We are excited to announce an upcoming OLLIE webinar. Join us on
Monday, February 22 at 3:00 for an overview to the award-winning
lesson-building tool SoftChalk Cloud. A reminder that as an Iowa
educator, you have access to SoftChalk Cloud for free through AEA PD
Online (this is a savings of $500/year!). To gain access, you must fill
out our request form here.
Our overview webinar will be hosted by David Evans, a learning
specialist from SoftChalk. He will not only give an overview of the
tool, but explain how it integrates seamlessly with all LMSs (including
Moodle, Canvas, and Schoology). Plus, he will show different examples
of how teachers are currently using SoftChalk Cloud in the classroom.
You MUST REGISTER ahead of time for the webinar, even though there is no cost. To register, https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3275886415780230401
And, as a final reminder, if you are interested in extending your
professional learning to receive credit, be sure to sign up for our
online cohort course that begins February 17. Our Designing Online
Lessons course focuses heavily on SoftChalk Cloud. You can register for
that here.
Friday, February 12, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 12
We hope you were able to participate in the CITE online conference on
Blended Learning over the past three days. There were many great
sessions for schools and teachers alike.
We are now turning our focus to the design process. It is one thing to know that you want to use blended learning, but it is a different one to actually deliver it. Online learning design (often referred to as "instructional design") requires an artful touch to it.
When she looks at her sister's course, as well as courses from other teachers in her building, she can't help but feel something is missing. It just seems to be a bunch of PDFs and power points uploaded. It feels more like a resource place for the class, so that they can download files from home, than it does true online learning. She doesn't think her students would take much interest going through a power point or reading a PDF without understanding what it is, and if she is explaining it in the classroom, then basically it is just like assigning homework.
But, today is Day 12, which means that the OLLIE Community is beginning to look at instructional objects. She has never heard the term before, but she finds out an instructional object is a catch-all term to describe online instructional lessons, online collaborative activities, and online assessments. "Yes," she nods to herself, "this is what I was looking for."
Ms. Sanchez takes a look at the discussion for Days 12-14 as well as the Instructional Object sharing database. Whoa! There are a lot of ideas here that people are sharing. She sees some good ideas, but also realizes, she will need to find out a bit more information tomorrow before she can contribute. But, her sister might benefit from looking at this right away.
• Take a look at our discussion forum for days 12-14. This will ask you to reflect on the database and share with community members something that you found that would enhance your classroom practice.
We are now turning our focus to the design process. It is one thing to know that you want to use blended learning, but it is a different one to actually deliver it. Online learning design (often referred to as "instructional design") requires an artful touch to it.
Scenario:
Meet Ms. Sanchez. She has been teaching for a few years, but she has never thought about teaching in an online setting. She has heard from other teachers about blended learning, and putting together a Moodle course, but she wasn't sure what that was. Her sister teaches in a different district that uses Canvas, and she knows her sister likes using the tool, but doesn't really know if she is creating online courses correctly.When she looks at her sister's course, as well as courses from other teachers in her building, she can't help but feel something is missing. It just seems to be a bunch of PDFs and power points uploaded. It feels more like a resource place for the class, so that they can download files from home, than it does true online learning. She doesn't think her students would take much interest going through a power point or reading a PDF without understanding what it is, and if she is explaining it in the classroom, then basically it is just like assigning homework.
But, today is Day 12, which means that the OLLIE Community is beginning to look at instructional objects. She has never heard the term before, but she finds out an instructional object is a catch-all term to describe online instructional lessons, online collaborative activities, and online assessments. "Yes," she nods to herself, "this is what I was looking for."
Ms. Sanchez takes a look at the discussion for Days 12-14 as well as the Instructional Object sharing database. Whoa! There are a lot of ideas here that people are sharing. She sees some good ideas, but also realizes, she will need to find out a bit more information tomorrow before she can contribute. But, her sister might benefit from looking at this right away.
