Wednesday, December 21, 2022

When ChatGPT Teaches, What Do Teachers Do?

ChatGPT, a language model developed by OpenAI, has the potential to revolutionize the way we teach and learn. It can provide personalized feedback and support to students, helping them to better understand and retain information. As an innovative educator, it's important to understand the capabilities and limitations of ChatGPT and how it can be effectively integrated into your teaching.

Here are some ways teachers can integrate ChatGPT into their classrooms:

  1. Use ChatGPT as a tutor or teaching assistant: ChatGPT can provide explanations and guidance to students as they work through problems, helping them to better understand difficult concepts. It can also be used to answer questions and provide additional resources to students, freeing up teachers to focus on other tasks.

  2. Create personalized lesson plans: ChatGPT can be used to generate personalized lesson plans based on a student's strengths, weaknesses, and learning style. This can help ensure that students are receiving the most effective instruction possible.

  3. Use ChatGPT for personalized feedback: ChatGPT has the ability to generate personalized responses to student queries. This means that students can receive individualized feedback on their work, rather than relying on one-size-fits-all explanations from a teacher.

  4. Utilize ChatGPT for language learning: ChatGPT can be used to provide additional support and practice for students learning a new language. It can generate personalized exercises and provide feedback on pronunciation and grammar.

While ChatGPT is a powerful tool that can not only teach students, but also enhance the educational experience, it is not a replacement for human teachers. It is best used as a supplement to traditional teaching methods and teachers are best at the personal connection and support they can provide students. By understanding its capabilities and limitations, teachers can effectively integrate ChatGPT into their classrooms and continue to provide their students with a high-quality learning and support.

Note...

This blogpost was written by ChatGPT using the following prompt: "Write a blog post about ways teachers can integrate ChatGPT into their teaching and student learning in the style of http://theinnovativeeducator.blogspot.com"

Screenshot of the prompt: "Write a blog post about ways teachers can integrate ChatGPT into their teaching and student learning in the style of http://theinnovativeeducator.blogspot.com"

Thursday, August 4, 2022

8 Reasons to Attend the #NYCSchoolsTech Summit on August 17th in Manhattan

Any New York City teacher can register to attend the 10th annual #NYCSchoolsTech Summit which will be back in-person on Wednesday, August 17 at LaGuardia High School in Manhattan. At the Summit, you’ll find dozens of thought-provoking sessions, hear best instructional practices, gain ed tech insights, learn about new technologies and strategies, and network with colleagues.   

There are lots of other reasons to attend the Tech Summit. Here are eight: 

A chance for in-person connection

It’s been over two years since DIIT has held a large, in-person conference. This conference is a chance to reconnect with colleagues and meet SPOCs, librarians, and parent coordinators in person. In some cases, it’ll be a chance to meet colleagues in-person for the first time! 

The latest tech

Emergency remote teaching turned New York City into the largest district in the nation with one device for each student. Wonder what devices and software kids are using these days? Come take a spin on the vendor floor and find out. 

Keynote 

This year’s keynote speaker is Roya Mahboob, an entrepreneur and Afghanistan’s first female tech CEO who has used her success and expertise to help educate and empower Afghan women and girls. She founded the Digital Citizen Fund and the Afghan Girls Robotics Team, and has worked to build innovation/tech centers across Afghanistan. 

Escape room - made by students! 

Can you make it out of the escape room? Give it a shot and see if you can solve a series of puzzles and decipher clues about ed tech to make it out of the room! Students at Thomas A. Edison Career & Technical Education High School designed the entire experience. 

Special guest star 

Gaspare Randazzo is a New York City teacher and stand-up comedian, performing in clubs around the city. He’ll be on stage, during the closing remarks, to talk about life as a teacher. 

Social Media Scavenger Hunt

Is your Insta and Twitter game on point? Share what you’ve learned in the Social Media Scavenger Hunt using #NYCSchoolsTech for a chance to win terrific prizes. 

Many teacher-led sessions

Teachers will host many of the summit's sessions. They’ll share their real experiences with the technology they’re using.

Free food!

We all love free food and snacks. Come to the Summit for coffee, snacks, and a delicious lunch. 

Friday, July 8, 2022

Innovative Educator on Nutrition: Vegan / Plant-Based Food Industry - Harmful or Healthy

Hey innovative educators. It's summertime and if we learned anything during this pandemic it's that we must prioritize self-care. That means living in a way that leads to a long, healthy life, and looking fantastic while doing it. 

