Emily Merritt, Author at Swivl https://www.swivl.com/author/emerritt/ Fri, 02 Apr 2021 16:46:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 97173492 Using Swivl for the TLC Grant in Iowa by Patrick Donovan https://www.swivl.com/2017/05/09/using-swivl-for-the-tlc-grant-in-iowa-by-patrick-donovan/ Wed, 10 May 2017 04:36:45 +0000 https://www.swivl.com/?p=20772 Over the last couple of years, Iowa schools have seen an increase in the number of Instructional Coaches, Model Teachers, and Mentor Teachers thanks to the Teacher Leadership and Compensation (TLC) grant. While we have had Instructional Coaches in my district for a while now, the grant allowed us to increase our number of coaches […]

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Over the last couple of years, Iowa schools have seen an increase in the number of Instructional Coaches, Model Teachers, and Mentor Teachers thanks to the Teacher Leadership and Compensation (TLC) grant. While we have had Instructional Coaches in my district for a while now, the grant allowed us to increase our number of coaches while also identifying Model and Mentor Teachers. The grant allows us to create more professional learning for our teachers and helps to create a system of internal growth using our coaches and current teachers.

We have used the Swivl a lot in my own district, but I have talked with many others who are using it in many of the same ways that we are. Our big goals as part of the TLC program is to help our teachers grow in their own learning throughout the district. The Swivl works well with this goal as it has many uses and has been implemented in a variety of ways. Each of our different TLC groups use the Swivl in similar ways but also have special ways that they use it as part of our professional learning. The Swivl is a versatile device and the updates keep providing us new opportunities for use.

One reason why the Swivl has been able to be used so extensively by our teachers is that it is very easy to use. I trained our Instructional Coaches on how to use the Swivl and the best practices, which allowed them then the ability to help teachers use it in their classrooms. One issue that was expected, is that there are a lot of teachers who are wary about recording themselves. The nice thing is that the Swivl blends so well into the background that many get over that unease quickly. We have to focus on the purpose of the recording and that purpose should outweigh any unease we have when viewing ourselves since video can be so powerful in our own growth.

Model Teachers

Our Model Teachers are chosen for the fact that they are people whose practices we want to model to other teachers, and because they have opted in to more professional learning than the rest of our teachers. Our Model Teachers are available to other Teacher Leaders, and other teachers overall in the district, to model what they are doing in the classroom. They are also expected to record classroom interactions in order for us to develop a video repository to be shared with other teachers in the district. Many of our Model Teachers have used the Swivl to record these classroom activities and interactions. We are still working on a best way to share those videos with all teachers in our district but we have looked at how the Swivl Cloud could help in this as we can easily share and use the commenting feature to drive discussions over best practices.

The Swivl allows us to follow the teacher around the room while they are teaching and the microphone picks up the audio we need to hear. The Swivl is noticed by the students when you first use it but it quickly blends into the background. It becomes less of a distraction than if you have multiple other teachers standing in the room to observe something. These teachers can easily share out the videos with others so they can see what is going on in other classrooms without having to pay for a substitute teacher.

Many of our Model Teachers have started to use the Swivl in their own classrooms for their own work with students. Some have used it to record lessons to share with students who are gone or will need it again later. Some have even used it to share work done by students with authors or others who are connected to the student’s work. We are working with some teachers as they start to use Swivl to better observe their own students and to increase the effectiveness of their feedback and planning.

Mentor Teachers

Our Mentor Teachers work with our teachers who are new to teaching, or new to the district. They are often in the same building as their mentees but this is not always the case. The Mentor can still observe what their mentee is doing without having to travel to their school, thanks to the Swivl. By having the chance to record the classroom observation, this lessens the stress on the Mentor to always be able to come over and leave their classroom with a sub. The Swivl can easily record something that both the Mentor and Mentee have discussed, all without the Mentor having to be there. They can easily use the commenting feature in the Swivl Cloud to collaborate over the shared video. This digital work can lead to more effective work when they are meeting in person.

