  Scratch a ‘Happy Birthday”. Here is how it was done:-

  1. I downloaded the birthday project sample balloon which came with coding and saved it on our school public student drive.
  2. Students opened the file, saved it back into their folders and simply customized the balloon to their personal design. They replaced the phrases in the coding with their first name, where they are from and why they like using Scratch. It was then uploaded to the public gallery to be grabbed and placed on the World Museum site.

Why I loved this great project:-

  1. We did not have to be experts to create a birthday message. The coding was done for us but students could tweak it if they wished.
  2. Students could customize the balloon and use their own creativity.
  3. The balloon pops when clicked and opens up with their message
  4. It is going online so there is an authentic global audience
  5. A parent popped into the room while we were creating our balloons and was suitably impressed with the popping of balloons, the engagement and the sharing that was going on.

To quote Yoshiro Miyata

 I would like to put their works in the project.  I think the students will enjoy watching their creations in the big display with their messages.  That’s when their vision expands from their works to other people around the world working together with them.

From a newbie point of view, this was a great project to work with. We did not need to know much about scratch and its more complex coding options.  The students could get an effective, creative, customizable product quite quickly. They finished it within a 50 minute lesson.

Although I have tried Scratch several times over the last four years,  I kept hitting a wall and then gave up. This has inspired me again and the students are up and running! (or should that be scratching!) Thanks to Lorraine Leo for connecting us to this great project. Have you tried Scratch? What could you share? Are you part of the World Museum projects?

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Popping the balloons

The changing face of teaching!

This year I teach ICT or computer studies to years 4 and 5 students for one lesson per week.

Vesna's sprite

Vesna's sprite

Lorraine Leo, a long term colleague,  also teaches this age group at Jackson School in USA. Hoping that we could work together on some global project, Lorraine suggested we get involved in the World Friends Scratch project.

Knowing that the grade 4/5 boys (who tend to be disengaged in the normal classroom) would like working with Scratch, I agreed.  However, I have never put time aside to sit down and learn how to use it, despite being highly interested in its use.

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Soon after, grade 4/5 went to the library to watch a skype videoconference linkup with Lorraine and her student Lana from USA. It was Wed night at 7:30pm Lana’s time and Thursday 11:30am our time. Students watched intensely as Lana used the screen share facility of skype and stepped us through the creation of a sprite, how to make it move and how to add speech bubbles that would appear when it bumps another sprite.

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At the end of this presentation, students were able to ask Lana questions and 50 minutes disappeared very quickly. Just as the bell went, Lana took her laptop to the window to show us the snow that had fallen outside. Despite the darkness we could see it quite clearly.

Blake's sprite

Blake's sprite

Students then proceeded to create their sprites during following ICT lessons. Lorraine created two screencasts which quite clearly demonstrated the steps required and emailed them to me. The links to these were shared on my class blog. Students were able to work at their own pace and as some students completed the tasks, they mentored the others. I became a facilitator and simply watched the learning begin and blossom.

The first group of students have now completed their sprites, tested them and some were uploaded to the public gallery on Thursday, ready to be transferred to the World Friends site global project site.

What we learnt

  • Digital citizenship – the necessity to make our sprites resemble our own persona. One student had made an animal sprite, another gave their body a different colour. They were changed to bear a greater likeness to themselves for global sharing.
  • How to use screen casts effectively. How to use video tutorials that Lorraine Leo created to help them learn.
  • Students can become effective instructors and mentors, even when they are virtual.  They talk to each other in their own language.
  • The necessity to follow each of these steps or the sprite would not talk when bumped.
  • Expertise no longer matters if a teacher has a strong learning network

Why it worked so well

  • The engagement of student learning with technology –
  • having an American student teach them virtually
  • working with a tool that is not obviously literacy or numeracy based
  • having experts teach the students – both Lana via skype and Lorraine via the screencasts
  • students mentoring other students within the classroom.
  • A real project with an authentic audience

How does this fit the pedagogy of learning? (adpated from the ISTE NETS standards for students)

Students will

    • use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively on a global scale,  to support individual learning
    • contribute to the learning of others
    • connect, interact, collaborate and publish with global peers, experts and general community members, including family.
    • use a variety of media and digital environments to connect, communicate and create.
    • share learning spaces
    • communicate information and ideas effectively to a variety of digital audiences using a variety of media and formats
    • develop cultural understanding and global awareness by engaging with learners from other cultures.
    • Promote and model digital citizenship and responsibility.
Screen shot of the World Friends website

Screen shot of the World Friends website

    Do you have any questions? Please email them to innovatorofthemonth@gmail.com or add a comment below. Have you used scratch? If so, how? Has there been an element of global collaboration?

Learning to Scratch!

When: Tuesday 30 August, 4-5pm, Melbourne Australia gmt+10 time

About this session: Scratch is a popular, free programming language for everyone. It has been developed byMIT and allows users toscratch logodevelop programming skills in a user friendly environment and to  create interactive stories, games , music and art. Outcomes can be shared online.

In this session, Marc will cover the following:-

  • Learning to Scratch
  • What can Scratch be used for
  • Where to download Scratch from!
  • How to move and draw with Scratch
  • The different types of Scratch blocks
  • How to find resources for Scratch.

Please join us and bring any of your experiences with Scratch.

About the presenter: Marc Grossman, all the way from the UK  will present from London and be our global presenter for this session. Marc Grossman, all the way from the UK will present from London for this session. Marc is a teaching assistant at two primary schools in London. After working in the IT industry for almost 20 years he moved into supporting children with their learning, He loves helping children with their numeracy, literacy and ICT. He also spends part of of his time supporting teachers too, showing them new aspects of ICT such as Scratch and SketchUp.

Here is the link to the recording