Wednesday, July 1, 2026

What I Learned on Day 3 (Tuesday) at ISTE 2026 #ISTELive #notatISTE

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

I got up early so I could get downstairs to the Greek yogurt. It's awesome. Don't judge me — a conference runs on small joys and that yogurt is one of them.

And then I saw him. A man in a shirt for a printer named Eddie. Eddie prints edible ink. I wanted to chase him down right there, but I behaved myself (I sent my son after him later in the expo hall — more on that). I did, however, text my sister about a whole new way to eat my words. You could eat your words. You could put your foot in your mouth. The possibilities are endless. Oh yes, I love it. But I digress!

Then I headed to the lazy river for a few quiet minutes — alongside my new antagonist, Napoleon the short squirrel, who is unafraid of humans. I named him. I think he likes it. He wouldn't tell me. He's too busy plotting how to take over the little island in the middle of the lazy river. He doesn't know it's actually called Elba. Probably not the best place for a Napoleon to set up camp, but I'm not going to be the one to tell him. OK. I digress yet again. This is supposed to be about ISTE, not about an ancient emperor who took over the world.

Yet, we're talking about a new trend taking over the world. AI. Is it a tyrant? Is it the greatest assistant ever invented? Does anyone even know? No. But we do know that kids are struggling to learn because this “helper” ain't helping. At least not in the form it is in now.

So I headed over to learn, to grow, and to interview some pretty remarkable people. You never know where you'll find the amazing stories. They are everywhere. Even inside the conference center after you just made the hot walk from the Hilton.

A professor from Nebraska and the power of shorts

One of those stories found me before the day even really started. I met a remarkable professor from Nebraska — Evi Wusk, EdD at Nebraska Wesleyan. Evi is using short-form video to engage her students in learning. (I always go up to people with presenter badges and ask what they're presenting about. It is like a personal interview. We got to talking and I knew right away. I'm booking her for the show.)

That's ISTE for you. The best connections are not on the schedule!

A deep dive into Renaissance Intelligence with Todd Brekhus

Then I headed to the media center for a real deep dive into Renaissance Intelligence with Todd Brekhus, Chief Product Officer at Renaissance and General Manager of Nearpod. We both got started in the 1990's helping people learn how to use the Internet. Ok, this is cool, he actually worked at MCI along with Vint Cerf. That Vint Cerf. The one who helped invent the Internet. I've always wondered, shouldn't it have been that we Cerf the Internet? OK, again, you can hear me. I digress.

Disclosure: I'm doing some work for Renaissance at ISTE this year. I've used Nearpod for years and always do my class presentations with it. I like to do formative assessment every eight minutes. That's my goal anyway.

As I'm writing this, Renaissance Intelligence has just gone live. Everything – all of their tools -are pulled into one place. It is really exciting. I had a person demo it at the booth and it is really remarkable. I do recommend if you use any of their products to take a look at the demo on their site. It also integrates all of the testing data with how teachers can assign content.

They are focusing with the AI on the teacher side first. Keep the teacher in the middle. That is great.

Brandie Wright and the keynote on curiosity

I got to sit down with Brandie Wright, who gave the ISTE main-stage keynote on curiosity. She teaches at YELLOWHAB, the tuition-free micro-school Pharrell Williams founded in Norfolk. She talked at the mainstage on Sunday. She told the story of a student who was sitting right there with his dad on the front row.

Oddly enough, I hate to admit. I wondered if the story wasn't real but was about a generic kid and AI generated. When, before the interview, I asked her, she admitted that quite a few people have been asking if the student was real.

Are you kidding? What is wrong with us? Are we so frustrated with AI that we now all think a perfectly believable teacher needs to make up a story about some generic kid to tell us? Are we that cynical? Am I that cynical?

So, I know I've “fallen for” those fake AI stories that are all over facebook. Well, I don't like it this way either. To mistake a real human for AI is so insulting to the human. (The side of AI detection nobody talks about enough, me thinks.)

Tony Frontier: stop being the AI police

And that is what Tony Frontier talked about. There are kids who never touched AI and got a false positive. Then, they started using AI so that they could see if a false positive would happen and are REWRITING their papers to make it not be flagged as AI? Do we see what we're doing??? Seriously. The games we're playing.

So I sat down for a delightful conversation Tony Frontier, PhD, author of the best selling book, AI with Intention (and the earlier Five Levers to Improve Learning). He has been running focus groups with students all over the country. He says that they're using AI for between a quarter and 40% of their school work. Most of them are receiving no guidance from adults. They're figuring it out. But they are alone.

Hear that. Alone. Like do we want that?

Tony talks about integrity, transparency, and explainability. We have to have integrity. We need to be transparent about AI use. And can we explain the learning behind anything and everything we create and share and turn in?

He says this “AI police” thing is not good. He says the arms race to detect AI cheating is one we can't win. Instead, the real question isn't did you use AI, it's does this work represent what you actually know.

I would rather have learning detectors than AI detectors any day. I've got a lot to learn from Tony — and John Hattie said his book is the best one out there on productively using AI for learning. Wow. That's some education cred right there for me. He's my next read.

The BBC Learning Hub — free and awesome

The BBC Learning Hub has a pile of free resources that are genuinely wonderful — Bluey, Walking with Dinosaurs, amazing digital field trips. So many cool things, and free for teachers. This is a fantastic free resource and their booth has been super busy. I'll be sharing more about them as well. I love their resources!

Disclosure: the BBC is one of the sponsors of my work at ISTE this year. As always, I tell you when there's a relationship — and I only point you to things I actually love.

Where I Was On Wednesday

I had two sessions today. I was going to post this Wednesday morning. It didn't happen but for posterity, here they are. I'll write more about it on my Wednesday recap.

  • 🎬 Empowering Digital Storytelling from Pitch to Publish (with AI) — 10:00–11:00 a.m., Room W206BC (also streamed). My son John is co-presenting this one with me. We'll take you from idea to finished story using AI at every step — pitch, produce, publish — plus the gear, the gadgets, and the projects I use to teach it.
  • 🧰 50+ AI/Edtech Tools and Teaching Tips to Transform Your Classroom — 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m., Room W312AB. A practical rundown organized by the teaching job each tool helps you do — assessment, creativity, coding, productivity — with the pedagogy to match. This one isn't streamed, so you have to be in the room for the goodies. Resources: bit.ly/50AI-EdtechCCT.