Instructional Coaches

Each Instructional Coach in our district was given a Swivl at the start of the year. We wanted this tool in their hands for them to use as they work with teachers. The Swivl can easily be integrated into our coaching cycles as our teachers plan and reflect with our coaches. The Swivl can be used when a coach is observing a teacher as part of their coaching cycle, which can provide another data point for them to use or to allow them to have an “impartial observer” in the form of the video. A teacher could even record the class without the coach being there, and then they can come together later to use the video as part of their coaching conversation. The video allows teachers to see what is actually happening in the classroom, something that can’t happen in the moment when we are teaching.

We have even used the Swivl to record our large group learning between administration and our Instructional Coaches, as well as our PLC work that our coaches participate in as part of their own learning. We are starting to look at how we can use either the multiple camera setup or the multiple microphone Swivl, and the online Cloud commenting features, to create new learning opportunities for ourselves as we continue to reflect and grow. The bottom line is that video can tell us so much more than any other form of media and we are continually looking at ways that we can use it as part of our professional learning.

Overall the Swivl has found a place in a lot of the work that is done by our TLC groups. The video that you can get from using the Swivl, and the commenting in the Swivl Cloud, can play a large role in your work as you reflect, grow, and collaborate. We are excited to use the multiple-camera setup to look at individualized feedback and to give us more ways to observe/reflect on learning in the classroom. With our focus on continually growing and learning, the Swivl plays a big role in our work.


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Patrick Donovan is a Technology Integration Specialist in Ames, IA, an authorized Google Education Trainer, a Swivl Pioneer, and much more. He has a Masters in Curriculum and Instructional Technology from Iowa State University. Check out his website and Swivl Pioneer page, and follow him on Twitter

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Optimizing Formative Assessment Using Individualized Observations https://www.swivl.com/2017/03/29/optimizing-formative-assessment-using-individualized-observations/ Thu, 30 Mar 2017 01:23:09 +0000 https://www.swivl.com/?p=20020 Jeremy Shaw is a Swivl Pioneer and Instructional Technology Coach in Snow Hill, North Carolina, who has been active in integrating technology into classrooms to lift student achievement and increase engagement in his district. In his blog, he shares his experience of using Swivl Pro+ to facilitate the individualized observation of a STEM-based Spanish class […]

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Jeremy Shaw is a Swivl Pioneer and Instructional Technology Coach in Snow Hill, North Carolina, who has been active in integrating technology into classrooms to lift student achievement and increase engagement in his district. In his blog, he shares his experience of using Swivl Pro+ to facilitate the individualized observation of a STEM-based Spanish class to both document a brand new and exciting lesson and to assess the impact of the lesson on individual students.

Document, Reflect…and Assess? (Excerpt)

by: Jeremy Shaw

Swivl has been a great coaching tool for me but the capabilities do not stop there. With Swivl Pro+, a new wave of student assessment has begun. Swivl Pro+ makes use of the Swivl device as well as up to four other devices. One example of how I have taken advantage of this feature is with Mrs. Lilian Corbitt’s STEM Spanish I class. In this class, Mrs. Corbitt wanted to integrate our new Little Bits Kits. Before introducing the challenge, we needed to be sure students received a proper introduction to these “electronic building blocks”. We also wanted students to show that they had an understanding of these devices by building their own circuits.

So, how did we accomplish this?

We separated the class into 4 small groups. Each group had their own iPad running the Swivl+ app. Students viewed a presentation on the iPad (yes, Swivl allows embedded presentations as well!) and performed the task on each slide. To make this even more awesome, Swivl+ was recording each group simultaneously. Once the presentation and recording were completed, the videos were uploaded to the Swivl Cloud and compiled into one video. In this video we had the ability to select the group we wanted to view and even isolate the audio for the particular group. This allowed the teacher to assess whether the group correctly demonstrated the task.

Swivl and Swivl+ have opened up so many possibilities for teacher documentation, teacher reflection and, now, even student assessment.

I can hardly wait to see how far we can go!

Read the full post on Jeremy’s blog.