To-Do:
• Visit the Instructional Object database in our community. As you search through the database, think about what strategies makes sense in your curriculum?• Take a look at our discussion forum for days 12-14. This will ask you to reflect on the database and share with community members something that you found that would enhance your classroom practice.
Monday, February 8, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 8
Day 8
Today is an exciting day in the OLLIE Community.
Today you will explore how to configure physical learning space, use of
time in the classroom, and also how to distribute yourself and other
staff if deciding to transition to a blended learning model in the
classroom.
iNacol has a document containing the “The Six
Elements for Planning and Implementation of Blended Learning” as
teachers transition into a blended learning environment in their “A Roadmap for Implementation of Blended Learning at the School Level: A Case Study of the iLearnNYC Lab Schools.”
The questions that will help us reflect on today’s
videos come from the Teaching Element in the six blended learning
elements. The questions are:
-
How will teaching and the role of the teacher change?
-
How will student learning change?
-
What is the school’s pedagogical philosophy?
-
How will best teaching practices be modeled and share?
These questions may help you reflect on your own situation, as well as the videos Ms. Brooks will watch today.
Scenario
Now that Ms. Brooks has some ideas on which LMS she
will use with her students, she'd like to learn more about how to set up
her classroom and structure her time with students. She starts
investigating some of the different learning models that other schools
are implementing.
These models include:
She watches the videos attached to each of these models and reviews information in the OLLIE Community. She earns an OLLIE badge by completing the "Blended Learning Models" forum.
28 Days of OLLIE Webinar: Christine Jegers & Atomic Learning
This Wednesday, as part of our 28 Days of OLLIE, we will be presenting a Q&A with Christine Jegers. Christine is an Education Integration Specialist with extensive experience in Blended Learning. She will be sharing her thoughts and ideas about how to deliver blended and flipped learning in the classroom, utilizing resources available to Iowa teachers.
We also will take a look at new features available within Atomic Learning. As a resource free for all Iowa teachers on behalf of the AEAs, Atomic Learning has ready made content in a large number of areas, much more than simply the technology tutorials it is known for. These resources can make an instant playlist for your blended classroom.
Our webinar will be from 9:30 - 10:00 on Wednesday morning. No pre-registration is required. The link for the webinar is here: https://heartlandaea.zoom.us/j/346529635.
We also will take a look at new features available within Atomic Learning. As a resource free for all Iowa teachers on behalf of the AEAs, Atomic Learning has ready made content in a large number of areas, much more than simply the technology tutorials it is known for. These resources can make an instant playlist for your blended classroom.
Our webinar will be from 9:30 - 10:00 on Wednesday morning. No pre-registration is required. The link for the webinar is here: https://heartlandaea.zoom.us/j/346529635.
Sunday, February 7, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 7
Hello everyone!
Hope everyone is enjoying a Super Bowl Saturday. I want to take a moment to remind you about the OLLIE community cohort course opportunity. The course, Designing Online Lessons is a 2-credit course and will begin on Feb. 17. You may audit the course for free, or pay a minimal amount for license renewal and graduate credit. To register, click here.
(Note: You must register even if you are choosing to audit the course and not take it for credit.) This course is an awesome opportunity to learn more about video-based lessons, text-based lessons, and tools like SoftChalk (A free tool provided to Iowa Educators via AEA PD Online...What's better than free? Not much).
While those first steps have worked very well, she still feels like she is just nibbling around the edge. Her school has talked about the SAMR model, and she feels that a lot of her technology use is down at the "substitution" and "augementation" levels. She wants to use technology in a more transformative manner.
Through attending conferences and reading blogs, she has heard quite a bit of buzz around blended learning and flipped learning. She would like to know more about the concept, but before she can even get started, she sees quite a bit of the buzz is around the LMS.
Seeing that LMS stands for Learning Management System, Ms. Brooks sees that many teachers who teach in a blended environment need a tool that brings many tools together in one spot. Since blended learning is truly transformative, and replace some aspects of the face-to-face class with online learning, she needs a platform to help organize this learning when students are not in the classroom. The question is, which one?
