Second Graders?

Light BulbStephen from Indianapolis, Indiana writes:
I have admired your Planet 5th website and now the Learning in Hand site for many years. My question is this: I have had the Palm 130's for three years while I was a 5th grade teacher, but now for the 05-06 school year, I will be teaching 2nd grade. A 5th grade colleague and I want to do "Palm Buddies" similar to intermediate and primary "Book Buddies". The problem is this: what would you suggest we do! We are not real sure what programs would be best for our 5th graders to teach our 2nd graders or what they would be capable of doing? Maybe just math facts? or e-books? Any advice or research out there for 7 year olds using palms with their older classmates would be extremely beneficial.
I've used handhelds with students in grades K-5. There are by far many more activities and applications to use with the upper grades. However, there are still many things second graders can do. Here are some activities second graders at my school have done:
  • MathAce for addition and subtraction practice.
  • MathTreeHouse for addition practice.
  • Note Pad for drawing or beaming spelling words.
  • Sketchy for making drawings and animations to review a concept.
  • Quizzler for quizzes about a topic or unit of study.
  • MatchWho to make a character to write about.
  • SpellIT's Word Jumble mode for practicing spelling words.
  • Coconut Fern to play a game of Connect Four against the computer or against a friend.
And if they have a fifth grade buddy helping them, there's even more possibilities. Let me list some buddy ideas that come to mind:
  • Fifth graders make GoneMad! story templates and then help the seconds grader fill it out and read it. They could even then write a story template together to share with other pairs of buddies.
  • Fifth graders could help second graders create a Quizzler quiz over something they have learned.
  • Fifth graders and second graders could write a What-If Builder story together.
  • Fifth graders could teach a second grader how to play some of the simpler games from this page.
  • Fifth graders use Dictate with second graders to practice spelling words.
There are certainly plenty more way to use handhelds with second graders. Please leave a comment with your ideas for Stephen!

Comments:

This may not directly relate to second grade lesson plans so I hope this entry is OK here.

I found a freeware spellchecker that may come in handy for those with limited software budgets called Spell5 on Palmgear.

You can enter text directly into the Spell5 application, have it examined and then copy/paste it to Docs to go, memo, etc.

 

If you begin the morning with a conversation about the date, day, and weather you could integrate palm pilot callendar application into this discussion.

Have the students journal what the temperature is and what weather is like. Preload the activties of the day and review them with the students.

Good practice for what is one of the original and core features of a handheld.

 

At the beginning of the year use Contacts as part of a "get to know your classmates exercise." Have the students enter their own information into the palm, and then beam that information to each other. Kids get familiar with two core features of the handheld, Contacts and beaming.

 

http://lh099.k12.sd.us/tribby.htm

This is a lesson plan for a "spelling word alphabet book"

 

Stephen,
Tony and "Dale" have offered some great suggestions.
Where do you teach? I am a 4th grade teacher in Lawrence Township @ Indian Creek Elementary. I would like to bring together a collaborative group of local Education Palm Users in the Indy area. I am entering my second year of using Palm computers with classroom integration. Are you interested in sharing ideas, struggles and successes?

Marc
marcemenhiser@msdlt.k12.in.us

 

I'm 35-year-old career changer who wants to integrate technology into my future classrooms. I'm a student right now and, unfortunately, I have two years left. I always wanted to teach but I let my parents talk me out it when I was 18. I allowed my wife talk me out of it in the late 90's. However, after spending quite a bit of time volunteering in my daughter's preschool and kindergarten classrooms I decided last year that I had to go back to school. I'm trying to find a technology inclined teacher to do my student teaching with. Right now, I'm just a parent who uses his two daughters as Guinea Pigs.

My daughters, 6 and 4, have enjoyed using my handhelds (currently a Zire 72s) for several years and they love taking pictures and video with it. This summer, they shot footage of a butterfly emerging and took pictures of a cicada emerging. They take pictures of things, weird looking fungus for example, we come across on nature walks and then we do research or ask a naturalist about it.

I have my daughters practice handwriting on NoviiAnimator using some templates I created. They ask to use it and they love to use it.

I started using QuizWiz, before I knew about Quizzler, and I utilized the materials my daughter brought home to create Math worksheets and quizzes with specific problems. I talked my mother, a teacher's aid, into buying a handheld and her students loved doing Multiplication Tables on QuizWiz quizzes I created.

What I would like to see is a guided reading program for handhelds and laptops. I've actually scanned picture books into the computer, rearranged text and pictures, and created PDF files for my daughters to read. My 6 year old likes reading from the laptop but I've found that in cases where you need large print and one-to-one text/picture correspondence the handheld screen size is problematic.

Dale
Flushing, Michigan

 

Here's an interesting 1999 PDF file about young children and handhelds. Page 1 starts with 2nd grade usage.


http://www.concord.org/publications/newsletter/1999fall/99fall.pdf

 

Post a Comment

RSS Feed
Email Subscription

October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?
Creative Commons Licensed BY-NC-SA Tony Vincent, Inc. 2001-2008