Jeremy Shaw is an Instructional Technology Coach for grades 6-12 in Snow Hill, NC. He mentors teachers throughout the region as a member of the Digital Leaders Coaching Network. His goal is to help teachers integrate meaningful technology into their instruction, allowing them to work “smarter” while increasing student engagement and achievement. Check out Jeremy’s website and Swivl Pioneer page, and follow him on Twitter

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What’s Missing from Teacher Collaboration Today? https://www.swivl.com/2017/03/02/whats-missing-from-teacher-collaboration-today/ Thu, 02 Mar 2017 10:49:52 +0000 https://www.swivl.com/?p=19508 For as long as modern schools have existed, collaboration has been critical to the teaching profession. It has also been a constant struggle to make effective. Finding time for in-person collaboration during the school day is a challenge. In addition, accessing the expertise to address very specific student needs was not always possible on a […]

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For as long as modern schools have existed, collaboration has been critical to the teaching profession. It has also been a constant struggle to make effective. Finding time for in-person collaboration during the school day is a challenge. In addition, accessing the expertise to address very specific student needs was not always possible on a single school campus. And finally, given the concurrent nature of schools, teachers have to rely primarily on their own observation skills in a chaotic classroom to assess their students.

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The emergence of digital platforms, like Twitter, allowed teachers to overcome many of the obstacles they traditionally encountered with peer collaboration:

  • Teachers are now able to ask for feedback at any time, from nearly any device, meaning collaboration is more frequent and requires less overhead.
  • Online resources and tools can be easily shared and broadcasted to the broader educational community.

While online collaboration has vastly improved teacher collaboration over the old model, there are still some limitations:

  • Teachers still rely primarily on their own power of observation to assess and communicate their students’ needs when requesting feedback.
  • Communication via social media often lacks the depth of conversation that is needed to tackle some in-class challenges.

Individualized observations bring the best of in-person and online collaboration together, along with added benefits missing from both. An online, video observation where you can see and hear every student makes possible the one thing that is hugely valuable and yet so hard to achieve on a daily basis: to get a second pair of eyes on your students’ engagement in class. Just like other forms of online collaboration, you can gather collective insight through simple chat interfaces so that it can be more frequent and can take place at any time. Online resources can easily be shared, but with a window into the classroom, they can also be tied directly to actual students’ needs.

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Bringing student voices and experiences into the conversation through individualized observation is what’s missing from teacher collaboration. We believe Swivl Pro+ is a necessary complement for in-person collaboration or other forms of online interaction.


Get a Pro+ Demo


Have one of our customer success team members give you a guided tour of how to do Individualized Observations using our new Pro+ offering.

 

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]]> 19508 Plug Your Disengaged STEM Students back in with Digital Storytelling https://www.swivl.com/2016/07/27/plug-your-disengaged-stem-students-back-in-with-digital-storytelling/ Thu, 28 Jul 2016 05:23:56 +0000 http://www.swivl.com/?p=15781 While for many students, STEM Lab or going to the Maker Studio at their school might be their favorite part of the day, we’ve all encountered the student who has totally disengaged from science or math in school. For some, it might be Math Anxiety, for others they may feel anxious about being an underrepresented […]

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While for many students, STEM Lab or going to the Maker Studio at their school might be their favorite part of the day, we’ve all encountered the student who has totally disengaged from science or math in school. For some, it might be Math Anxiety, for others they may feel anxious about being an underrepresented population within STEM fields, and in some cases they may just not have encountered the magic of Science and Engineering yet. We’re going to take a look at how you can use Digital Storytelling to pull those students back into the core of your STEM classroom and help them to fully engage with the content.

What is Digital Storytelling?

Digital Storytelling is the act of building a narrative through a digital medium (or media). Digital Stories are short, created using computerized tools (video editing software, website building tools, computer programming, animation software, etc.) and frequently even combine these tools tools to create a multimedia mashup of genres and styles. You can find out more about Digital Storytelling here.

Bring Narrative into the STEM Process

The point of STEM (and the Maker Movement) is to bring any and all of the tools at your disposal together to solve a problem. The point of digital storytelling is parallel to this: to bring any and all of the tools at your disposal together to tell a story. By bringing storytelling and STEM together, you focus not just on the outcomes, but on the entire process. This can be beneficial for encouraging a Growth Mindset in your learners and for reducing the pressure that some students may feel to always produce the “right” answer.