Background

While I've always prioritized health and fitness (belonging to several gyms and an avid beach volleyball player), pre-pandemic I found myself overweight. As schools, gyms, and volleyball courts shut down in the early days of the pandemic, I suddenly had free time and looked more deeply into not only exercise, but also diet and nutrition. I am someone who is health and cruelty conscious and I followed a mostly vegan (sometimes vegetarian) diet. 

My Journey

Though I was health and fitness conscious, I was overweight. This didn’t make much sense. I bought healthy brands and was not an overeater. As the pandemic gave me free time, my research began with two books: Mark Hyman’s “Food: What the Heck Should I Eat?” and “Genius Foods.” My eyes were opened to all the ways the food industry misrepresents food for profit. After following some very simple advice, I changed my diet, and today at 53 and after going through menopause, I find myself 25 lbs (or 20%) thinner with more muscle, without counting calories and with eating delicious food. An innovative educator at heart, I want to share what I learned with any of you who are interested.


Learn How!

Here's a summary of some the ways I moved to more healthful eating.


Oils

I'm starting with oils because there are oils we should use regularly and others we should avoid. Use olive oil, avocado oil, and coconut oil. Stay away from the oils in the chart below. I'm starting with oils because these inflammatory oils are often found in food marketed as vegan and they are bad for you.



Food industry marketing

Speaking of marketing, the food industry markets food as vegan, but that typically does not mean it is healthy. It just doesn't have animals. If it's packaged, it often has unhealthy ingredients, additives, and oils. Remember french fries and onion rings can be vegan / plant-based.

Meat alternatives

When Beyond Meat and Impossible Burger came out, I was beyond thrilled. I even looked into investing in the companies. What I learned later is that these highly processed meat alternatives are not healthy for us. They are generally high in saturated fat and sodium and contain those unhealthy inflammatory oils.

Packaged / Processed foods

Avoid them and eat whole foods. If they are marketed as vegan or healthy, this is a red flag that they are likely unhealthy. Want examples? When I was eating mostly vegan (with sometimes vegetarian) I found Tattooed Chef's plant-based foods. Packaged foods like this made up the majority of my diet. It was only after I learned to read the labels that I realized it was not healthy because their products contain high sodium, too much saturated fat, palm oil, and hazardous additives like disodium diphosphate, xanthan gum, and annatto.

Don't drink your calories

Most people already know not to drink soda, but that's not the only drink to avoid. Eating fruits and vegetables is much better than drinking / juicing. When you have juice you consume too many calories and lose much of the ingredients that are so good for you. If you drink alcohol, stay away from drinks where lots of sugar is added, you can always add your own monkfruit or stevia-based sweetener.

Eliminate wheats and grains

Wheat, and grains are often the staples of a traditional American breakfast. They are also "vegan," but they are terrible for us. Bread, muffins, croissants, pancakes, muffins, cereal, and even oatmeal are all a no. Instead start your day with a protein rich breakfast like eggs, avocado, mushrooms, beans, tomatoes. If you want something for a sandwich I like the Outer Aisle Cauliflower Sandwich Thins or the Egglife wraps.

Eliminate pasta & replace with these options

Shiratake and kelp noodles are absolutely delicious options. They are both superfoods and low calorie. Kelp is known as the superfood of the sea and shirataki noodles are made from the superfood konjac root.

SMASH Fish

While a clean vegan / plant-based diet is a great option and works for many people, I learned about the significant health benefits that can be derived from eating low-mercury, wild-caught fish that are ethically raised. While this does not 100% align to my desire to be cruelty conscious, I also learned that even eating plant-based only can displace and harm animals, so I am trying to make the wisest choices with these facts in mind. I learned that SMASH fish are high in omega 3's and low in mercury. These are small fish and the acronym includes the fish in the image below.

Yuka App

Want to see how false the advertising is instantly? Get the Yuka App which provides an amazing way to see if food is healthy. Food is rated on a score of 1 -100 with 100 being the best. Ratings are based on factors such as amount of saturated fat, hazardous additives, sodium content, calories, lactose, calories, and more. As you start using the app you'll discover foods with those healthy labels (i.e. vegan, plant-based, gluten free), often are not that healthy. There's a free version of that app allowing you to scan items, or you can pay about $15 a year and type any product in as well.
Screenshot of an item being scanned on the Yuka app


Wake Up & Read the Labels

I love Jen Smiley's work on Wake Up and Read the Labels. She breaks helps followers decipher the labels. She then breaks down why some of the healthiest marketed foods (i.e. Lean Cuisine, Weight Watchers, even pickles) are terrible for us. You can follow her on Instagram and listen to her podcast.

Stop counting calories

While restricting calories can help to lose weight, you don't need to do that. If you eat real, healthy foods, your body will be satiated and you will lose weight. I got fit by eating as much healthy and delicious food as I want. It just took some time to learn what those foods are, and they are usually not the ones the food industry markets to us as such.

