This post demonstrates how effective and informative Google forms can
be when planning a presentation and delivering a presentation.
A few months ago, Kern Kelley, Alice Barr, Sarah Sutter, and I were asked to be part of a
presentation in front of 800 MLTI
students at a student conference on the University of Maine campus. After several sessions on SKYPE and planning with conference organizer Jim Moulton, the 5 of us, were going to
present to an auditorium of 800 participants in an interactive fashion.
How can 800 participants interact with the presentation? With Google
online tools! Wait a minute! We know we have a hard time when we get 20
students in a classroom using a wireless access point in one room, we
freeze up, have slow speeds getting to a website, but with 800, oh my!
Jim
assured us that the University of Maine would get their best thinkers
and doers working on this. Dr. Bruce Seegee and the fine engineers
from CISCO took on this mission and would
actually join us in the session to watch the bandwidth use and
troubleshoot, if necessary. This would be a perfect opportunity for all
the conference participants to observe what happens behind the scenes
to make things work at their schools and for all to see that when using
technology we always have a backup plan.
Our presentation was the
final session at the end of a very busy and productive day. What
follows is the information we gathered prior to the presentation. This
demonstrates the scope of our project and the power of google forms to
gather real time data. (I am happy to report that we were able to get
all 800 students on the network during our presentation. We were able
to collect real time data during the presentation while students filled
in the google form (survey) and we presented the data as it was
collected. Our students truly saw the power of the network.)
Our session was titled :
Block 3 - Only Google is big enough - Everyone, all together, one room, one session!
- In 2009 Good Questions are More Powerful Than Good Answers - Google Super Session (Alice Barr - Yarmouth High School; Kern Kelley - MSAD #48; Cheryl
Oakes - Wells Ogunquit CSD; Sarah Sutter - Wiscasset High School)Maine's
own team of Google certified educators will be leading the
whole gang through a series of activities that will demonstrate the
power of the Google Toolset. Sure, we all use Google, but wait
till you see what you can do when you understand how to leverage
Google's power to go beyond getting answers and learn how to use Google
to ask your own thoughtful questions of people in your class, in your
school, around your state, or even around the world!
As
part of the preparation, the five of us, created a series of questions
in a Google Form, and sent the questions out to our worldwide networks,
in 10 days we collected information from all our personal networks, and
after some clamoring this information is published for all to share and
use. Thank you to all who participated in our survey. We hope you will
create a survey that we can participate in at some point in the future.
As we participate in the upcoming NECC conference in
Washington, DC June 28 to July 1, 2009, let this kind of collaboration
be an inspiration to you and act as a reminder, no matter how valuable
face to face connections, our virtual connections can be equally
informative and interactive. Create your own collaborative interactive
survey and let the world provide the data.
Here are the data points distributed on the global map.
We
had over 550 respondents answer our survey. You can see the points on
the map indicating the participation that spread throughout the world.
Our personal learning networks reach far and wide. A take away points:
- Collaboration is a tool which will leverage the learning and opportunities for our students.
- The
data we collected will serve to make our students more global and
appreciative of the power of all of us versus the power of one
individual.
- The process of collecting the data is viable for all types of projects.
Here are the questions:
The
survey is no longer available for more responses! Please check out the
data that you were part of in this collection! YOU now are part of this
historical collection.
- How many hours a day do you spend at school for academics?
- How many days a week do you go to school?
- What time does school start for you in the morning?
- What time do you get out of school at the end of the day?
- What would be your ideal time to start school?
- What would be your ideal time to end your school day?
- Do you attend tutoring or other academic content classes outside of the school day?
- If Yes, how many hours do you spend in this additional class each week?
- Are sports or other club activities available outside the school day at your school?
- If sports or other activities are available at your school, when do they occur?
- Does your country provide free public education?
- At what age do children begin formal schooling in your country?
- At what age does public education typically end in your country?
- Where is your school?