Tuesday, October 8, 2019

HyperDocs Hype: Explore



Once the stage is set and your class is engaged, offer your students time to more thoroughly explore a topic by providing them with an exploration activity in your HyperDoc. You can start preparing for this portion of the lesson early on by collecting your favorite resource links that promote thought and ignite curiosity. As they explore, students will begin learning about the topic, forming their own opinions, and asking questions. And because students have countless resources readily available at their fingertips, they tend to dive into a rabbit hole and become so immersed in the information they're finding that they don't want to stop exploring. Of course, this excitement is also one of the many benefits of creating exploration time. Don't be too surprised if your students continue exploring the topic at their own pace at home or at school and begin finding their own favorite links to information about your topic to explore. In fact, you may even consider adding a section to your HyperDoc where students can share their newly discovered resources with one another. Allowing time for students to explore and share their ideas about a topic before launching into specific learning objectives creates a curious classroom community that's willing to take risks and ask questions.

HyperDoc Exploration Strategies



EXPLORE TOOL: MULTIMEDIA TEXT SETS
A multimedia text set is a collection of text about a topic that includes a variety of information sources such as websites, articles, videos, images, quotes, and infographics. Students explore the collection of resources and are immersed in the various perspectives presented on the same topic. Exploring a multimedia text set requires that students practice their digital literacy skills and build schema on the topic.
21st Century Skills
Communication
Critical Thinking

ISTE Standards
Technology Operations
Critical Thinking
Research and Information
Communication and Collaboration

SAMR
Modification

Sample HyperDoc
goo.gl/r2EdCV
How to Design
Insert a two-column table in a Google Doc.
In one column, link students to a resource.
In the second column, create a way for students to respond to a broader question, record their thinking, and/or take notes.

How to Deliver
Share the Doc with students. When students click on the linked resources in the table, a new tab will pop up in the web browser with teacher-selected text. In the new tab, students read and explore the link. Students then record their notes in the Google Doc.

How to Collect
Through Google Classroom:
Create an assignment in Google Classroom.
Select the option to make a copy for each student so you can collect individual student data.
Provide feedback on the Doc.
EXPLORE TOOL: YOUTUBE PLAYLISTS
After students have read an article or text excerpt about a topic, give them visual content so
they can explore further. Watching videos helps improve a student's understanding of the topic at hand, while offering students who need this type of visual and auditory support easier access to your curriculum. When you invite students to explore a topic through videos, it helps
to pre-curate the content by creating a YouTube playlist. You can then link students to your playlist in your HyperDoc, allowing them to quickly access and explore the content on their own or with a classmate.
21st Century Skills
Communication
Critical Thinking

ISTE Standards
Technology Operations
Critical Thinking
Research and Information
Communication and Collaboration

SAMR
Augmentation

Sample HyperDoc
goo.gl/e9z0FQ
How to Design
Create a new YouTube playlist featuring relevant videos for your students to explore.
In your Hyperdoc, state your expectations for students as they watch the videos. Will they respond to a prompt after they watch the video? Discuss a new discovery with classmates? Or will they just explore for the sake of exploring?

How to Deliver
Include a link to your YouTube playlist in your HyperDoc. As students watch the videos, they will take notes in a notebook.

How to Collect
Depending on what you expect from the exploration time, you can collect student thinking in multiple ways:
Anecdotal records based on conversations (formative assessment)
Student responses in a notebook
A collection form where students submit videos they have found
EXPLORE TOOL: GOOGLE MYMAPS
To help students develop curiosity for learning, we must provide them with opportunities to
explore their interests. Creating personalized Google MyMaps is one way to do just this. Using this web tool, you can actually "plant" content where it took place on a map and then post corresponding text, images, videos, and links to take students to the next portion of the assignment. For example, if you were to drop a pin on Mount St. Helens, your students could view a video of the volcano erupting and then zoom in on the map to see the actual scarring left on the earth. Google MyMaps pins encourage students to determine their learning's pace
and path and engages their curiosity so they want to see what the next pin has in store. As students progress, you could add another layer to this powerful learning tool by having them
create their own maps.
21st Century Skills
Critical Thinking

ISTE Standards
Technology Operations
Critical Thinking
Research and Information

SAMR
Augmentation
Modification

Sample HyperDoc
goo.gl/jSsFqU
How to Design
In Google Drive, select New and then MyMaps.
Create a personal Google MyMap. Add locations by placing markers in strategic places.
Post the content you want students to discover for each location.

How to Deliver
Embed your map or share its link on a Google Site or share a link to your MyMap via Google Classroom. Discuss how to explore the map to not only learn its content, but also how to view it as a mentor text.

How to Collect
After exploring the map, discuss the elements, discuss the topic with students and explain how to use MyMaps. This prepares students for an application step later on in the lesson should they choose to create their own MyMap.