Monday, March 14, 2022

Help Students Become Fluent Readers with Literacy Tools from @MicrosoftEDU

Helping students learn to read is a priority in public education. However, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress only 35% of fourth graders read at grade level. It is difficult to give students the individual attention they need to support literacy development. Fortunately, for innovative educators and their students, Microsoft has come out with some impressive tools including the brand-new Reading Coach and Reading Progress which provide accessible, individualized, and data-driven learning experiences that save time and improve learning outcomes.

These tools provide students with personalized learning experiences that will help them become fluent readers in ways that would not be possible with just one teacher with a classroom full of students.

Reading Progress

Reading Progress enables students, teachers, and parents to check reading fluency frequently and therefore differentiate more powerfully to support students on their fluency journey. Instead of feeling nervous when it’s time to do fluency checks, students feel empowered because they don't have to rely on anyone else to see their progress. They can see and build progress over time whenever they want. Educators and parents are pleased to see how well it motivates students to try multiple times and work independently to increase their scores – they are invested in their progress as readers.

Reading fluency is composed of speed, accuracy, and expression. Currently Reading Progress looks at speed and accuracy. With the forthcoming update in Spring 2022, Reading Progress will have the capacity to automatically determine the aspects of reading expression, including monotone reading, long pauses, not pausing for a period or comma, voice inflection for question marks or exclamation points, and even the stress of multi-syllable words.

Learn more about Reading Progress from Microsoft and check it out in the video below.

Reading Coach

Reading Coach builds on Reading Progress by identifying the 5 words each individual student struggled with the most and presenting them again with tools to support the learner in practicing independently. Tools available to students include text to speech, syllable breaking, and picture dictionary. These supports can be enabled and customized by the educator, who sets up the Reading Coach when a Reading Progress assignment in Teams is created.

Learn more about Reading Coach from Microsoft and check it out in the video below.

Insights Dashboards

To ensure fundamentals are addressed, an Insights dashboard is being developed this Spring which will reflect students’ understanding of phonics rules. The Reading Progress software will analyze each word at the phoneme level and give an accuracy rating per phoneme. The phoneme scores are mapped onto a set of phonics rules that are surfaced to the educator to help inform instruction. Because there are many phonics rules in the English language, the rules are categorized into consonants and vowels, and then sub-categories in each area.

The phonics rules dashboards will allow an educator to see which areas need additional focus at the class or student level at a glance.

Screenshot of the Reading Progress Insights Dashboard. Shows words per minute, accuracy, mispronunciations and more.

Technology tools such as these enable us to redefine and reimagine literacy development in the classroom by providing every student with learning personalized to their needs. Students empowered to use these technology tools have a much greater likelihood to achieve reading at or above grade level.

Thursday, January 20, 2022

5 Pandemic Learning Gains

Person walking through a tunnel with technology floating around
If you follow the fear-mongering mainstream media, you’d think today's youth is doomed as a result of the “learning loss” caused by the emergency remote learning students were involved in during the pandemic. Innovative educators (and their students) understand this is untrue. There is not one moment in time when any particular subject or topic needs to be learned. As adults many of us know we remember and use very little of what we learned in our K-12 education. Talk to students pre-pandemic and they’ll tell you school often felt boring, irrelevant, and disconnected from the real-world where they can learn anything, anytime, anywhere using technology that traditionally was not available (even banned) in many schools pre-pandemic. 

Instead of focusing only on loss, let’s talk about the tremendous learning gains caused by the pivot to remote learning. Because of the pivot students and staff were catapulted into the future in many school districts. As a result our students will now be more prepared than they ever would have been, had education not been disrupted. Here are five pandemic learning gains.


Access to Devices 

Students and adults know that access to technology is crucial for preparing students for success in the world. Pre-pandemic there was an enormous digital divide. Schools were spending wasting money on things like textbooks, paper, pencils, erasers, ink, etc. All this when Chromebooks were available for around $200 (or $50 - $75 a year per student). The pivot to a more powerful learning tool is not only better for students, but also more cost effective. The pandemic helped us get more devices than ever in students' hands. Not only is this access great for all students, but it is especially important for so many students with disabilities or who speak other languages. That is because the devices provide digital accessibility and translation.  


Access to the Internet 

The pandemic no longer allowed elected officials to ignore the digital divide. All citizens need access to the internet to function in modern society. In cities across the nation and globe, the pandemic caused elected officials to work with tech companies, phone companies, and more to determine ways every family could have access to the internet.  


