TCAPSLoop Podcast

TCAPSLoop
TCAPSLoop Podcast

The TCAPSLoop Podcast hopes to help make the Ed-tech landscape a little more interesting and much less daunting. Contributors to ”the Loop” are fellow Educators and Specialists willing to act as your digital ed-tech tour guides. This is not meant to be a ”White Paper” site replete with training videos and techno jargon (though there will probably be some of that), but a conversation starter and opportunity to have a bit of fun while sharing some potentially useful tips.

  1. OCT 22

    Closing the Loop! Our Last Potentially Useful Edtech Podcast

    Episode 8.01 Closing the Loop  Greetings and Welcome to the final Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. Danelle Brostrom and I attempted to not be excessively maudlin and succeeded to some extent as we looked back on 8 years of potentially useful podcasting while "closing the Loop". Moment of Zen: Every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end.” ― Lucius Annaeus Seneca  The Rundown: Reflections On A Project  Why it Started A fun, Innovative PD vehicle to share best practices with edtech. Initial concept included a full multimedia project inspired by Grantland.com but downsized within the first year due to unrealistic expectations of an already over worked team. Some articles from Stephie Luyt and David Noller can still be found on Medium.com Podcasts allowed for a long form conversation to help demystify technology for our educators and allow for thought provoking discussion from our amazing team of Edtech experts. By the Numbers: Number of years - 8; TCAPSLoop started podcasting early 2016. TCAPSLoop Weekly #1 was March 2017 Number of episodes - OVER 200!!!!! Highlights: Helped inspire and/or launch at least 3 other edtech podcasts (remember when we were TRENDING on apple podcasts????) Favorite special guests  Emmanuel Schanzer - data science -  in 2023 Stephie Luyt - books, books, books! cast.org Favorite episodes - top 3 I’d recommend for people to listen to RIGHT NOW Universal Design for Learning with Cast.org | TCAPSLoop Podcast 2024 Considering Age Appropriate AI | TCAPSLoop Podcast 2024 ALL DIGCIT PODS, but especially Bonus Pod! Common Sense EDU Digital Citizenship Week Discussion | TCAPSLoop Podcast 2023 First DigCit pod: Oct 17, 2017 What's Next: All things AI, Accessibility, Closing the design, use, and access divides (NETP), continued work on the MACUL Board serving the membership of MACUL (Conference chair for MACUL26 in GR - 50th anniversary of the org) Recommendations Hard Fork Body Electric Twenty Thousand Hertz For the Purpose Of - Kent ISD Tech Tool of the Week Common Sense Media and cast.org :)  Final Thoughts: Podcast series will still remain out in the ether for people to listen, reflect, share Tech tools come and go. Good teaching is timeless. Pause for people. Put down the device. Go outside.    Where can we find you? Danelle  - brostromda@tcaps.net or Linked In (brostromda) TCAPSLoop can be found at a thrift store, estate sale or antique store near you.    Thank you for listening to the podcast on Apple podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Pocketcast, Podbean, Castbox, Overcast, Bullhorn, or wherever else you got your ear candy. gekawabamin meenawa and... Thanks for listening and inspiring!

    31 min
  2. MAY 10

    Universal Design for Learning with Cast.org

    Greetings and Welcome to another Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. I’m so pumped for this episode as we are joined by Melissa Sanjeh and Bryan Dean of cast.org. They are here to de-mystify UDL and get you on board to implement their amazing resources into your practice, in the classroom, or district-wide. This is a must listen for any educator invested in the education of ALL students.    Moment of Zen: “No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.” ― Charles Dickens   The Rundown: Key Goals of the Podcast: Visibility for cast.org and what it can offer educators/schools Increase depth of understanding around accessibility/UDL   Audience for the Podcast: K-12 educators Administrators   Questions/Topics What is cast.org? What are the goals of your organization?  Why is accessibility important and necessary? What are some common accessibility barriers educators might be overlooking? How does UDL fit in? How can UDL benefit ALL learners? Connection between your work at cast.org and the NETP What advice would you give educators who are just starting to explore UDL, accessibility, and cast.org? Looking towards the future, what are your predictions for the role of accessibility and UDL in education? From a district leadership perspective, how do we make this into just something that we DO in our district/school?   Additional Questions: Can you share some success stories or personal anecdotes about accessibility and UDL in action? Can you share a Tech Tool for our listeners? What will help them learn more about the topic or what will help them be more accessible? Tech Tool of the Week Cast.org    Please rate and review the podcast on your app of choice and leave us a comment on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram Thank you so much for listening and inspiring!   Hosts: Danelle Brostrom, Larry Burden Special Guests: Melissa Sanjeh, Bryan Dean Um and Ramble Editing: Larry Burden   Cover art created with help from Adobe Firefly.

