Saturday, December 1st, 10AM - 4PM
Main room: 285 Grace Dodge Hall
What is it?
EduCamp is a BarCamp-inspired gathering born from the desire by teachers, researchers, and technology specialists in K-12 education to share and learn in an open and powerfully-networked environment.
EduCampNYC is launched with the help of New York City teachers and hosted by Open Educator TC, the Columbia Teachers College campus chapter of the non-profit, Open Educator.
Pre-event planning will take place using this wiki. The event will be run using Open Space Technology. It will be an intense event with discussions, demos, and interaction from attendees. It will be an intense event with discussions, demos, and interaction from attendees.
Event details
When:
Saturday, December 1st, 10AM - 4PM.
Where:
Columbia University, Teachers College. Main room: 285 Grace Dodge Hall,
120th between Broadway and Amsterdam. Entrance on north side of street.
Bring ID for security.
Cost:
The event itself is free, however we are looking for sponsors to cover
breakfast, lunch, and happy hour. Contact Jennifer at
(jenniferstillman at gmail.com) if you are interested in pitching in.
RSVP:
Limited space available. Add your name to the EduCamp Wiki at [http://www.educampnyc.org]
How to prepare:
All attendees are encouraged to host a break-out session or demo on a k-12 instructional topic of their choosing. Sessions should focus on resources and/or methods in k-12 teaching and learning. Please bring anything you need to run your workshop. LCD projectors and Wi-Fi will be provided. Please post your idea on the EduCamp Wiki at [http://www.educampnyc.org]
What to bring:
LCD projectors and Wi-Fi will be provided. Please bring a laptop. If possible, also bring an extension cord and plug-strip. Mac users who wish to use a projector should bring a VGA dongle.
Food:
Provided we can obtain sponsorships, all food and refreshment will be free.
Happy hour:
4:30PM-8P, Amsterdam Cafe, Amsterdam Ave. between 119th and 120th.
Please RSVP by adding to this page!
Note: This WIKI has had the "hiccups" lately. You will probably get a server error when you first try to edit. Please don't be alarmed. Refresh the page and it will work. This is an open WIKI. Simply log in using the password c4mp, click "Edit Page", and add to the appropriate section! Learn more about using the BarCamp Wiki.
Who's coming? (aka Campers)
- add yourself using the same format you see above, with "|" signs to separate your entries...There are FIVE cells in the table. Example)
| Name | Subject Areas | Grade Level(s) | Questions/topics I'd like to hear about | Topic(s)you might lead |
| Andrew Stillman (event organizer) | Physics, Engineering, General Science | 6-12 | What is open-source curriculum? How do people best learn science? | How to use Open Planner |
| Jennifer Stillman (event organizer) | US Government, Law | 9-12 | Can law-themed high schools develop a common framework for curriculum? | How to run mock trials, soup to nuts. |
| Gloria Rosario (educator and school leadership team member) | Global History | 10-12 | How can a school's leadership team promote collaboration and support each teacher? | I am also interested in meeting prospective ELA and Social Studies teachers. |
| Valinie Naraine | Queens College Graduate Student | k-2 | How can we help to increase intrinsic learning? | |
| Tiffany Braby | ESL and Social Studies | 6-8 | How do you make American History interesting for Middle Schooler's? | Effective Strategies for teaching Students with Interupted Formal Education and Long Term ELL's in Middle School |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
| your name here | your subject area | grade level here | topics you'd like to hear about | topics you might lead |
etc...
The "Rules" of EduCamp
When you come, be prepared to share with educampers.
When you leave, be prepared to share it with the world.
NO SPECTATORS, ONLY PARTICIPANTS
Attendees must give a demo, a session, or help with one, or otherwise volunteer / contribute in some way to support the event ("Contributing" something to EduCamp can mean many things. You can attend someone else's workshop and simply engage in discussion, or help clean up the breakfast plates! We just want to make sure people are actively involved.) All presentations are scheduled the day they happen. Prepare in advance, but come early to get a slot on the wall. The people present at the event will select the demos or presentations they want to see.
Presenters are responsible for making sure that notes/slides/audio/video of their presentations are published on the web for the benefit of all and those who can’t be present. We will be using the collaborative curriculum authoring tool Open Planner to document all sessions.
Sponsors
Open Educator, TC
Columbia Teachers College Student Affairs
Schedule
Saturday, December 1st
- Happy Hour (tentative: Amsterdam Cafe)
Topics I would like to hear about
- Open Source curriculum: What is it? How does it work? Why?
Planners
Andrew and Jennifer Stillman, Event Coodinators
Open Educator, Inc. Advisory Board Members, Outreach
Volunteers
http://www.barcamp.org/EduCampNYC?edit=1#
Table
Task List
(please croos out when it's done)
Tech
Wifi
Projectors
Photo (need volunteer photographers)
Video (need videographer)
Audio
Non-tech
Breakfast
Lunch
Coffee/Tea
Happy hour
Who's blogging
Open Planner