Access to Learning Content 

The pandemic resulted in school districts adopting learning management systems and platforms like Google Classroom. Finally, content was put in an easily accessible place for all students and families. This means if a student needs to go back to refer to content, it’s there. If a parent wants to know what a child is working on, it’s there. If a student is transferred to a school mid-year, they still have easy access to learning materials.  


Access to Authentic Platforms 

Pre-pandemic a unit might culminate in students presenting something to the class and a grade by the teacher. A moment in time, often lost and forgotten. The pandemic provided schools access to limitless platforms that allowed teachers and their students to do work in modern ways. For example, students might all put their projects on Flipgrid and then watch and comment on one-another's work. Families then could also get a glimpse into the work of their children by viewing a grid. Some students were able, for the first time, to create authentic digital portfolios using tools like Seasaw or Wix for Education 


Access to Each Other & The World 

Video conferencing was something novel pre-pandemic, but now Zooming is a verb and everyone knows how to connect via video. Video conferencing flattens conversation inviting voices traditionally ignored, to have a seat at the virtual table. Features like the ability to use chat helped more introverted or shy students to share ideas. Captioning helped students with disabilities or who spoke other languages access what was being said more easily. Many teachers realized how easy it was to bring authors, guests, and experts into their virtual classrooms.  


As society makes its way back-to-school, let us not be so quick to go back-to-normal. Normal was a digital divide. Normal was outdated textbooks and tests. Normal did not support students with disabilities or who spoke other languages. Normal did not untap the reality that technology helped serve many of our underserved and often unnoticed (or less noticed) students. Innovative educators, leaders, and elected officials must understand that the pandemic catapulted education into the future. Now we must determine how we will harness the lessons learned to ensure we build upon those gains.

Monday, January 3, 2022

A Few of My Favorite Healthy Meals and Where to Buy Them

Screenshot of Thrive Supermarket
In my last post, I shared healthy foods to eat and ones to avoid, but readers asked for more specifics like where to shop and what to make for various meals. To follow are some of my favorite things to eat based on what I've learned from reading many books, articles, and listening to podcasts. By following what I've learned I've lost more than 25 pounds and gained muscle.

Shop

Where to order healthy online

Fast

Doing the Bulletproof coffee method makes intermittent fasting easy. It will help you lose weight and improve your brain function.

I eat during the hours of 10 - 6 or 11 - 7.

It only took a few days for my body to adjust to fasting. Fasting is a healthier way for us to eat. 


Here’s how to make it.

  • Pour your favorite coffee

  • 1 - 2 tablespoons of MCT oil and grass fed-butter such as Ghee

  • I also add a scoop of collagen powder

  • If you like sweetener use monk fruit. This is your healthiest option.

  • Blend or use a frother

Breakfast

Don’ts

  • Cereal, granola, oat, bars, milk, cheese, waffle, muffin, pancake, bread, toast, processed meat

Do’s

Recipe ideas

Lunch or Dinner

Don’t

  • Bread

  • Processed meat

  • Cheese but if you must have cheese from goats or sheep. Some cheese alternatives like Miyoko's are not too bad.

  • If you must have bread eat ezekiel bread

Do’s

  • Wrap

    • Egg wrap or wrap with romaine lettuce

    • What’s inside?

      • Protein like chicken, fish, or tofu

      • Lots of veggies such as

        • Peppers, capers, tomatoes, olives, celery, beans, avocado

      • Plain non-fat greek yogurt. You can make it taste like various things by adding seasoning such as ranch

  • Stir fry

    • Cauliflower rice

    • Egg

    • Veggies

    • Meat or tofu

  • Sushi

    • Seaweed wrap with avocado, cucumber, quinoa (or cauliflower rice)

    • Protein: fish, meat, tofu

  • Salad

    • Make you own dressing my fave:

      • Olive oil, liquid aminos, coconut aminos, 

      • Add either: lemon juice, lime juice, or your fave vinegar

    • Greens

    • Veggies

    • Protein such as meat, fish, or tofu

  • Soup or chili

    • Most soups and chili are healthy. Make lots and eat throughout the week 

  • Shirataki noodles or Spiralized Zuchinni or Squash

    • Eat these instead of pasta. They are good for you and will make you skinny.

    • Prepare as you would regular pasta i.e. marinara, pesto, lots of veggies, healthy meat

Snacks

  • Air fry chickpeas

  • Paleovalley beef sticks

  • Apples with peanut or almond butter

    • Get an apple slicer

    • Don’t cut all the way through

    • Sprinkle lemon or lime on it and put it back together for when you’ll eat it

  • Frozen banana chips

    • These take like yummy little ice cream cookies

    • You can dip them in peanut or almond butter too