Uses for Wikihow in Literacy

So here is a great recommendation. If you are a teacher working with your class on instructional text then I would recommend using Wikihow. It reminded me of the How Stuff Works site but is characterised with wiki features – you can freely contribute articles and edit others.

So how would you use it in your class?

Well with my Year 6 class, I am always on the look out for real, purposeful opportunities to write. In our 1st week on instructional text we wrote for an audience of children in Sydney. In this second week I wanted to get practical – so the children could make something in the classroom and then we would write up those instructions. Wikihow provides you and your class an excellent opportuntiy to publish what you write to a wider audience and as it is a site taking requests for instructions, there is also a real human purpose to putting pen to paper.

So we decided to answer a request for “How to make a Healthy Breakfast Drink”. The week’s planning, for 5 literacy lessons, included other independent tasks related to instructional text work – but the shared time was planned out to work on this request.

Monday

We introduced the site and explored the framework we had to write to. I highlighted the audience and purpose of our writing. As a class we recapped the instructional text features and talked briefly about our targets for the week, what did we want to achieve? It boiled down to: By Friday we want to submit a well written instructional article to Wikihow.

Tuesday / Wednesday / Thursday

I divided the class into groups of 10 children and on these consecutive days they worked with a teaching assistant on our healthy smoothie recipe which I had done some preparation on. The group worked together and prepared, made and tasted the smoothie and also recorded brief notes on the procedure on a large flipchart. A digital camera was used to capture various stages. (These images will be used in the Wikihow article later.)

Whilst the groups were working with the TAs I worked with the rest of the class on some word level games such as dictionary races etc. The remaining children then went to work on their independent tasks.

Friday

So this turned out to be our big writing session. We worked together as a class to produce the instructions for the Wikihow article. We worked directly in the text frames on the Wikihow site, but could have easily done this elsewhere.

I really like the structure of the Wikihow article and it is simple enough to follow – just be aware that the “You will need” list is an optional extra. Scroll to the bottom of the text frames and there are some check boxes to add on writing sections, for example “Warnings” or “Top Tips”.

Take a look at our finished piece of writing titled “How to Make a Healthy Breakfast Drink

If you are looking for a great source of instructional text then there is a huge number of articles to choose from. The content is closely monitored by the editors and seems ideal for school use.

So what else can you do with the site:

  • Use as a guided reading text during your literacy hour – if you feel something is missing then why not edit the article and make additions. (Guided writing)
  • Read some text as a whole class when identifying the language features of an instructional text. Use your whiteboard tools to highlight and annotate the article.
  • Use the writing guides available on the site, they work in line with the literacy objectives from the Primary Strategy (UK)
  • Look for a related activity or article that you can carry out in a different subject area. For example making a rubber band guitar could be done when looking at sound in science lessons. There are lots to choose from.
  • Post a request yourself. If there is nothing that you would like to respond to then post something worthy of your efforts. Make it relevant to your curriculum work – if you are doing the Romans then why not post a request for “How to make a model Roman shield” – then get your kids making it and write the instructions in literacy, a good cross curricular link.
  • Create a set of instructions over a short period of time. I will be editing our article with some images taken during the activity. The writing could be added to – slowly improving your work. Also don’t fret too much if others do this – remember that is what makes this so great, a collaborative writing effort.
  • As I have done with my class – why not respond to a request for instructions, make or create it so the children get a first hand experience and then incorporate the writing as part of your shared work in the literacy lessons.

Instructional Texts – Be our audience…

Over the next few weeks at school, once we return from half term, we will be learning about writing effective instructional texts. (Year 6 – 10/11 year olds) I want to begin to make the most of the links that emerge so readily from blogging so I have planned to work with Jamie Wahab in Sydney, Australia.

The children from his school will be part of our audience for some shared writing we will be doing on “How To Write a Blog Comment”. We will also be producing the writing for some novice bloggers in my school.

I think that we cannot make the most of these international links and the whole essence of the flat earth unless we put into place some simple curriculum planning to embrace it. So I have planned a week of literacy lessons where the first part of the lesson – shared writing / reading – will be about constructing effective instructions for the title explained above.

