Happy Digital Learning Day 2013!

It’s the 2nd annual Digital Learning Day, and once again, we’ve compiled a bunch of great resources from within the network to share with you. They are all available to anyone looking for information or inspiration on how to incorporate digital learning practices and pedagogies into their learning spaces. They’ve all been tested in afterschool, out-of-school and summer learning environments, and they’re free for you to use, remix and share.

Today, our own Leah Gilliam is also at the National Network of Statewide Afterschool Networks Annual Meeting in DC where she’s participating in two sessions and highlighting some of the exciting work that has come from the rich collaborations and partnerships within Hive NYC. One session explores how to build and sustain digital learning opportunities from a networked perspective and via partnerships. The other focuses on the Maker Movement in the afterschool space, namely, what “making” looks like in informal learning and how it empowers learners. We’ll share more details following those sessions soon!

Check out these resources!

Screen Shot 2013-02-06 at 2.13.28 PMCuriosity Machine – Iridescent. The Curiosity Machine is a hands-on learning platform that brings cutting-edge science research and related engineering activities to children and their families. The Curiosity Machine is supported by NSF and the Office of Naval Research. It is a website and mobile app that hosts a collection of exciting and challenging engineering projects designed to encourage curiosity, creativity, and persistence.

Technovation Challenge – Iridescent. Technovation Challenge’s mission is to support and inspire girls to become creators and innovators. The program offers high school girls an opportunity to learn about computer science and entrepreneurship by partnering with women in technology via an online course hosted on P2PU.  Together they bring their unique perspectives together to develop mobile phone applications that solve problems in their local communities.

TASCasaurus After-School Curriculum – Hive NYC and TASC. Developed by The After-School Corporation and Hive NYC Learning Network, this curriculum provides educators in expanded learning time, after-school and other out-of-school time settings with a free, engaging, web-based model to teach kids how to move from digital consumers to active web producers.

Webmaking Hacktivities – Mozilla. For educators looking to introduce concepts around webmaking into formal or informal learning environments, these Hacktivity Kits include everything you need, from icebreakers to more complex lesson plans.

Media in Action Curriculum – Global Action Project. This curriculum, developed by the Global Action Project, is intended to serve as a rough guide for how to harness the power of youth media for cultural expression and political change.

Off the Wall – Institute of Play. Visual-based templates help you take your challenge-based informal learning activities to a new level.

Off the Wall Design by Institute of Play

Off the Wall Design by Institute of Play

Off the Wall Design by Institute of Play

Off the Wall Design by Institute of Play

 
Playforce – Institute of Play. Playforce is an online community built for and by players, parents and educators to discover and share learning experiences from games. For parents and educators, this provides a searchable database of games with learning potential, by specific content area or skill. It also trains players to develop critical tools to articulate what they’ve learned in a way that educators can easily understand.

Gamekit – Institute of Play. Gamekit is a digital platform to connect aspiring teen game designers to professionals through curated game design challenges. The site recently launched in beta, and there are currently 4 warm-up challenges on the site. New ones will be published monthly beginning in March.

Short Circuit Guides – Institute of Play. Short Circuit Guides offer complete curriculum and professional development modules for an after-school program in electronics and physical computing. These are free to download, and they include lesson plans and individualized assessment tools for hands-on informal learning activities that encourage DIY digital media skills.

Playmakers  – Institute of Play. Playmakers videos explore some of the experiences and innovations that are changing the face of learning design for the 21st century, intended to inspire others to think about how they can use new tools and ideas to address the challenge of student engagement.

Digital Passport – Common Sense Media. Common Sense Media’s Digital Passport is a fun and effective way to teach and test the basics of online life – Digital Citizenship and Literacy! The free web-based games and videos engage 3rd – 5th graders in independent learning. The modules zero in on critical skills related to digital safety, respect, and community.

Here’s another example of digital learning in action:

Youth and educators from Brooklyn Public Library, Global Kids and TeacherGaming came together to create and explore a challenge-based, virtual learning environment using MinecraftEdu to explore social themes from The Hunger Games including inequality, suffering, and resource distribution. Read more about it here.

We’d love to hear what you think, and what other resources you use to create and facilitate effective digital learning experiences for youth!

PenPal News Red-Blue: Students Cross State Lines to Get New Perspectives

This is a guest post by Michael Bernstein, Founder of PenPal News.

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This fall, Hive NYC supported PenPal News Red-Blue, a 6-week online exchange program that partnered middle and high school classrooms in red and blue states across the country. Student penpals ranging in age from 12- to 18-years-old were able to share their perspectives about election-year issues like the role of government, the economy and immigration. Over 8,000 students in 30 states participated.

PenPal News is a web platform and matching service that makes it easy for teachers to connect their students in one-on-one exchanges with peers in another location. It also provides a dynamic curriculum that includes short animated videos and news stories as the basis for discussion.

The idea is to provide students with background about an issue, engage them with an interesting news story about a specific aspect of that issue, and then have them share their perspectives about it with their penpal.

For example, here’s an animation used to provide background on the health care debate:

(Check out other animations at https://vimeo.com/penpalnews/videos)

After watching the video, students were asked to read and respond to questions about the story of Arijit Guha, a graduate student at Arizona State who started a public campaign against his insurance company. He was protesting the fact that they wouldn’t cover his colon cancer treatment because he had exceeded his lifetime limit on coverage.

Rebecca, a 12th grader at Winston Prep in New York City, and Robert, a 12th grader at Our Lady of Providence High School in Clarksville, Indiana, wrote to each other after reading the article. They talked about their opinions on Obamacare and discussed whether people should be required to buy insurance. Rebecca also told Robert about her own experience with health insurance:

Rebecca:
Okay, so separate from the major healthcare topics being consistently addressed I just wanted to comment on the healthcare system in general. So much of it is corrupt and/or dysfunctional! Continue reading