How the day ended

It was a full day, and we ended it with sushi. Oh yes. Sushi.

My son John — aka Cameraman, aka Producer, aka the guy I send into the expo hall to track down Eddie the edible-ink printer — reports back that yes, it prints on Rice Krispies. Anything flat, apparently. Which got me wondering about Mochi. (I'd never had it before this trip. I think I'd print “yum” right on the outside.)

I'll never forget that John's whole life changed in tenth grade when a teacher assigned him to record a podcast. And that teacher's life changed too — because now he's my editor. We sure do have fun together. Wednesday he co-presented the digital storytelling session with me. He knows more about it now than I do.

I have to wonder what would have happened if John had not had a teacher willing to let him tell stories digitally. Would he be working for me now? Would I be talking about digital storytelling today?

Well, it thundered and rained like crazy as Tuesday came to a close. I figure Napoleon got to plot his takeover of Elba island in the middle of the Lazy River somewhere in his snug nest. I hope that today, as I write this on Wednesday, that I'll get to interact with this little feller one more time. If you wonder – yes, in the South we name animals all the time. Especially ones with odd little quirks. In my family, they have always been historical names. The last Napolean I knew was Napoleon Bone a Bark and his nemesis was a little puppy named Lady Astor. They didn't like each other but somehow made us laugh. Sometimes history repeats itself. I wonder if Napoleon the squirrel has secretly named me Lady Astor. I hope not. The original Lady Astor didn't seem so nice.

It has been an amazing conference. The tools are cool. The people are remarkable. And the squirrel is short.

I was about to post this post on Wednesday morning before everything began but someone came up to me. He is awesome. I am posting after I'm back in my room but I do think posting matters. Conversations matter. Thoughts matter. You matter. (Hat tip to my friend Angela.) OK, I'm not so sure about squirrels. But I digress. Time for a nap.

See you later, educator.


Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, and Renaissance and the BBC are among the sponsors of my ISTE coverage this year. If you buy through an affiliate link, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you — it helps support this blog. I always tell you when there's a relationship, and I only recommend what I actually use and love.

A squirrel wearing a tricorne hat peeks out from a tree hole next to a sign with an inspiring message for ISTE 2026.

The post What I Learned on Day 3 (Tuesday) at ISTE 2026 #ISTELive #notatISTE appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/iste-2026-day-3/

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

What I Learned on Day 2 (Monday) at ISTE 2026 #ISTELive #notatISTE

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

This morning was so sweet as I joined my friends Eric Curts, Jaime Donally, Rachelle Dené Poth, Gabriel Carrillo, and Victoria Thompson for our Edtech and AI Supershare. The crowd was awesome and had so much energy! (That was surprising for a 9 am session!) That really started the day on an up note!

In today's post I'm going to share some of the cool things I saw, the conversations in the hallway, and just some general observations about what people are talking about. I will tell you one frustration. Social media is not making it easy to connect. The algorithms they use now don't help us connect with others who are there very easily. There was a day when most educators were on Twitter, but now people are in a variety of places. It just makes it harder. One day someone will invent something, that's for sure.

First Stop: Edtech and AI SuperShare

I think we should focus on detecting learning not whether AI was used.

I wish we could focus on detecting if learning is happening rather than detecting AI. The question is does a student know and understand what they are doing. I don't care as much if they use AI to get there.

In five years, AI will be just be everywhere. It will be like asking if we use a calculator on a math problem. It is really irrelevant if we did and more relevant if we can work the problem. I hope we'll have the controls we need to focus on learning and that every tool we use will help us get there and not distract from the process.

For example, let's look at how I'm writing this post:

  1. Voice AI. Throughout this conference I'm recording my day on Plaud Note Pro. I also record my thoughts and big takeaways and what I want it to focus on pulling out from my day. I love the
  2. Compliation and Conversation. Then, I use Claude Cowork to go through the day using my voice notes as a guide. I have it interview me and give my words and thoughts on each aspect of the day.
  3. Draft. Then, I have it pull it all together along with links.
  4. Fact Check. I have Claude Cowork fact check everything. I mean everything. (See below! Sigh!)
  5. Push the Draft to Wordpress. Then, after I read over the draft and am happy with it, I have it push the draft to my blog.
  6. Rewrite. Then, I go through it and rewrite in my own words. Why? Because even with all of my writing, it still sounds like Claude. I really try to get it to sound like me but it doesn't. It puts “stakes in the ground” it em dashes where I wouldn't em dash (and I will use them and not give them up. I wrote about that recently.)
  7. Check links. OK I try to check every link. I really do. Might I miss some? Sure. But most of them, I'll have them.
  8. Add pictures. Then I figure out what pics I want and *gasp* I might even AI generate the featured image. Why? Because I want to!

So, let me ask you this — does it matter that I used AI? Is it relevant that without these tools my blog posts often die in the land of good intentions and digitally rot away to irrelevance because in the rush I can't pull them together?

I really want to help all those teachers not at iste! And some of the most important things are the CONVERSATIONS people are having and one of those conversations is about WORKFLOWS.

So, at this point, I could care less if AI touched something because *double gasp* AI touches everything these days. The qeustion I want to ask is “did this student learn.”

Portrait of an AI Graduate from ISTE, Credit ISTE.org.

ISTE's Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate

I really enjoyed ISTE's new Profile of an AI-Ready Graduate, and I'll admit it — I like the roles humans are playing in it their pavilion. Now, it took me forever to find it as it is on the bottom floor near the entrance.

The framework names six things ISTE says we should want students to become: Learner, Researcher, Synthesizer, Ideator, Connector, and Storyteller. (Here's the framework.)