It will include a range of web 2.0 based skills – including, Gliffy, Flickr and of course our class blogs. I have begun by adding a flash file to our class blog that I will use on Monday as an introduction. Perhaps the most important aspect is establishing with the children in my class that there will be a real audience for this work, who and where they are. That will be key.

Although this is a small scale project I just want to clarify the details here:

Our Aims:

  • For the children who are involved to become more effective writers of instructions.
  • For the children to have a greater awareness of AUDIENCE and PURPOSE.
  • For the children to select appropriate style and form to suit a specific audience and purpose. (NLS T22)

Why do this using class blogs?

  • Not only have we been able to establish worldwide links from our blogs but as soon as we have published our work it has a similar varied audience.
  • Writing on the blog allows other children to interact with the writing process, to leave constructive criticism and to work collaboratively towards a successful piece of writing.
  • The audience becomes part of the editing process.

What dialogue will occur?

  • We will publish our work throughout the week including the notes we make using Gliffy or other applications. The set of instructions will also be published for others to follow on our class blog.
  • The intended audience can leave feedback on the success or otherwise of the instructions we write as a class – there will be time on the Friday for us to explore some of these and to edit the writing if necessary.
  • The act of commenting constructively will be a important skill for the children visiting and reading to develop.

This is not just an exclusive project, so I would very much welcome anyone to help us make it an effective unit of work – feel free to leave a comment here indicating who and where you are and if you would like to be involved. Or just explore some of the work published over at Priestsic6 from Monday onwards and leave a comment over the next few weeks.

Using Gliffy in the classroom

Today we were writing a simple flow diagram for an explanatory text about drive belts. So I planned to use Gliffy, the online diagram tool, to do the job. I was really pleased with how things worked and the user friendly nature of it all.

It is a free to register site and has all the functionality you would expect. I was happy with it but I did ask myself whether I could have got similar results using SMART Notebook? What was I doing that is different?

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Well the transformation of the activity lies in it’s potential. Today I scratched the surface and we just used it to create a diagram, but when you plan to collaborate on a diagram with others – then it becomes a different game entirely. Two classes could collaborate on the same diagram, maybe two classes in the same year group (same school) and then from the wider community too.

There is also the inherent “Share” feature as with many web 2.0 tools nowadays – the ability to embed into websites or blogs using, in this case, java or linking quickly to an image file of various sizes. I found this very useful.

I did find the resizing of text to be a little fiddly it could do with being able to resize along with the shape it lies in.

The images you can see in my example were straight from the Image Search tool in the left panel – which is a nice touch, being able to search right there. (You can also upload your own images to the left panel to insert)

All in all a good tool to have in the locker when exploring this sort of diagram authoring.

Working with Carronshore

Yesterday there was a little bit of a spark in the air as children from Carronshorehelped us with our poetry on our wikispace. Nothing was particularly planned, we just followed up a comment on the class blog after asking for some contributions.

The children from Carronshore wrote their “If I were and If you were” poetry contributions on our wikispace as we also added our “Sick” poem rhyming couplets as we had done on post it notes in class.

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It would have been really nice to have worked on something in real time or use Skype and/or messaging to chat as we worked. Let me know if anyone would like to do more of this.
Just is a great reminder how simple technology can help create great collaborative opportunities between children from different parts of the world.

Multimedia Poems

This week and next week we are going to produce multimedia versions of our Poppy Poems that were written last week, coinciding with our World War 2 work in history and Remembrance day.

For the last fortnight or so I have been exploring the different web 2.0 multimedia presentation tools, see the list below, and have decided in the end to use Photostory from windows.

This is a list of the various multimedia presentation tools I considered for the job (all web based) :

I eventually decided upon Photostory 3 from Microsoft because I wanted the option to add not only audio to each photograph but an overall soundtrack as well. The fact that it is individual software and not web based was not really an issue, but the actual scope within the software, what you could actually achieve with the tool itself was important.

I like Photostory for a few basic reasons:

  • It is really simple and doesn’t over complicate the process.
  • Users are taken step by step through the creation. It almost acts like a “wizard” rather than an application.
  • The process is linear so you know when you have finished. You can retrace your steps easily too.
  • Images can be altered in the application – so you can change all of the images to a sepia tone for example.

I think the children will enjoy the various elements of the application – they begin their work on Tuesday, the first of 2 planned sessions on creating a multimedia Poppy Poem.