    41 min
  3. MAY 7

    Libraries, AI and Senate Bills

    Greetings and Welcome to another Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. Today's show includes potential pulitzer prize winning novelist, Danelle Brostrom as well as her ghost writer in this alternate reality, Stephie Luyt. We will be discussing all things Libraries including three school library associated bills currently working their way through Michigan State Congress and how they'll effect our Certified Librarians. We focus on Information Literacy, Artificial Intelligence and of course, Bluey. Moment of Zen: “The person who deserves most pity is a lonesome one on a rainy day who doesn’t know how to read.” — Benjamin Franklin   The Letter: Dear Senate Education Committee Members,   Thank you for your thoughtful consideration and questions about the “Library in Every School” bills that are sponsored by Senator Camilleri (SB741, SB742) and Senator Bayer (SB743).   At yesterday’s Senate Education Committee Meeting, members of the committee asked for data about school libraries. The Michigan Association of School Librarians (MASL) has a wealth of data and we will share some of it below in several forms.   Please reach out if you have questions about this data or would like to meet to have any of your questions answered.   Thank you very much,   Kathy Lester >MASL Advocacy Co-Chair, Immediate Past-President AASL, Adjunct Faculty Wayne State University Alexa Lalejini >MASL Advocacy Co-Chair, School Librarian, Rockford Public Schools Stephie Luyt >MASL Advocacy Co-Chair, School Librarian, Traverse City Area Public Schools Carrie Betts, >MASL President, School Librarian, Birmingham Public School District, AASL National School Library of the Year Christine Beachler,  >MASL President-Elect, School Librarian, Lowell Public Schools   DATA ABOUT THE POSITIVE IMPACT OF SCHOOL LIBRARIANS   Correlation between reading scores and school librarians in Michigan According to the latest data, Michigan 46th in the nation in the ratio of students to school librarians (ratio of 2788 students per school librarian from 2021-2022) and 43rd in 3rd grade NAEP reading scores. Michigan Study About the Impact of School Librarians In Michigan, a Library of Michigan research study showed that school library media programs have a statistically significant positive impact on reading achievement in grades 4, 7, and 11. Specifically, this study showed that schools with librarians have 35 percent more fourth graders who score proficient or above than school without librarians (see page ix of the study). The Michigan reading test scores rise with the extent to which the state’s school library programs are headed by qualified school librarians. The relationship between school libraries and test scores cannot be explained away by other school or community conditions at any school level. The Impact of Michigan School Libraries on Academic Achievement: Kids Who Have Libraries Succeed Other research and data about the positive impact of school librarians The Michigan Association of School Librarians has put together a document that summarizes the different ways that school librarians have a positive impact on students and includes links to research for each item. bit.ly/slibevid A good article that summarizes much of the research The article below is a great article that summarizes much of the research. Lance, K.C. & Kachel, D.E. (2018).  Why school librarians matter: What years of research tell us. Phi Delta Kappan, 99 (7), 15-20. An infographic about the impact of school librarians on students with cited research studies: bit.ly/slheights Tech Tool of the Week Teaching Books is the new Sora extra!    Please rate and review the podcast on your app of choice and leave us a comment on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram Thank you so much for listening and inspiring!   Hosts: Danelle Brostrom, Larry Burden Special Guest: Stephie Luyt Um and Ramble Editing: Larry Burden   Cover art created with help from Adobe Firefly.

    20 min
  4. APR 25

    Ed Tech Tools for the School Year Stretch Run

    Greetings and Welcome to another Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. After several rather stress inducing weeks at TCAPSLoop towers we decided to keep this episode light by focusing on some great tech tools to get you through the stretch run of the school year. So let’s start the calming process by inhaling this weeks TCAPS Loop Moment of Zen: Moment of Zen: “Be like a duck. Calm on the surface, but always paddling like the dickens underneath.” —Michael Caine   The Rundown: Canva for podcasting How To Create a Podcast in Canva Free and customizable podcast templates   Google Classroom Practice Sets Practice sets - Google for Education Uses AI to help find and attach supplemental study material Uses AI to deliver insights about assignment/class AI Test Kitchen from Google Comic Sans Criminal   Additional Inspiration: Dr. Nagler Named COSN EmpowerED Superintendent of the Year Too much screen time? U-M pioneers digital wellness program for youths | University of Michigan News  In the legislature now: The American Privacy Rights Act of 2024   Tech Tool of the Week Bluey. Just watch it.  Watch - Bluey Official Website    NPR Bluey Podcast   Please rate and review the podcast on your app of choice and leave us a comment on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram Thank you so much for listening and inspiring!   Hosts: Danelle Brostrom, Larry Burden Um and Ramble Editing: Larry Burden   Cover art created with help from Adobe Firefly.