But I love the booth! Educators from the STEM SIG / SIGTEL were demonstrating how they teach their students to be each of those things! It is so fun. Nothing mass-manufactered here. Lots of small groups of humans talking about what this looks like. Educators teaching educators. In small groups. Human to human talking about the tool. That is the way to go (Karim Meghji from CodeAI says it best below.)

Karim Meghji and Code AI: glass box, not black box

Speaking of Karim Meghji,, one of favorite conversations was sitting down with him! Karim is one of my interviews of the day and is president and CEO of Code AI.

Disclosure: CodeAI is one of the sponsors of my time at ISTE this year as I'm recording a few things for them. Companies like CodeAI make the work I do possible and I always disclose that. Although I've talked about this organization for years because I love what they do!

One of my favorite conversations of the day was sitting down again with president and CEO of Code AI — the nonprofit formerly known as Code.org, the people behind Hour of Code (which is what got me started in Python) and now Hour of AI.

Earlier in the day, John and I took one of their classes in their activation space. I loved the designs of the lessons.

For example, I can stand up front in class and tell my students all day that “AI is biased.” But when they work to generate foods, you can see the bias. For example, when I said to “make the meal appeal to kid” it put a smiley face of food on the baked chicken. One instructor commented that somehow AI thinks kids like to eat smiley faces! See — bias. And that is the point — we see it. We feel it. We talk about it.

CodeAI is free and has built these moments on purpose. I was even amazed as Kari says they have built some lessons where AI answers incorrectly so students learn to inspect it.

The safety controls are pretty awesome as well with multiple steps between students and the AI tool and back from the AI tool. The I highly recommend these free tools for teaching about AI even if you have other tools in place just because of the way they have set it up.

Karim also pushes past the usual “human in the loop” language. Being in the loop, he says, could mean sitting in the passenger seat. He wants the student driving. An active participant, not a passive one.

There was a line he said that I could repeat over and over.

“If you are going to start anywhere with AI education, it starts with humans teaching humans about what the machine is doing.”

Yes!

I could go on so much more even about the delightful man from Mexico, Oskar, that I sat with in the booth!

The Hallway Conversations

Oh the people are just the best:

  • I ran into Nurlan who had emailed me when I went to Edcrunch in Moscow. That was such a happy memory and a room full of educators.
  • I talked to Dyane Smokorowski — Mrs. Smoke from my Flat Classroom days and we nerded out on global collaboration for a moment. She's cooking up a very cool project but I'll let her share the story soon, I hope.
  • I ran into Eric Sheninger who hosted one of the best conferences I ever attended, Edscape. My son was a senior that year. I watched my son get his first sack in Eric's vendor room.
  • I chatted with Don Wettrick, an awesome entrepreneur who helps bring business into the classroom.
  • I saw PBL guru Suzie Boss in the hallway. What a brilliant and remarkable human being she is.
  • I saw Starr Sackstein at my hotel who may just have the busiest few days this week I've ever heard of someone doing! (It isn't mine to tell, but wow, Starr if you read this – you go, girl!)
  • I've met people who have read my blog. So many are in leadership now and said when they were a teacher getting started, I helped them get started!
  • We might come to ISTE to talk tech and curriculum but the best thing about ISTE is the people!

I'm so mad with Google search and a digital literacy lesson worth remembering.

I've learned that mistakes are best owned and then we can move on. And when we share our mistakes, someone might learn from our embarrassment. I was prepping for my interview with Karim, and I was looking for recent surveys on how many adults are leaning on Ai for decision making. I was in a rush because I couldn't find the research I had looked at just last week.

OK I'm going to show you the screen shot but DO NOT BELIEVE IT. I'm going to get to it below.

This is what came up in my search, It was even BETTER than the research I saw last week and was so very shocking.

OK so the Google summary said that 78.5% of American's used an AI tool to influence their decision making but only around 17% check the answers. I clicked on Knoxville news sentinel. I did all that I teach my students to do. I vetted sources… or so I thought.

So, after the interview, I did a fact check using my Claude Cowork skill that I programmed to be a “cranky geek curmudgeon” (I've blogged about that too.)

And then I could have just kicked the wall. The number went back to a pay-to-post survey from a marketing agency. This is not a source I'd ever hang my hat on.

Dad gum it, as we say in Camilla, Georgia. Google let me down.

Here's what happened. Google found information but it doesn't fact check sources,. It can't tell a vetted study from a press release.

It looked authoritative. It wasn't. I'm going to have to edit that stat out of the interview even though his response is pure gold. I'm not going to perpetuate the problem by sharing it!

So, I'm working to figure out how to turn off AI search on Google. Or, I'm just going to have to use Perplexity which tends to be more accurate than AI's search.

So, here's the lesson. We all need digital literacy. I got burned by an AI summary from Google. (And perhaps you could argue that my well tuned fact checking skill in Claude opened my eyes to the source and helped me fess up where I messed up so I can get better!)

Doggone it. That's another Camilla Georgia saying. But I'm not going to be gone. I'm going to open up. Below are some ways that I'm working to try to turn off Google's AI summaries. Some work now and may stop working so be aware.

Try this: digital-literacy moves we can all use against bad AI summaries

Since an AI summary is what burned me, here are the habits I'm taking back to my own searching — and teaching my students:

  • Click through before you quote. Don't cite a number an AI summary hands you until you've opened the original source and seen who actually said it.
  • Watch the URL. If it contains /press-release/ (or “PR”), it's paid placement, not reporting — and seeing it on several sites usually means one press release was syndicated, not independently confirmed.
  • Ask who ran the study. A university, Pew, or Gallup is one thing; a company with something to sell is another.
  • Bypass the AI summary. Add &udm=14 to a Google results URL (or click the “Web” tab) to get plain links with no AI overview. In Chrome, you can set google.com/search?q=%s&udm=14 as your default search so it skips the summary every time.
  • Teach the habit. Have students trace one AI “fact” back to its source. It's the fastest digital-literacy lesson there is.

The “AI dean”: helpful, as long as humans don't hand over the decision

At the AI-Ready Graduate pavilion, I heard Phyllis Shepherd of Alexandria City Public Schools talk about equity in school discipline. The numbers behind it are sobering — students with disabilities are far more likely to face long-term suspension — and she built an AI decision-support tool to make discipline more consistent and policy-aligned.