In many cases, school districts in Iowa are investigating implementing a schoolwide or even district-wide LMS. There are benefits to doing so, but teachers like Ms. Brooks--where the school isn't implementing an LMS--are not out of luck. There are options that individual teachers can use. Ms. Brooks takes a look at the resources on LMS to understand what are her options.
Hope everyone is enjoying a Super Bowl Saturday. I want to take a moment to remind you about the OLLIE community cohort course opportunity. The course, Designing Online Lessons is a 2-credit course and will begin on Feb. 17. You may audit the course for free, or pay a minimal amount for license renewal and graduate credit. To register, click here.
(Note: You must register even if you are choosing to audit the course and not take it for credit.) This course is an awesome opportunity to learn more about video-based lessons, text-based lessons, and tools like SoftChalk (A free tool provided to Iowa Educators via AEA PD Online...What's better than free? Not much).
- Day 1 focused on becoming an OLLIE Community member and exploring the community.
- Day 2 focused on how to keep up-to date on community events and activities
- Day 3 was all about staying connected via social media
- Day 4 looked at sharing resources with each other in the community forum
- Day 5 showed you where community members could share videos with each other
- Day 6 was a chance to reflect
Day 7
We are shifting gears and taking a look at a very popular topic in Iowa: Learning Management Systems (LMSs). Many schools are moving to adopt official LMSs for their district. In some cases, this can be a very robust system with some considerable expense. In other cases, you can utilize a free tool but miss out on having some of the learning tools at your disposal. We'll take a look at the more popular options and give you an idea of how you can understand the different LMS options available.Scenario
Meet Ms. Brooks. She is a middle school social studies and language arts teacher and loves working with her students in innovative ways. She was one of the biggest proponents for adopting 1:1 technology, and once her school did adopt it, she was one of the most enthusiastic using it in her class. Her students loved the way she was able to incorporate Web 2.0 technology like wikis, blogs, and even Google Docs in her class.While those first steps have worked very well, she still feels like she is just nibbling around the edge. Her school has talked about the SAMR model, and she feels that a lot of her technology use is down at the "substitution" and "augementation" levels. She wants to use technology in a more transformative manner.
Through attending conferences and reading blogs, she has heard quite a bit of buzz around blended learning and flipped learning. She would like to know more about the concept, but before she can even get started, she sees quite a bit of the buzz is around the LMS.
Seeing that LMS stands for Learning Management System, Ms. Brooks sees that many teachers who teach in a blended environment need a tool that brings many tools together in one spot. Since blended learning is truly transformative, and replace some aspects of the face-to-face class with online learning, she needs a platform to help organize this learning when students are not in the classroom. The question is, which one?
In many cases, school districts in Iowa are investigating implementing a schoolwide or even district-wide LMS. There are benefits to doing so, but teachers like Ms. Brooks--where the school isn't implementing an LMS--are not out of luck. There are options that individual teachers can use. Ms. Brooks takes a look at the resources on LMS to understand what are her options.
To Do
• Examine the OLLIE lesson Learning Management Systems: What to Know, How to ChooseSaturday, February 6, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 6
Happy Saturday!
Well, I bet you didn't expect to hear from the OLLIE Community today...It is the weekend after all. Well, no worries. Today is all about looking back and reflecting about the first 5 days of this month long event and thinking about how you might be able to leverage the OLLIE community to help you teach online or blend your instruction.
Well, I bet you didn't expect to hear from the OLLIE Community today...It is the weekend after all. Well, no worries. Today is all about looking back and reflecting about the first 5 days of this month long event and thinking about how you might be able to leverage the OLLIE community to help you teach online or blend your instruction.
- Day 1 focused on becoming an OLLIE Community member and exploring the community.
