|  | Teachers Teaching Teachers 
                    Tech!The ACIE Newsletter, May 1999, Vol. 2, No. 
                    3workshop summary submitted by Gabriela 
                    Sweet, NLRC Immersion Project Assistant 
 
                     
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                      | Twin Cities 
                          immersion teachers “going to school” at 
                          tech workshop. |   
                      |  |  Teachers and administrators from eight immersion schools 
                    in the Twin Cities area met at Emerson School in Minneapolis 
                    (MN) on February 6th to share ideas and strategies on the 
                    use of technology in the immersion classroom, in a workshop 
                    sponsored by the American Council on Immersion Education. 
                    The workshop was broken down into five working sessions, where 
                    participants got a chance for lots of hands-on work with the 
                    Internet, and discussion on key issues related to immersion 
                    education.  The presenters, immersion teachers themselves at the elementary, 
                    middle, and high school levels, led participants through a 
                    variety of activities. Greg Anderson, from the Adams Spanish 
                    Immersion School, held a session on creating basic web pages 
                    using Claris HomePage Trial Software. This software can work 
                    on its own or within Netscape (running without an actual connection), 
                    giving new designers a chance to see how their created pages 
                    might look on the web. Participants reported that they were 
                    happy to see how easy web publishing can be! Teachers had 
                    an opportunity to begin building a page at the workshop, which 
                    they could later take home and develop.
 Maureen Curran-Dorsano, from the Normandale French Immersion 
                    Community School, guided participants through building web 
                    activities using Netscape Navigator Composer. This group developed 
                    interactive games about animals.
 From Highland Junior High School, science teacher Andy Burfeind 
                    showed how he uses the Internet as a learning resource in 
                    his Spanish immersion classroom. Burfeind led a surfing session, 
                    showing how teachers can effectively use links with their 
                    students during content-based science lessons, and increase 
                    student motivation at the same time through the use of technology.
 Emerson’s Tomás Gonda and Terri Geffert, from 
                    Bridgewater Elementary in North- field, collaborated on a 
                    demonstration of KidPix, a program they both use in their 
                    Spanish immersion classrooms. Gonda and Geffert showed how 
                    teachers can create slide shows that tie to lessons, using 
                    both audio and video to
 reinforce students’ developing language skills.
 Víctor Barela, from the Robbinsdale Spanish Immersion 
                    School, led an informative session on assessing students’ 
                    speaking ability in the second language through the use of 
                    video. In addition, Barela showed examples of rubrics in use 
                    at Robbinsdale, providing workshop participants with a concrete 
                    example of performance-based assessment.
 Robbinsdale’s Angie Cabrera provided user-friendly guidelines 
                    for creating multimedia presentations through HyperStudio. 
                    In addition, all participants received a disk containing web 
                    site URLs specifically chosen for immersion teachers, featuring 
                    sites for class activities, software, identifying “key 
                    pals,” and more.
 Participants noted that, despite their busy schedules, the 
                    opportunity to meet with immersion colleagues to learn from 
                    each other was tremendously valuable. “I tend to forget 
                    that other people have faced the same challenges that I have,” 
                    admitted one teacher. “It’s great to be able to 
                    collaborate: it makes my work that much easier! Good to remember 
                    that we’re all in this together.”
   
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