Monday, 2 July 2018

Curious About Inquiry - My Final Project

It's hard to believe that it's time to publish my final project! This class has flown by and has been my favourite so far. Thanks for sticking with the blog, I am excited to share with you my digital artifact.


I have enjoyed this course because of the freedom I had in choosing my direction of study. In the past I have struggled with this but for whatever reason this course it just clicked. I think it has been harder for me because I am a classroom teacher which can make it harder to complete library specific assignments. This course opened things up a bit so that my topic of study could relate to both the library and the classroom.


This year has been challenging for me moving from TTOC work to teaching full time Kindergarten. I say challenging, but not at all in a bad way. I found that trying something so outside my comfort zone like Kindergarten has made me try new things and made me grow and stretch in many positive ways. Through this stretching I have begun to explore new ideas and since I am new to Kindergarten I need to find my passion in teaching these young children. That is where my interest in Inquiry Based Learning for Kindergarten came from. I was seeing all of these things like loose parts, and provocations, terms which I was not familiar with, and I could see potential in them. I wanted to know more and as I started to research I realized I would need to keep track of what I found which brings me to the purpose of my project.


I knew that I wanted to try something new for this project, to work with a website I hadn't used yet. I also new I needed to find a way to organize my resources. At one time I suppose I could have used recipe cards but that would be very hard to share with you all!



After asking around I settled on using Symbaloo as an organizational tool and Adobe Spark as a platform to explain my organization of the resources.

Here are the two parts of my project with the links in the titles.

Part 1 - Symbaloo


The first thing I did was go through the list of bookmarks I had collected on my computer. These were sorted, sifted, added to, and then organized by type onto Symbaloo. 


Once I started organizing my resources I realized that I also needed a way to share my method with others. I understand how and why I chose each symbol but not everyone would. By using Adobe Spark I was able to create a web page which explains how to use the Symbaloo. This is also linked on the Symbaloo page by clicking the compass square.


Curious About Inquiry


Works Cited

A complete list of the works cited in my project can be found on my Adobe Spark page.


Reflections


Once I completed my project I decided it was time to share it with other teachers in order to reflect on my learning and the usefulness of this project. I started out by emailing a few kindergarten teachers I know. Then, I took a risk and asked for help on the Kindergarten Connections Facebook page.

I have had a lot of positive feedback on the project so far. Teachers mentioned the Symbaloo is attractive, well organized, and easy to navigate. The Adobe Spark page also had positive feedback with teachers commenting that it is clear and helpful.

I did also have a few suggestions which helped me improve the project. One of my friends found some link errors, and another teacher suggested moving the guide button so it is on it's own (a fabulous suggestion). 

Sharing this project with others was scary. I have spend a lot of time with this and to release it to others made me nervous. At the same time I knew I had to otherwise what was the point of creating this resource? 

What Now?

I hope that after I publish and share the final draft of my project that I will continue to receive feedback and even suggestions of things to add or remove. I want this to be a living resource, something I can revisit and use as I hope to teach K again next year.



1 comment:

  1. Well done! It looks like you've pulled together a great collection of resources. Congratulations on finishing your final project.

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