- Day 2 focused on how to keep up-to date on community events and activities
- Day 3 was all about staying connected via social media
- Day 4 looked at sharing resources with each other in the community forum
- Day 5 showed you where community members could share videos with each other
Scenario
It has been a busy week for Mr. Miller. He has learned that the OLLIE community and its members are there to support him as he moves toward more

Friday, February 5, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 5
Day 5
Are you a fan of Amazon.com? As a mother of a toddler and with another baby on the way, I'm a huge fan of Amazon. One reason, I love Amazon are the customer reviews. When it comes to selecting products, the reviews and recommendations are a huge help. While the OLLIE Community isn't Amazon, it does have a few ways to make your life as an online/blended teacher teacher.
Today Mr. Miller will take a look at the video database where OLLIE community members can share and recommend videos for other community members to use in their own courses. The recommendations from community members can help take some of the time consuming guess work out of finding videos to use with students.
Scenario
Day 5 is "Share a Video Day". Mr. Miller learns that the OLLIE community has a searchable video database. Community members can share the videos that they
- Title
- Grade level
- Curriculum area
As he looks at the database, he finds that many teachers have created their own videos, which adds personalization and makes the instruction more exact to what's going on in the classroom. He would like to do the same, and wishes that he knew how. Then, he remembered the calendar for the 28 Days. With some excitement, he sees that days 15-17 will be looking at that process.
Thursday, February 4, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 4
Before I get into today's focus, I
want to remind you about the OLLIE community cohort course opportunity.
The course, Designing Online Lessons is a 2-credit course and will begin
on Feb. 17. You may audit the
course for free, or pay a minimal amount for license renewal and
graduate credit.
To register, click here.(Note:
You must register even if you are choosing to audit the course and not
take it for credit.) This course is an awesome opportunity to learn more
about video-based lessons, text-based lessons, and tools like
SoftChalk.
And now without further ado...
Day 4
ON day
4 Mr. Miller begins to see some of the ways community members can help
each other out by sharing ideas, resources, and tools. You to can help
out by sharing your own thoughts about question posed in the scenario here.
Scenario
It's day 4 of the 28 days of OLLIE and Mr. Miller is starting to see
how he can connect with people. The announcements give him new
information and ideas to think about and the forums, Twitter, and Diigo
are all tools that he can use to connect with others in the community, but what has him really stumped is…"when and why do people connect?"
Other than the information from the community announcements, he doesn't
really feel like he has a reason to add his voice to the
conversation... and that's when it happens.
In the general forum a teacher has made a post asking the community for assistance. She is a 4th grade teacher who would like to incorporate some digital citizenship content into her blended course. She is looking for online resources that could put in her unit.
Mr. Miller remembers that he read that a good online instruction includes extension activities and resources that push students thinking. Even though he teaches middle school science, he replies to her post with a resources that he uses with his students.
As he looks at others responses to the post he even finds some resources that will assist his efforts in supporting digital literacy with his students. He makes a mental note to add them to his course.

In the general forum a teacher has made a post asking the community for assistance. She is a 4th grade teacher who would like to incorporate some digital citizenship content into her blended course. She is looking for online resources that could put in her unit.
Mr. Miller remembers that he read that a good online instruction includes extension activities and resources that push students thinking. Even though he teaches middle school science, he replies to her post with a resources that he uses with his students.
As he looks at others responses to the post he even finds some resources that will assist his efforts in supporting digital literacy with his students. He makes a mental note to add them to his course.
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Physical Science Self Paced Content Available
In AEA PD Online's Student Personalized Learning system teachers and students can learn more about Physical Science with learning modules on Waves, Chemical Reactions, Energy and Electricity, and Matter. Teacher can check out the content by logging into the Student Personalized Learning system using their username and password that they use for the training system where they have taken mandatory trainings.
Once logged into the Student Learning system, click on Modules, Science and look at the individual Physical Science modules. If you wish to use these with your students or have any questions please contact Denise Krefting (dkrefting@aeapdonline.org) or Melissa Wicklund (mwicklund@aeapdonline.org).
Once logged into the Student Learning system, click on Modules, Science and look at the individual Physical Science modules. If you wish to use these with your students or have any questions please contact Denise Krefting (dkrefting@aeapdonline.org) or Melissa Wicklund (mwicklund@aeapdonline.org).