    24 min
  5. APR 11

    AI Prompt Engineering and Regional Education Media Centers

    Greetings and Welcome to another Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. This episode dives into the world of AI prompts with guest Pete Milne, REMC Director! We explore best practices for crafting effective prompts, ensuring responsible AI use, and leveraging Pete's expertise to elevate your ed-tech game. Buckle up and get ready to unlock the appropriate use of AI in your practice! Moment of Zen: “The power to question is the basis of all human progress.” – Indira Gandhi   The Rundown: Crafting Powerful Prompts: Pete shares key tips for creating clear, concise, and effective prompts that guide AI tools towards your desired outcome. Reliable Sources & Verification: Learn the importance of including reputable sources in your prompts and double-checking information for accuracy. Responsible AI Use: We discuss crucial considerations like avoiding PII (Personally Identifiable Information) and verifying sources to ensure ethical and responsible AI integration. Practice Makes Perfect: Pete emphasizes the importance of practice when crafting prompts. Explore scenarios like those offered by Common Sense Education (https://www.commonsense.org/education/collections/ai-literacy-lessons-for-grades-6-12)) to hone your skills. AI as Your Partner: AI is best used as an assistant or thought partner, not a replacement for our expertise. Tech Tool of the Week REMC 2Central REMC Association of Michigan REMC SAVE Control Alt Achieve: Super Prompt - An AI Prompt to Create AI Prompts The Prepare Framework – AI Pioneers Doc for Getting Started with Prompts Enhancing Efficiency & Effectiveness While Providing Accommodations for All - April (asynchronous) Sketchnoting - April 17th (noon - 3:30) PSTL in a Box - May (asynchronous)   Please rate and review the podcast on your app of choice and leave us a comment on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram Thank you so much for listening and inspiring!   Hosts: Danelle Brostrom, Larry Burden Um and Ramble Editing: Larry Burden   Cover art created with help from Adobe Firefly.

    32 min
  6. MAR 21

    Considering Age Appropriate AI

    Greetings and Welcome to another Potentially Useful episode of the TCAPSLoop Podcast. Danelle's leveled up after her successful quest through MACUL 2024 and will guide us into the exciting realm of Developmentally Appropriate AI in Education. We know our youngest learners must develop the necessary critical thinking skills to navigate a landscape where AI will be ubiquitous. So, gear-up, fellow ed-tech explorers, as we embark on a journey through bytes, and building blocks. Moment of Zen: There are very few human beings who receive the truth, complete and staggering, by instant illumination. Most of them acquire it fragment by fragment, on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic. - Anais Nin   The Rundown: Thoughts on Access vs. Exposure in regards to AI in schools Generative AI has potential benefits for education and risks that must be thoughtfully managed.   Early Elementary - Bite sized digital citizenship, scaffolding to big ideas AI is not a human “Peek under the hood” to see how these things work Critical Thinking  AI hallucinations AI created images Slow down and self reflect AND Seek facts and evidence (5 core dispositions of digital citizenship) Not directly on AI systems - under 13   Later Elementary Problem solvers, if we aren’t careful, they will learn to rely on this kind of tech rather than solving their own problems Ask ChatGPT questions, but the teacher is always in the drivers seat. Spend a LOT of time thinking critically about the answers Not directly on AI systems - under 13   Middle School  CAUTION! “Over 13? Let’s get them on AI!” Developmentally what do we know about middle school brains?  They lack impulse control. Set guardrails and limits.  Exercises in which students ask a generative AI chatbot to answer a question or write an essay and then critique it—looking for factual errors, etc. “It should be used as a tool to complement and challenge the critical-thinking skills that come online at this age,”    High School High school students are fast becoming sophisticated users of programs like ChatGPT. Teachers may feel their main duty at this stage is to police students and make sure they’re not using ChatGPT, Photomath, and similar technologies to do their assignments. But experts say that educators have a more important role to play: primarily, to teach students the limitations of the technology. The text and images created by generative AI programs, for example, can be plagued with biases, stereotypes, and inaccuracies. “Exercise your natural suspicions. Doubt the machine. Don’t take answers at face value” AI is an important component of their education, but it still needs boundaries and guidance.  AI Literacy Lessons for Grades 6–12 | Common Sense Education   Tech Tool of the Week AI Literacy Lessons for Grades 6–12 | Common Sense Education   Rate, Review and Subscribe to the podcast on Apple podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Pocketcast, Podbean, Castbox, Overcast, Bullhorn, or wherever else you get your ear candy.    Please rate and review the podcast on your app of choice and leave us a comment on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram Thank you so much for listening and inspiring!   Hosts: Danelle Brostrom, Larry Burden Um and Ramble Editing: Larry Burden   Cover art created with help from Adobe Firefly.

    20 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

The TCAPSLoop Podcast hopes to help make the Ed-tech landscape a little more interesting and much less daunting. Contributors to ”the Loop” are fellow Educators and Specialists willing to act as your digital ed-tech tour guides. This is not meant to be a ”White Paper” site replete with training videos and techno jargon (though there will probably be some of that), but a conversation starter and opportunity to have a bit of fun while sharing some potentially useful tips.

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