This term's Year 6 Geography topic is 'How are We Connected?', for the last part of the topic over the next few weeks 6A and 6S will be doing a project on a country they are some way connected to. For homework last week I asked them to make a list of five countries they are connected to in some way in preparation for the next lesson.
Rather than asking children to bring in the list on paper I set up two wallwisher pages.
6A Wallwisher homework
6S Wallwisher homework
This was my first time using wallwisher and also the children's. They went away from their lessons excited about the prospect of doing their homework in a different way and I was pleased to see that, by the time I got home on Friday evening, several children had already done the homework! It is good to see the children motivated and keen to try new things.
One of the reasons I decided to use Wallwisher is so that we can look at the homework together as a class on the IWB at the beginning of the next lesson. The children will be mapping their connections and eventually paired up with someone who has the same country as them to do the project, having the information online and in such a visual way will hopefully make this much easier.
One of the things I like best about Wallwisher is its ease of use, setting up a wall takes about 5 minutes!
Monday, 9 November 2009
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this is a great idea - nice way of using Wallwisher!
ReplyDeleteLooking good - i should get my year 6's to do it too and we could compare - my school is based in inner city brum and the children have main links with Pakistan and The Yemen!
ReplyDeleteIt would be an interesting comparison, most of the children I teach here in rural Suffolk struggle to come up with any connections to other countries at all!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant Miss
ReplyDeleteSuzi Bewell
Could I reference this in a short web2.0 evaluation I'm doing for my MSc?
ReplyDeleteChris (@electricchalk)
I tried using Wallwisher in our Grade 5 classroom and the kids were so enthusiastic, they crashed it!
ReplyDeleteHave also tried http://www.twiddla.com which is also really good for this.
Thanks Suzi!
ReplyDeleteChris I've DM'd you on Twitter.
I will check out twiddla, looks interesting...