It was interesting, and I think it could be genuinely good — as long as the humans involved don't offload the decision-making to it. That's the line for me. A tool that helps a human be more consistent and fair is one thing. A tool that becomes the one deciding is another. Keep the human in the chair.

Workflow and Claude Cowork

So funny when I said “Claude Cowork” in the first session, some people cheered. The people who are fans are superfans. And we are nerding out, I've got to tell you.

I got a lot of questions about my Plaud notetaking tool and my Remarkable tablet and how my whole workflow fits together.

Lots of people are quietly changing how they work. They aren't testing new apps because they have gone underground reengineering their workflows. They are forming attachments to their AI tool of choice. They are comparing their time savers.

The conversation among many leaders is about habits. They say we're moving from the attention economy to the attachment economy. It is happening. You'll say “are there any Gemini users in the house” and they'll cheer. Claude Cowork and more cheers. Not as many for ChatGPT — not sure why. Interesting. I still use it but for certain things.

Oh, and vibe coding. We're all showing each other the apps we've built. Again, not as much about the apps on the floor because we're all building them. English teachers. Non geeks. People with ideas. People who understand workflows. Making apps. This is great!

Walking the exhibit hall – my observations

The floor was its own education. A few things stood out:

  • Adobe Premiere on the iPhone with Firefly generation built right in — that one's awesome, and it changes what's possible for quick video.
  • A genuinely good, extended demo of Renaissance Intelligence — there's a lot there worth a longer write-up. (Disclosure: I'm doing work for them too and I adore Nearpod which is central to what is happening with this cool tool. More on them later.)
  • Canva is still a huge hit; their booth was packed the whole time.
  • The curated vendor tracks — booths grouped by the job you're trying to do — were really popular, and honestly that's a smart way to walk a hall this size. Curating by the educator's actual job description is a hit.
  • The BBC's free learning resources were awesome — a lot there for teachers at no cost. (Another sponsor of my work at ISTE)
  • And there was a child-sized walking robot. Robots and drones still pull a crowd — people find them genuinely interesting — though I'll admit I looked at the walking one and thought, I'm not sure why you'd put this in a school. The interest is real; the classroom use case isn't always.
@coolcatteacher I am just not sure how a humanoid robot could be used in the classroom. It will take convincing. I could see all kinds of mischief with this little feller. #istelive #robot ♬ original sound – therealnevv

Where to find me Wednesday

If you're at ISTE, I've got two more sessions on Wednesday, July 1, and I'd love to see you there:

  • 🎬 Empowering Digital Storytelling from Pitch to Publish (with AI)10:00–11:00 a.m., Room W206BC (also streamed). I'll take you through helping students go from idea to finished story using AI at every step — pitch, produce, publish — and share my gear, my gadgets, the projects I use to teach storytelling, and the websites that make it easy.
  • 🧰 50+ AI/Edtech Tools and Teaching Tips to Transform Your Classroom11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m., Room W312AB. A practical rundown of 50+ classroom-tested tools organized by the teaching job they help you do — assessment, creativity, coding, and productivity — plus the pedagogy that goes with each. This one isn't streamed, so you have to be in the room for the goodies. Resources: bit.ly/50AI-EdtechCCT.

Where Day 2 left me

The day opened with five friends and an energetic room having fun teaching together, and the best line I heard all day was Karim's: it starts with humans teaching humans. Meanwhile, under all the booths and demos, people are forming real attachments to their tools — the attachment economy isn't coming, it's here.

So, here's where I finish out Day two. Let the attachments be to the humans and then use the tools to help improve how we humans live. Don't be lonely, live life and get out there. Don't watch on a screen (if you can help it – when I broke my foot, I had to). Get out there if you can and see the people. The tools are cool but the people are remarkble.

Let's be human beings not human doings. Let's work on help kids and loving them well. Let's have the conversations that matter.

That's Day 2. I gotta run. Lots of people to see. And there's this vendor who has edible ink. Talk about eating your words! (ha ha) Oh and there's a squirrel at the Hilton who isn't afraid of humans. I don't like him. I've named him Napolean. He's a little aggressive. And short.

OK enough with the stuff. See you later, educator.

The post What I Learned on Day 2 (Monday) at ISTE 2026 #ISTELive #notatISTE appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/iste-2026-day-2/

Monday, June 29, 2026

What I Learned on Day 1 at #istelive #notatiste

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

I started the morning in the lazy river with for some quiet time with my Bible, Journal, and a moment. The water was moving slowly, the conference hadn't started the intensity yet, and then my friend Angela Maiers — founder of the You Matter movement — came over and brought me breakfast.

We floated and we talked. And what we talked about was kids: how we help them build social skills, how we help them know they matter, how we teach them to relate to other people, get along, and get out of the house. I didn't know yet that the last thing I'd hear at the end of the day — a keynote built on neuroscience — would say the same thing right back to me. More on that at the end.

Smart glasses, with Jaime Donally and Hall Davidson

My second stop was a conversation I'd been looking forward to: Jaime Donally and Hall Davidson showing me their Meta display glasses — the ones with Meta AI built in. I recorded a hilarious video below for those of you not here so you can feel like you're here!

The post What I Learned on Day 1 at #istelive #notatiste appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/iste-2026-day-1-roundup/

Saturday, June 27, 2026

My ISTE 2026 Sessions #ISTELive #ASCDAnnual

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

ISTE 2026 is really a joy for me. It is 19 years since my first ISTE, and this year they named me a “Featured Voice.” That just thrills me so much! I do hope to be helpful. In this post, I'll share the sessions I've got going on, and I'll add links to the resources as well, so you can bookmark it!

