Rankin students get cracking on Macs

Monday, November 09, 2009 11:55 AM

(Source: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal)trackingBy Chris Kieffer, Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Tupelo, Miss.

Nov. 9--TUPELO -- Students at Rankin Elementary are getting a sneak peek into using Apple technology in the classroom.

Art teacher Jamie Baker's third-- to fifth-grade students are using iPods and Macintosh laptops to create projects, complete activities and deepen their learning.

It's part of Baker's "mini studios" approach to her classroom, and it will only be enhanced next year.

That's when the Tupelo Public School District will provide Apple laptops to all sixth-- to 12th grade students and computer carts of 80 laptops each to its kindergarten to fifth-grade schools.

"Computers are what our students know," Baker said. "They are growing up in a completely digital world, and we created it for them. Our job is to figure out what is important for them to learn and how to teach that in the environment they're in."

Baker was ahead of the curve. She applied for and received a grant from the Association for Excellence in Education that allowed her to purchase two iPod Touches, in addition to other equipment, for her classroom. Her goal was to create a bank of podcasts of her lessons that students could watch at any time on the iPod to get additional instruction.

"They could have me teach them a specific skill without me even speaking to them," Baker said. "With the two iPods, I could basically be in three places at once."

She quickly discovered other uses for the iPod Touch. It has applications with video lessons, games that allow students to create art and encyclopedias about great artists.

Then as the district began exploring its new computer initiative, Baker was given access to Apple laptops at various times as part of the program's trial. Before the end of the semester, she'll receive her own laptop, as will all of the district's teachers.

Her students have used those computers to create digital projects. They're currently making digital stories: drawing illustrations, taking photographs of their art and importing them to the computer, creating background music, narrating their stories and publishing them in iTunes.

"It gives them a different standard for doing their work," Baker said. "Their reason for doing well is for themselves, not for their teachers."

The concept ties in with Baker's mini studios classroom that was created last year thanks to another grant from AEE.



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