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 3
I don't know about you, but I spent a good chunk of yesterday digging my way out of the snow. The good news is I don't believe that the groundhog saw his shadow yesterday so spring is just around the corner, right? Right?
It's Day 3 of the 28 Days of OLLIE and Mr. Miller didn't have time to look at the daily announcement during the day. However, as he lays in his bed looking at the
The announcement focuses on two additional ways that community members can connect with each other. One is Twitter and another is Diigo.
Twitter is a microblogging tool where individuals can write 140 character messages and post it so that others can view it. The announcement includes several different resources to help people new to Twitter get started. After reviewing the information, Mr. Miller downloads the Twitter app to his phone, does a search for the #28OLLIE, and looks at what others community members have been posting on twitter.
Diigo is the other tool that is introduced. It allows members of a group to bookmark and annotate articles. The OLLIE community uses it to share articles about online/blended learning with each other and sometimes discuss them with each other using the annotation feature. Mr. Miller takes view the tutorials, download the diigo app to his phone, and finally review some articles that the community has annotated in the past.
Here is what Mr. Miller and you can do to stay connected with the community via Twitter and Diigo.
- Review informatin about Twitter, including what it is and how to use it here.
- If you don't have a Twitter account create one here
- Review the tweets at #28OLLIE
- Earn your Twitter badge by posting your own tweet at #28OLLIE
- Review the information about Diigo found here
- If you don't have a Diigo account create one here and join the OLLIE group
- Explore articles that the community has shared with each other
- Earn your Diigo badge by sharing an article with the OLLIE Group
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 2
Does snowmageddon 2016 have you stuck inside? If so, take a few minutes to check out Day 2 of the 28 Days of OLLIE.
Day 2
Today focuses on how to stay informed with community events, activities, and conversations. Now that Mr. Miller has joined the community he is looking for ways to stay connected to the events, activities, and conversations that are happening in the community.
ScenarioDay 2
Today focuses on how to stay informed with community events, activities, and conversations. Now that Mr. Miller has joined the community he is looking for ways to stay connected to the events, activities, and conversations that are happening in the community.
It's second period and it is Mr. Miller's planning period. He opens his e-mail and notices that he has a message from the OLLIE community. He doesn't have much
He notices that the message includes a short video about how the
community uses announcements and forums. He doesn't have time to view it
now, but decides he will take a look at it when he is waiting to pick
up his son from basketball practice.
...Fast forward to later in the day...
Mr. Miller has viewed the super short video and learned
...Fast forward to later in the day...
Mr. Miller has viewed the super short video and learned
- that as a member of community he will receive announcements via e-mail
- he can review older announcements by locating "Announcements" under the "Resource" heading in the community.
- Announcements are made by the community facilitators.
- Announcements contain useful information about events, activities, and opportunities to engage in conversations about online/blended learning.
View the video on community announcements below.
Monday, February 1, 2016
28 Days of OLLIE: Day 1
Day 1: Becoming a Community Member
Mr. Miller is a middle school teacher and is wanting to blend his instructions, but he doesn't know where to begin. He has heard several of his colleagues talking
They explain that the OLLIE community is an online community where individuals who are interested in online or blended instruction can connect with each other. Members they have the opportunity to benefit from each other's ideas and experiences, as well as gain insight into the newest innovations in online learning. It is a great place to ask questions and bounce ideas off others who are expanding their instruction into the online world.
After hearing this, Mr. Miller decides to become an OLLIE community member. He isn't quite sure what he wants from the community or what to expect, but he's willing to give it a try. He:
-
Enrolls in the community here.
-
Introduces himself in the general forum found here.
-
Pins his location here and learns that there are 3 other teachers in his school who are members of the community.
-
Learns the lay of the OLLIE community by completing the OLLIE Scavenger Hunt here
Later that day he is pleased to see that several community members have replied to his introductory posts, including the community facilitator. He also notices that he has received a badge for completing the OLLIE scavenger hunt.
Be Like Mr. Miller!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)