I will be sharing videos and thoughts just about everywhere I share: X LinkedIn Facebook Instagram Pinterest YouTubeBlueskyThreadsTikTok

My Sessions — short version

  • Mon Jun 29 · 9:00a · W311CD (also streamed) — ⚡ AI & Edtech Power Hour (panel)
  • Wed Jul 1 · 10:00a · W206BC (also streamed) — 🎬 Digital Storytelling: Pitch → Publish (with AI)
  • Wed Jul 1 · 11:30a · W312AB — 🧰 50+ AI/Edtech Tools & Teaching Tips

I will also be recording and sharing interviews with remarkable educators, thought leaders, and more. The schedule is so full, but it always has room to learn, and it is so exciting! Stay tuned to my social media for clips, thoughts for you, and info on what people are talking about at ISTE.

Spy the AI Game
Oh yes, I've been vibe coding to prepare for this year's ISTE. Of course, I had a friend tell me if I know how to code (which I do), it isn't really vibe coding because I can read it all and am just coding with tools. That said, it is really incredible to be able to crank out these useful, simple html resources to teach. I've been doing it all year long in class and have taught my students to do it as well. It is so exciting to share this at ISTE! I've got links below to play them.

Details for each Session

Note: I have a few tools I'm adding to these, so come back and reload them on the day of the presentations. I'll also come back here and add links.

All my ISTE session info will be right here: www.coolcatteacher.com/iste2026

⚡ AI & Edtech Power Hour: Turbocharged Tools for Every Subject and Grade (panel)

Mon June 29 · 9:00–10:00a · Room W311CD · Also streamed for virtual attendees
A fast-paced, interactive panel spotlighting practical AI and Edtech tools and pedagogies across subjects and grade levels. This year, the panelists are Dr. Rachelle Dene Poth, Eric Curts, Gabriel Carrillo, Jaime Donally, and Victoria Thompson. It is always high energy and so much fun, and I always have some surprise intros that I write for each of them. The room has always filled early and been closed, so this is one of those that is a fun three-pete (this is the third time we've done this one at ISTE!)

🔗 SuperShare resources · ISTE session page · Add to Google Calendar

🎬 Empowering Digital Storytelling from Pitch to Publish (with AI)

Wed July 1 · 10:00–11:00a · Room W206BC · Also streamed for virtual attendees
Take students from idea to finished story using AI at every step — pitch, produce, publish. I'll share my gear, my gadgets, my projects for teaching storytelling, and some cool websites that make it so easy.

🔗 Digital Storytelling resources (link to be added) · ISTE session page · Add to Google Calendar

🧰 50+ AI/Edtech Tools and Teaching Tips to Transform Your Classroom

Wed July 1 · 11:30a–12:30p · Room W312AB
Cut through the AI noise with 50+ classroom-tested tools organized by teaching need — assessment, creativity, coding, and productivity. In this session, I'm sharing my current thinking on AI. How I teach about it. I have some tools to test your knowledge on AI terminology, and a model of innovation that really works. I've updated my recommendations on lots of tools and also share the pedagogical best practices that goes with the recommendations I'm sharing! This won't be streamed so the only way to get the goodies is to be in this one.

🔗 Resources & slides · ISTE session page · Add to Google Calendar

🎮 Play the games: Spy the AI (vocabulary) · Turtle Tracker – I have vibe coded these and also share how I made them and the tips and tricks to teach your students vibe coding too!

I hope to connect with some of you at ISTE 2026. I hope you are having a great June! I'm about to get in the car and head out! (I live close enough in Georgia to Orlando to drive so it is time to hit the road!)

The post My ISTE 2026 Sessions #ISTELive #ASCDAnnual appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/iste2026/

Friday, June 19, 2026

How Students Actually Learn: Memory & Attention

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

Today we're focusing on a thought leader and classroom AP Psychology teacher, remarkable educators! Here's something I've believed for most of my 24 years in education: if you don't have a student's attention, you just can't teach that student. Blake Harvard is the AP Psychology teacher behind The Effortful Educator. Blake says attention isn't a “nice to have.” It's a necessary component of learning, and it's exactly where we lose kids the most. This show with Blake will change how you think about every lesson you design.

In these ten minutes, Blake unpacks how students actually learn — the power of a quick pre-test, why piling a “fun” complex activity on top of complex content backfires, and the two strategies with more than a century of research behind them: retrieval practice and spaced practice. My favorite line? “You're not going to prepare for a game by watching practice.” That one will stick with you — and it might just change how your students study tonight.

Sponsor. Today's show is sponsored by EF Explore America and their STEM Tours. Lead your students on a STEM tour to places on the cutting edge of innovation to show them how STEM thinking often shows up where you least expect it. Imagine your students coding robots with MassRobotics at MIT, exploring marine ecosystems in Florida's coral reefs, or even sitting down to talk with a former spy in Washington DC. If you want to inspire your students and give them a fresh perspective on the power of STEM, visit efexploreamerica.com/STEM.

Listen to the Show

About Blake Harvard

Blake Harvard how to get student attention
Blake Harvard how to get student attention

Blake Harvard is a full time teacher in Alabama. He is in his 20th year of teaching and currently teaches AP Psychology. He has a particular affinity for reading research into cognitive psychology for implementation in his classroom to improve student outcomes. He began writing about how he implements these research findings on his website (www.effortfuleducator.com) 9 years ago. Blake recently released his first book, Do I Have Your Attention? Understanding Memory Constraints and Maximizing Learning. It focuses on memory processing and learning strategies that over a century of research indicates improve learning in the classroom.

Blake has worked with numerous organizations like ISTE, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, and the US Department of Education and has also presented to numerous faculties across the world about memory and learning.

Connect with Blake: Website | X (@effortfuleduktr) | Bluesky (@blakeharvard.bsky.social) | Facebook (The Effortful Educator) | Instagram (@blake_harvard) | LinkedIn

Other Shows for Teachers Who Want to Teach How Students Learn

Listen and Subscribe

If this episode made you think, share it with a teacher friend.

Disclosure of Material Connection: This is a sponsored episode and blog post. EF Explore America has compensated me to share information about their STEM Tours. However, all opinions expressed are my own. I have personally reviewed these resources and only recommend tools I believe offer genuine value to classroom teachers. My endorsement is limited to the educational products and services discussed in this episode. This post also contains affiliate links; if you choose to buy a book through one of them, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.” The sponsor has no impact on the editorial content of this show.

