Wednesday, February 1, 2012

SpiderScribe: my new favorite web tool for students

In honor of Digital Learning Day, I thought I'd post about a new web tool I tried with my 6th graders this week.      I read about SpiderScribe on Free Tech 4 Teachers, my FAVORITE site for finding new tech ideas.  Richard always does a fantastic job of describing the tech tool and then explaining possible educational uses for it.

I was searching for a new collaborative mind-mapping tool for a project I had typically done with Popplet, because although Popplet is fantastic and worked fine for the project last spring, it hasn't been playing well with our school network this year.  It's sooo glitchy at school now that I just can't have my kids use it anymore.  We used Wallwisher this fall and it was fine, but had some limitations for what we were trying to do.  So I was super excited when I found Richard's post about 7 mind-mapping tools and discovered SpiderScribe, which is just perfect for this project.

Project background: my 6th graders work in groups to research several holidays and historical events for a Spanish-speaking country they've chosen.  Each student researches 2 holidays and 2 events, and they write the dates in Spanish.  They then use a collaborative web tool of their choice to create 2 "timelines" (not necessarily linear) to display their holidays and events in chronological order.  (This time, they could choose between SpiderScribe and Wallwisher, but everybody chose SpiderScribe.)

(student SpiderScribe project exported as jpeg -- see below for links to view more projects larger!)
To begin, one student in the group created a "map" (blank canvas) and added the other group members to it.  They could then all add boxes with their information, pictures, Google maps, and more.  They could see each other's changes in real time and modify each other's work.  SpiderScribe was easy and fun for the students to use, and worked almost flawlessly except a small few glitches that were quickly fixed. (By the way, their tech support is speedy and very helpful -- great for an educational tool!)

Check out a few examples at the links below:  (These are real student work so obviously not perfect!)

http://www.spiderscribe.net/app/?957fd3ca36407d32f02d8cad70cb59d7

http://www.spiderscribe.net/app/?0048708a7278bbc4d5f81d4c20710339

http://www.spiderscribe.net/app/?ed5505cd65a0fe74f73e2982aeec50ab

http://www.spiderscribe.net/app/?af2ae672a819c37c70e4afc62f5f23b1

Notice how the students were able to be creative with their layouts and designs.  I wish you could have seen them collaborating online and face-to-face at the same time as they worked -- it was exciting to watch!  Many groups finished their projects in class, but students who needed to work at home were able to do so quite easily.

The last step of the project is that each group posted their project link to a discussion forum on our class Moodle page.  For homework (over several days), each student has to view at least 2 other groups' projects and then leave high-quality comments for the groups in the forum.  (To set this up, I have a thread for each group, where they post their link and the classmates reply with comments.)

How have you used SpiderScribe or another real-time collaborative web tool with your students?  What did you think of my students' projects?

4 comments:

  1. Ooooh, this is so awesome! Can't wait to check it out.:)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jennifer,

    We are glad your kids were able to use SpiderScribe.net without much training. We are trying to make it as simple as possible. Right now we are working on some new improvements.

    Feel free to email us any time with feedback.

    -SpiderScribe.net Team

    ReplyDelete
  3. This post is quite old but I wanted to thank you for it, I just signed a contract to teach 6th grade at a public school in Maryland and I am beyond excited. But it is the first time I am teaching middle school, and your post just opened my eyes to SpiderScribe, which looks awesome, and I want to say thanks for the help!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. This post is quite old but I wanted to thank you for it, I just signed a contract to teach 6th grade at a public school in Maryland and I am beyond excited. But it is the first time I am teaching middle school, and your post just opened my eyes to SpiderScribe, which looks awesome, and I want to say thanks for the help!!

    ReplyDelete

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