The Hero’s Journey is a iconic narrative theme developed by Joseph Campbell. It is a structure that can be found in literature, cinema, TV, and many other forms of storytelling (this site will give you a more thorough explanation). The acts of creating, or making, or engineering most of the key components of the Hero’s Journey narrative:

  • The Hero: Your student!
  • The Call to Action: What was the problem they wanted to solve? How did they encounter this problem?
  • The Threshold: The moment they went from identifying the problem to trying to solve it.
  • The Mentor: You! The teacher.
  • Challenges (and Failures): All of the iterations of their experiment or attempts to create a solution.
  • Transformation (and Reward): What they learned, created, developed or made.

Once your students assume the role of the Hero in their own STEM adventure, they cease becoming static vessels of knowledge, and become active participants with huge potential for growth.

Let Your Students Tell Their Stories Their Way

One of the greatest advantages of using digital storytelling in the classroom is that it is a medium that is accessible to all types of learners. It does not require that you communicate most effectively in writing, or visually, or that you be a confident public speaker. The only requirement is that you tell your story as best you can. Some students may choose to speak directly to use the camera, or incorporate in-class video content into their stories, while others may incorporate photos and music for more abstract elements of their narrative.

Swivl Cloud’s Slides feature allows students to upload a primary video for their digital story (be it a video of them narrating, an in-class video of their science experiment, or an animation they created in Scratch), and then add other kinds of media to it. Students can upload a variety of supporting content: a photo from class, a PDF image from a textbook, or even another video. Then, they can sync this media to particular moments in the primary video, tying everything to the overall message they want to convey.

Motivate Today’s Students to Inspire Tomorrow’s

I’ll kick off this last point with an anecdote from my time working as a Technology Specialist at a school here in California. It was early-afternoon and the campus was quiet as I walked to deliver a new toner cartridge to the main office. A second grader who I knew by face and not by name passed me and we said “Hi”.

After we had passed, she turned around and started “ummm Miss Emily, you work in the computer lab, right?”

“Yeah, I do,” I responded.

“And… you work with computers?”

I smiled. “Yeah, I work with computers every day. That’s what I do.”

She looked off to the side, furrowed her brow, then looked up at me and smiled. With that, she spun around and skipped back to class.

I think about that conversation often, and sometimes wish we had talked longer. It seemed there was another question, one she didn’t ask, on her mind. Can women work in tech? I could tell she had heard the contrary from someone. Maybe a little brother, or a classmate, had told her that women aren’t good with computers. Maybe she had heard from a teacher that we don’t have enough women in tech. I could tell from her smile that she was now armed with evidence that women in tech do exist, and tech is for us.

There is a wealth of studies and thought leadership that has given us insight into the huge impact that role models can have on underrepresented groups in STEM fields (in particular for women, for some examples see here, here and here). One of the most salient results, however, is that the role models who have the biggest impacts on students, are the most accessible to them, and the ones whose achievements feel the most attainable. Given that, who could be better role models for your students than… your students?

Pair up older grades with younger ones for collaborative STEM activities. Play students’ digital stories as an introduction to each younger students’ partner/mentor. Share their achievements and their challenges, and yes, even their failures as examples of what it looks like to thoughtfully engage in STEM. Now you’re empowering your older students to apply what they’ve learned to help the younger ones, and your younger students now have a very real role model in their lives.

Sign up for you Swivl Cloud account today!


Swivl is used in over 20,000 schools. Make yours the next.

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]]> 15781 3 Critical Steps to Getting Ready for Your Flipped or Online Class this Fall https://www.swivl.com/2016/07/13/3-critical-steps-to-getting-ready-for-your-flipped-or-online-class-this-fall/ Thu, 14 Jul 2016 00:06:32 +0000 http://www.swivl.com/?p=15444 So, you’ve told yourself this is it, this is the school year you’re going to flip your classroom. Or maybe your department chair asked you to run an online version of your most popular course. You’ve read some books and articles on what makes a good flipped lesson. Maybe you’ve come up with some forum […]

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So, you’ve told yourself this is it, this is the school year you’re going to flip your classroom. Or maybe your department chair asked you to run an online version of your most popular course. You’ve read some books and articles on what makes a good flipped lesson. Maybe you’ve come up with some forum topics to kick off your students’ online discussions. You’re all ready to go … right?

