April 11, 2021

What Would You Do Differently? A 2020 Reflection - HoET177

What Would You Do Differently? A 2020 Reflection - HoET177

Nate Nagele returns to reflect on 2020 and what we would do differently.

Feedback, Shoutouts, and News (1:25)

Changes to Google Workspace storage

EdTech Thought and Recommendation (10:00)

10 Ways to Harness the Power of the Chat Function

  • 1. Chat me.
  • 3. Thank students and acknowledge their chats.
  • 4. Prepare prompts.
  • 7. Monitor the chat.
  • 10. Download chat as an artifact.

Featured Content (21:15)

Nathan Nagele - a husband, father, and teacher. Nate is currently a middle school technology education teacher in the Montgomery County Public School (MCPS) system. Nate has been teaching since 2009 and has served as a teacher, educational technology coordinator, department chair, and mentor.

He loves teaching students and teachers about technology and how to use educational technology to get the most out of their classroom experience.

Connect with Nate - http://nathannagele.com/

In this conversation, Nate and I talk about what we've each learned over the last year and we reflect on what we would do differently.

House of EdTech VIP (48:55)

Tim Cavey - Tim is an 8th-grade educator and vice-principal in Vancouver, BC, Canada. In 2019, he completed a Master’s of Educational Leadership degree through Vancouver Island University, and the 2020-2021 school year was his 20th in education.
My MEdL program re-invigorated his passion for education. His favorite education topics include the 5Cs, design thinking, growth mindset, inquiry, PBL, visible learning, and strategic uses of technology in education. Tim's Master’s thesis focused on the tremendous power of asynchronous professional development media, inspired in part by his podcast, Teachers on Fire.
On the Teachers on Fire podcast, Tim profiles agents of growth and transformation in K-12 education. He chats with inspiring educators to bring you their highs and lows, passions and goals, and the voices and influences that are shaping their thinking and inspiring their practice. In the fall of 2020, Tim began streaming these conversations on the Teachers on Fire YouTube channel as well.
He launched the podcast in March of 2018 without knowing much about the technical side of podcasting. Growth has been steady, and the reach of the show continues to build month after month. As he continues to learn, improve, and connect with other educators, he has enjoyed playing a part in professional learning across North America and the world.
https://teachersonfire.net/