The post How Students Actually Learn: Memory & Attention appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e943/

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Heart First, Tools Second: How to Teach and Use Tech in Today’s World

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

Today's show is full of ideas — how to teach in today's world based on the current research and the best thinking, an AI researcher who stays grounded in being human, and a set of practical tool tips from instructional coach Amy Storer. But all the tools in the world don't matter if we don't build our classrooms on a foundation of relationship. So here's the throughline: the heart comes first, and then we pick the tools.

You'll hear from Dr. Patricia Dickenson, author of Smart Teaching in the Age of AI, on teacher-driven instruction and using AI to plan, differentiate, and rethink how we assess. You'll hear from Dr. Jie Tao, who leads Fairfield University's AI & Technology Institute, on building AI out of compassion and using it without giving up control. And you'll hear from Amy Storer on the tools teachers are most excited about right now. I think you'll come away with lots of ideas, real insight into the tools educators are using today, and practical tips you can use tomorrow. Heart first, tools second.

A note: part of this episode touches on suicide and the research being done to detect and prevent it. If you or a student you love is struggling, you can reach the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline anytime by calling or texting 988.

Listen to the Show

Key Takeaways for Teachers

From Dr. Patricia Dickenson — Teach heart-first, then let AI help

  • Bring your authentic self into the room. Patricia's design starts with the teacher's gifts, energy, and lived experience — not just the standards. Her own fourth-grade teacher, Miss Santa Maria, showed up through chemo and shaped her for life. More is caught than taught.
  • Use AI to plan, differentiate, and assess — without offloading your thinking. From custom GPTs that “unpack a standard” for a new teacher to analyzing 150 quizzes for skill gaps, AI can amplify a teacher's work. Used the wrong way it's a diminisher; used well, it's an amplifier.
  • Teach AI literacy, don't ban the tools. Frameworks like UC Davis's PAIRR keep writing human while using AI as a feedback partner. Students will use AI regardless — better that we teach them to use it wisely.
  • Keep it balanced. A composite-shapes lesson became a ten-minute, AI-built city-skyline art project that still let her differentiate up to a seventh-grade standard. Put your toe in; mix it up.

From Dr. Jie Tao — Build (and use) AI out of compassion

  • The best technology solves real human problems. Jie pledged to work only on research his own mother would care about — including a model to detect suicidal ideation and a free tool that summarizes medical research for patients.
  • Stop “prompt and pray.” A consistent prompting structure beats hoping for a brilliant answer. The interview pattern (have the AI ask you questions) and a “scratchpad” that uses only the information you provide make AI far more reliable.
  • Use agentic AI without giving up control. Jie defines the steps and gives the agent limited autonomy within each one — and cautions that fully autonomous agents still have “the memory of a goldfish.” Keep AI in a controlled environment; test it and try to break it before students touch it.
  • It's an “overconfident intern,” not Google. Knowledgeable but not always right. Understand what it can and cannot do, and step in to steer.

From Amy Storer — Coaching that clicks (and tools you can use tomorrow)

  • Adobe Express keeps getting more classroom-ready. Create a Podcast (studio-quality, with an Enhance button to clean up hallway noise), Animate a Character, and Quick Actions like editing or merging PDFs — all in one place.
  • Canva Code builds the interactive you imagine. Describe your “dream interactivity” (like a food-chain sorting game) and Canva AI → Code writes it for you — no coding required. Magic Studio handles background removal and more.
  • Little time-savers add up. Press a number key in Canva presentation mode for a timer overlay; use Scribe to auto-generate step-by-step, screenshot-rich how-to guides for families and colleagues.
  • Tools should lighten the load. “I'm team anything that saves teachers time.” Comfort and good policy help teachers move from worry to wise use.

About the Guests

Dr. Patricia Dickenson on AI in the classroom and teacher-driven instruction — Cool Cat Teacher Talk S6E9
Dr. Patricia Dickenson shares how AI in the classroom can help teachers plan, differentiate, and assess.

Dr. Patricia Dickenson

Dr. Patricia Dickenson is a Professor of Teacher Education. She began her career as an elementary teacher, and taught middle school mathematics.  Dr. Dickenson was also a Mathematics Coach for the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Dr. Dickenson has been a teacher training and consultant for Princeton Review, Harcourt Mathematics and Pearson.  Dr. Dickenson is also a Cal TPA Assessor. 

Dr. Dickenson's work has focused on designing instruction, planning lessons, and assessment. She has expertise in technology integration, Universal Design for Learning, and  Adult Learning Theory.

Connect:

Dr. Jie Tao

Dr. Jie Tao on building AI out of compassion and using agentic AI in education — Cool Cat Teacher Talk S6E9
Dr. Jie Tao on how the best technology is built out of compassion for real human problems.

Jie Tao is a leading AI Educator and Instructional Designer, and the founding director of Fairfield Dolan's AI & Tech Institute, specializing in translating complex AI concepts into practical business skills for non-technical leaders.

He designs and implements high-impact AI literacy curricula and strategic workshops for C-suite executives, as well as conducting academic research and practical consulting, designing agentic AI workflows and systems.

He is dedicated to demystifying artificial intelligence through a proprietary, hands-on methodology, and empowering professionals to lead with confidence and make smarter business decisions in the era of AI as an associate professor of analytics and the director of an international graduate program at Fairfield Dolan, and has received numerous research and teaching awards from top academic journals, conferences and institutions. He has also received recognitions from professional organizations (e.g., Nvidia Deep Learning Institute).

Connect: LinkedIn

Amy Storer

Amy Storer sharing practical edtech tools for teachers — AI in the classroom — Cool Cat Teacher Talk S6E9
Instructional coach Amy Storer shares the practical tools teachers are most excited about right now.

Amy Storer is an Innovative Learning Specialist and respected speaker in Montgomery ISD who is passionate about empowering educators through purposeful technology integration.

She thrives on partnering with educators to enhance the great learning already happening in their classrooms and schools by leveraging powerful digital tools. Amy is a certified educator and trainer for Google, Microsoft, Adobe Express, and Canva, and she brings energy, expertise, and heart to every professional learning experience. Her work centers on meaningful PD, authentic classroom connections, and innovative strategies that make learning stick.

