Showing posts with label virtual instruction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label virtual instruction. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Immune System Trading Cards and Storyboarding Remotely



I've described the immune system trading cards that my honors biology class makes here. We are remote this week, and we were ready to work on our trading cards. Fortunately, part of the activity is digital anyway. The adjustment that was needed was getting the illustrations onto the cards. 

Usually we pass the cards around and each of the students illustrates their word on every other student's cards. That part is impossible when we are all remote. To adjust, I had each student illustrate their word by hand, take a picture and insert it into the document. I also gave them the option to illustrate the word digitally, they just couldn't copy and paste from the internet. The class was split fairly evenly, with half of the students illustrating by hand and the other half used Google Drawings to put their illustration together. 

Some of our cards from this week.

After we finish the cards, when we are in class, I have them storyboard the immune response to an infection on our lab tables with characters of the immune system that I give them and chalk markers. This time, I put the characters in Google Slides and asks the students to story board in Slides. I love the bird's eye view I get of them working in Slides (even though I can't see all of the students when they are in breakout rooms. It was so much fun watching their storyboards coming together in real time. It allowed me to see some misconceptions as well and address them with the class.

Here's a link to the Google Slides students used to make the storyboard.

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Practicing FRQs in AP Bio In Person and Virtually



Since I returned to the classroom five years ago, I've been having my AP Bio students practice released Free Response Questions from past exams. In the last two years, I've been coupling that with having them grade not only their own responses with the scoring guide, but scoring the student examples that the College Board provides. My students have said that they find this exercise helpful, so I continued this practice even when we were online. 

Doing this online posed a few challenges. I didn't want to have to post a bunch of documents (questions, rubric, and student samples) and I didn't want students to see what the actual scores of the samples were. The longer I was teaching from home, the more ways I figured out how to solve these problems.  

One way was to print out the pages I wanted and then used the Image Capture app in my school MacBook to scan all of the documents on my wireless printer/scanner into one PDF. I didn't even know I had this app until I found it by accident in desperation while online teaching. My daughter, who was zooming for college, was delighted that I found this. She regularly had to scan documents and upload them for her classes.  One benefit of this method is that I could mark out the letters that the College Board had put at the top of the student sample FRQs and put my own letters on them. This is handy because my students quickly figure out that the A example is the best score, B is in the middle, and C is the worst. This method allowed me to just provide students with the original FRQ, the scoring guide, and the three student samples. When they were finished I would then reveal what the actual scores of the student samples were. (Which is what I usually do in the classroom.)

I wasn't keen on printing out that many pages...especially since I knew printouts were sitting at school. The second way I figured out how to take pages from several documents and put them into one was using Notability. I put all of the separate documents into one document in Notability, eliminated the pages I didn't want, and changed the order of the student sample pages. I could also mark out the original letters marking the student samples and add my own. 


To keep all students participating even if they are reluctant to share in class or on Zoom, I put together this Google Form for them to report their results in. In the classroom, I'm able to walk around and check on the progress of each student. This was much harder online. And both online and in class there are always students more reluctant to share. Filling out the form allows all students to contribute without putting any of them on the spot.

Here are the FRQs that I've done so far. They are primarily from ecology and human body systems since those are the last two units of the year. I only changed the order and letters of the first question linked here, since this Spring I was working in survival mode and was just trying to get the documents workable.

Human Body Systems

Ecology