Before you jump in, let’s take a step back. What makes a truly impactful flipped, online, or blended course? The same things that make an impactful face-to-face course: the content, the dialogue, and the connections made between members of the class.

There are plenty of factors, though, that don’t represent the core value of your course, but that can make or break the experience for you and your students. Dealing with big, clunky file transfers, searching through digital storage to find the right content, or having class discussion on a platform disconnected from content distribution can all have negative consequences for your flipped, blended or online class. This is where the tools you use can make all the difference. When they work, they become invisible, blending into the background of your class, allowing the real work, insights, and connections shine. When they don’t, they can flavor every other aspect, leaving a bad taste in students’ mouths.

Swivl Cloud is one of many tools that can be used to set up and distribute your flipped or online class content. Whether you’re using Swivl Cloud, or a different online platform, we’re going to take a look at how you can make some of these tools work for you and your students.

1. GET ORGANIZED

Perhaps you’ve started building out some of your content for the fall this summer. Maybe you’ve been capturing some video, or created some slideshow presentations to use as a base for your video lessons. Before you’re ready to provide this content to your students, first you need to organize it so that you can find it yourself.

How you do this will depend on how you like to find your digital content. If you prefer to search by keyword, you’ll want to develop a naming convention for your files or projects. If you like to create folders to group all of your content, you’ll want to make sure that you know how you want to categorize everything, and take some time to move around your files into their appropriate location. Although it may take some time to name or arrange all of your content, it will save you a lot of time and all of the stress of not finding that one file you need for class that week. Take the time to do this, even if you don’t have all of your content created yet. When you do develop the rest of your course material, all you’ll have to do is save it to the right folder.

With Swivl Cloud, not only can you search through your library for your content, but you can also create private folders to sort and store your content. Even if you want to organize your content differently from how you will distribute it to your students, that’s ok, the folders are all private just for you to see and arrange.

2. EQUIP YOUR STUDENTS

Now that you have your course content (or at least the beginnings of it), and some organizing structure for all of it, now you can start planning to share out your flipped videos and online class materials to your students!

If you’re using a Learning Management System, this will be a great place to start sharing content. Some content management platforms (including Swivl Cloud) will allow you to embed multimedia content so that your students never have to navigate away from your course page on the LMS. In most cases, the services will allow you to embed using HTML, but each LMS is different, so you’ll want to read up on embedding to the one you’re using.

You may discover that you want to take advantage of features outside of your LMS, or you aren’t going to use an LMS for your class. In those cases, you’ll want to do some research on what options you have to share your content. One of the most important factors is ease-of-use, both for you and your students. Swivl Cloud allows you to create groups of users to share with, which you can use to manage which content is available to your students, and allows your students to have a single location where they can find all of the content for your course.

3. READY. SET. ENGAGE!

You know that you want your students to engage with the course material, and you know you want them to engage with each other. But how to get them to engage with each other about the course material? This can be the ultimate challenge when running a class that includes some online aspect.

Some questions to ask yourself before you invest in a system for having your students connect with each other:

  • How often do I want them to connect or post?
  • Do I want them to write to each other? Talk over the phone/video call?
  • Will they talk one-on-one or as a group?
  • Will they write or present long messages, or just a few sentences at a time?
  • Should I have access to these conversations, or will they be private between the students?

The answers to these questions will help to inform you in your requirements for your students as they begin to access your course content. One feature that you may discover is very important to your online student interactions is the ability to comment or annotate directly on the content you have provided for them. If you are sharing your video content via Swivl Cloud, your students can talk with each other directly on the video using the time-stamped comment section. This allows your students to keep the conversation rooted in the class material, and helps to contextualize any questions they have for you, or areas that need clarification.

If you haven’t already signed up for your free Swivl Cloud account, or if you haven’t started your free trial of our Pro version, get started today! Our Summer Series for teacher and classroom development continues next week, where we’ll be exploring another of the many ways Swivl Cloud can advance teaching and learning in your classroom and at your school.

Sign up for you Swivl Cloud account today!


Swivl is used in over 20,000 schools. Make yours the next.

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