Connect: LinkedIn · X: @techamys · Instagram: @techamys

Coming Soon on the 10 Minute Teacher

Each of these conversations will be edited into its own solo episode of the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast in the coming weeks. Subscribe so you don't miss the full interviews with Dr. Patricia Dickenson, Dr. Jie Tao, and Amy Storer.

Other Shows for Teachers Using AI

Subscribe to Cool Cat Teacher Talk

Enjoying the show? A quick rating and review in your podcast app helps more teachers find Cool Cat Teacher Talk — thank you.

Disclosure of Material Connection: This episode includes some affiliate links. This means that if you choose to buy I will be paid a commission on the affiliate program. However, this is at no additional cost to you. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I believe will be good for my readers and are from companies I can recommend. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

The post Heart First, Tools Second: How to Teach and Use Tech in Today’s World appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/heartfirst/

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Experiential Learning Through Travel

From the Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis

Subscribe to the 10 Minute Teacher Podcast and Cool Cat Teacher Talk anywhere you listen to podcasts.

Happy Wonderful Classroom Wednesday, remarkable educators! Experiential learning works inside the classroom. It is especially powerful outside the classroom when you can travel with students. For 24 years, I've watched a single trip rewire how a student sees my classroom. This show with Angela Cannava will remind us exactly why experiential learning through travel is so powerful.

Watch on YouTube and subscribe for new episodes every week.

In This Episode

  • 0:00 — Introduction
  • 0:25 — Meet Angela Cannava
  • 1:04 — Why she started traveling with students
  • 2:39 — Curriculum-aligned trips: forensics in Great Britain
  • 4:30 — What changed back in the classroom
  • 7:33 — Belize: Ridge to Reef
  • 9:12 — The midnight bat workshop
  • 11:36 — Real-world connections
  • 13:34 — Choosing the next trip
  • 14:22 — Can any teacher do this?
  • 15:44 — Closing & sponsor

Key Takeaways for Teachers from Angela Cannava

  • Curriculum-aligned travel turns “learn this” into “I've stood in this.” When Angela's students ran real DNA fingerprinting in a Great Britain forensics lab, a reluctant learner told her, “Everything you taught me is actually what they do in the real lab.” That's experiential learning through travel — the lesson stops being abstract and starts being real.
  • The trip changes the relationship, and the relationship changes the classroom. A student who'd said maybe ten words in three years came home from the tour and couldn't stop talking — about baseball, about traveling the world, about being inspired. Relate to educate: travel builds the trust that makes everything else teachable.
  • The learning ripples to kids who never left home. Students who stayed behind started seeing the subject — and the culture of the class — differently because Angela made it real-world, and her HOSA chapter grew because kids wanted in on something bigger than a normal school day.
  • You can absolutely do this — pick a partner and set expectations. Angela was terrified before her first trip; now she won't stop. Her two rules: build a diverse chaperone team so every student has at least one adult they connect with, and tell students exactly what they're signing up for (Ridge to Reef means mountains first, beach later).

Resources Mentioned in This Episode

  • EF Explore America — STEM Tours: The sponsor and Angela's travel partner for both trips. Curriculum-aligned STEM itineraries with local tour directors who handle logistics. efexploreamerica.com/STEM
  • Health Sciences in Great Britain (EF tour): The nine-day Scotland-and-England tour Angela led — forensics lab, DNA fingerprinting, anatomical museums, and the London Eye. EF Explore America
  • Belize: Ridge to Reef (EF STEM/conservation tour): Mountains to ocean — a midnight bat workshop with a research NGO, rainforest zip-lining, snorkeling, and a microplastics beach cleanup. efexploreamerica.com/STEM
  • HOSA — Future Health Professionals: The career and technical student organization Angela advises; her travel program helped grow the chapter. hosa.org
  • International Baccalaureate (IB): Northfield is an IB school, which is why Angela's international connections tie so naturally back to her lessons. ibo.org
  • Ms. Cannava's Classroom: Angela's classroom website. mscannavasclassroom.weebly.com

About Angela Cannava

Science teacher Angela Cannava shares how she brings experiential learning to her students through travel.

For the past 19 years, I have been a dedicated high school science and Career and Technical Education (CTE) educator, currently teaching at Northfield High School. During my time at Northfield, I established the CTE Biomedical Sciences Pathway and proudly serve as the advisor for our HOSA Future Health Professionals chapter. I am driven by a desire to take learning beyond the classroom walls — I began integrating international student travel into my program five years ago to help students apply their knowledge in real-world, global settings. I have been group leader for 2 tours including a Health Sciences trip to Great Britain as well as Belize from Ridge to Reef. Experiencing the world alongside my students has been transformative, positively impacting both their educational journeys and my own passion for teaching.

Other Shows for Science and CTE Teachers

  • Cool Cat Teacher Talk — “Traveling With Students”: The full radio/TV show where Angela and four other teachers share their student-travel stories. coolcatteacher.com/travel
  • 10 Minute Teacher e936 — STEM Field Trips That Made Students Say “I Could Do This”: The multi-guest companion episode featuring Angela and three more EF group leaders. coolcatteacher.com/e936

Listen and Subscribe

If this episode made you think, share it with a teacher friend.

Episode Transcript

This transcript was generated using AI and has been reviewed by humans for accuracy. Minor errors or artifacts may remain but I worked my best to find any issues with the transcript as I reviewed the show. – Vicki

Click to read the full transcript

Vicki Davis: Today's show is sponsored by EF Explore America and the STEM Tours. To show your students how STEM impacts the world up close and in action, go to efexploreamerica.com/STEM and stay tuned at the end of the show to learn more.

Vicki Davis: Today we're talking with Angela Cannava. She's a high school science and career and technical education teacher in Denver. She's been doing that for 19 years. She has established the CTE Biomedical Sciences Pathway and serves as advisor for HOSA, Future Health Professionals. For the last five years, she's been taking her students beyond the classroom walls and leading international tours, including a health sciences trip to Great Britain and a Ridge to Reef expedition in Belize. So we're talking about how student travel transforms learning and your experiences, Angela. Why don't you start with your first trip.

