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Thursday, April 11, 2019

Seesaw Amazing Race? We Tried!



I attended a PD session at my school (Jackson R-2!) last week on using Seesaw for an "Amazing Race" activity. I know lots of elementary teachers use Seesaw, but I've not known a high school teacher using it (I wasn't really interested in the student work journals and parent sharing) so this intrigued me. Also, I felt dumb... I hadn't used it and they all knew their way around! I also never use iPads, so I was just confused. But, I completed their example activity and decided to give it a whirl.

I set off to create an activity for my Web Design 2 class. They are a great group of kids (and my small class of 11, so great guinea pigs). I decided to do a blended activity that allowed us to leave my computer lab to complete the race with their Chromebooks.


Process

I set up four groups (just colors) and the kids picked their own groups (of 3 or 2). I set those up as my "students" in the class (I didn't want them to be individuals or use their Google accounts to log in). When they do an activity and upload, it asks them what group to add it to, so that's how that worked using the login code.

I created four stops on our race (activities in Seesaw)--

Stop 1:   You'll need paper and markers. In your group, create the HTML tags for an image named dog.jpg that is centered on the page with an appropriate text alternative. Each tag and/or attribute should be on a separate "block" of paper (tear apart as needed). Don't forget to close your tags!  Take a photo and post it here!  (I set it up in the hallway with strips of paper and a box of markers).


Stop 2:  Find the Bootstrap wall. Take a picture with two group members holding two of the examples. Then, add text to identify what bootstrap feature or component they illustrate before posting.  (I printout out screenshots of bootstrap components and tacked them up on the railing in the hallway near my room)



Stop 3:  In your own words, your group members should use the following terms in a SPOKEN paragraph (either video or audio). Be sure your use of the term clearly shows you know what it means! I am not looking for dictionary definitions, but rather "real people" explanations.

Not worth credit--(isn't descriptive)
"John really liked the webpage that had the jumbotron and favicon because they made the page look cool."

Select at least 5 terms from this list----
Jumbotron, hexadecimal, favicon, thumbnail, CSS, class, HSLA, Javascript, hyperlink

Stop 4:  Listen to your instructor's message to know what to do! (I had an audio message in the app telling them to find something in the lobby by the office, take a picture, and translate the color to a hex code using the app).

Reflection

The students enjoyed the activity. I asked them for feedback about the length of the activity and the setup. They all agreed four activities was good for a high school class and 45 minutes.

The example session I attended didn't really give you all of the "stops" at once and I did with this group because I thought it would keep them all going in different directions and they wouldn't have to wait on me to review their activity before they could move on to the next one. However, the big issue with that was that they didn't know immediately if they were wrong. There isn't a way to "reject" an upload that they submit (just to delete it). I can approve it with a comment saying there's an issue but then they might assume it was okay. So, in the future, I think I will just tell them they have to review their items and my feedback and I will leave a comment on EVERY submission saying approved or denied (with notes for correction).  That might be a little confusing on the end because some may have more submissions than others.... but at least they would have feedback. As it was, when they finished all four, they found me and then I just told them that Stop 2 was denied. It worked okay, but I just need to think through that hurdle.  I think I will have a "final activity" that doesn't have instructions in Seesaw so students can complete the first 3 or 4 in any order and then can only get the final envelope from me IF they have all the others completed correctly. (But, let me tell you, if your tasks are complicated and take awhile to approve, you will drive yourself crazy!).



Another note a student gave was the the video upload took some time and so they had to wait on that to move on. Had I put the "stops" on paper in envelopes rather than in the app, they could have perhaps moved on to the next one. I didn't specific a length on the video, so those took awhile for me to approve (one was 6 minutes long!). So, lesson learned on that.

Overall, I enjoyed this and they did, too. It didn't take a ton of planning. I just need to learn Seesaw better. Our network had moments where I couldn't see their work and such (oh, technology!) but other than that, it was pretty cool!

I'd like to try this with a big class next. My Photoshop class does some photography and I think this would be a fun project to do with that unit while we go roam around taking pics. I also think I can have a "group worksheet" or word play type activity (maybe a scramble with a secret word) that they take a picture of when complete that goes over terminology or something that will keep them thinking as well. But, this is a very interesting way to review content and get kids up and moving!