Angela Cannava: My first travel experience with students was with EF Tours, in Great Britain. The reason I decided to take kids to travel in the first place is because I had actually gone on a tour with EF with one of my friends, Brian Jenkins, the year before. And when I was on that tour with him, I saw how much students' eyes were opened when they were traveling and how you could build different relationships with them and see them on a different level and get to know what their true interests are. That's what sparked me to want to lead the Health Sciences in Great Britain tour with EF tours. I was very nervous leading my first trip. I was like, my gosh, I can't believe I'm taking kids all the way overseas. But EF did a great job with helping ease my anxiety and my worry. I had chaperones with me, I had support, I had a tour director that met us right at the airport, and as soon as we got off that plane, the kids — you could just tell how excited they were because some of the kids that I took had never left Denver before. This was an absolutely amazing experience for them to actually get to be in a different country.

Vicki Davis: Wow.

Angela Cannava: So that trip was absolutely incredible. I had an amazing tour director, and one thing that EF does that's amazing is they have all local tour directors, so they know the area really, really well. I had an outstanding chaperone team, which for any teacher that's thinking about traveling, that's a very important thing to consider when you're doing your pre-planning — who your chaperone team will be. You want a nice diverse chaperone team where all the students will have a relationship with at least one of those chaperones. Just a little side note. We got to see so many cool things in both Scotland and England. The great part about the tour was the trip was aligned to the curriculum I'm teaching. One of the highlights was we went to this forensics lab and we got to do real DNA fingerprinting, look at fingerprint analysis. This was a real lab in a different country, so the kids got to see it from a different perspective too, which was so interesting. One of the students who wasn't necessarily the most excited to be in class sometimes — I just remember him coming up to me after the whole forensics workshop and being like, my gosh, Ms. Cannava, everything you taught me is actually what they do in the real lab. This is so cool. We did everything from health science related things, anatomical museums, seeing anatomical artifacts that have been collected from years ago, a lot of the old paintings that were done of anatomy, some of the first anatomical paintings that were ever done. That hooked really nicely into the anatomy class that I teach. But beyond the learning part, we went on the London Eye, and it was like sunset, and I have this picture of these students just looking out across the skyway, all smiles. I've never seen such happy kids in my life. It was a really good mix of getting to see really good sites plus the learning. A key for any teacher wanting to take students on a trip is, number one, knowing that you can definitely do it. If you build strong relationships with students, they will want to travel with you. And I was so surprised by how much the students actually wanted to interact with me. I could go on for hours about it.

Vicki Davis: When you brought those kids back from Great Britain from this tour, did anything change in your classroom or your relationship with your students? Like what happened after in terms of the culture around what you teach?

Angela Cannava: A lot — I took students all the way from freshmen through senior level. It was a very diverse group of students, and a lot of those students I did have in my class the next year. I saw they would talk about connections from the trip when we were learning material in class. For example, when I was talking about those anatomical drawings that were done ages ago, when we were starting our anatomy unit looking at some of these historical pieces of anatomy, one of the kids was like, oh my gosh, we saw that! And I was like, wow, what a cool connection to make. I got so many more students in HOSA, the career and technical student organization I run, because of that trip — because they saw that traveling beyond and being a part of something that's bigger than just your normal school day can do so much to enrich your life and your learning. We also travel through that organization too. It was very eye-opening, and we are an IB school as well, so having that international component that I can relate my lessons back to is really helpful. And like I said, building those relationships with students — having kids come in and just want to eat lunch with me and go back through the pictures from the trip, or talk about, do you remember that really gross dinner that we had? Because yes, most of the food was wonderful, but there were a couple dinners that some of the kids didn't love. And they're like, do you remember that? I don't think I could ever eat that again.

Vicki Davis: A lot of that is not because the food's not good, it's because it's different. And I think it's good for kids to have different experiences in different countries.

Angela Cannava: Exactly. Is it called haggis, I think, in Scotland? Trying — a lot of the food is just so different. And I also remember the kids talking about how they felt so much better when they were in Europe because we were eating so much non-processed food. They came back changed. There were a couple of students that barely spoke a word in class who decided to sign up on that tour, and they came back — I was teaching three levels at that time, so it was the third year I had one student, and he had never said maybe ten words to me before. And after we went on that trip, he just hit it off with me, telling me all about his weekends and about his baseball games and about how he wants to travel the world now and about how I inspired him. Moments like that were just so incredible and so touching.

Vicki Davis: And you know, Angela, all this resonates with me because I've traveled with kids and this is exactly why we travel with kids. It changes everything about the relationship. It changes how even kids who don't go on the trip view our subject and view the culture of our class, because we've made it real world. Now you took another trip — you went to Belize. So tell us what was the purpose of that trip and what did your students experience and do? What are some of the stories you have there?

Angela Cannava: Yes, so very different. EF offers a very diverse menu of trips, and I wanted to do a STEM trip that was more centered around conservation. So we decided on Belize from Ridge to Reef, and this one was super fun. I knew most of the kids that were on this tour — I'd had most of them in class before, they were mostly upperclassmen, so I had a pretty strong relationship with them already, which made it really fun. But it was a different type of student that wanted to go on this one rather than going to Europe, because it was a very different type of trip. It was so funny — we landed and I remember our tour director. He was amazing, this Belizean just full of energy, and he picks up our group and he's like, okay, we're going to the zoo right now! And the kids are like, wait, what? I'm still in my clothes from the plane. He's like, no, no, we're gonna make the most out of this experience, we're gonna do everything we can. So we went to the zoo there, which is very different than zoos here — it's all about saving animals and restoring their lives in natural habitats. That was the first experience and it happened within 20 minutes of us being on the bus. Then Belize was the ridge part — the mountains — and the kids got to experience so much. One of my favorite memories was we got to do this bat workshop in the middle of the night. This NGO — I can't remember the name of it exactly — took us, and we did a bunch of science-related activities during the day, looked at some ecology and different plants and botany. But then that night we did a bat workshop and they showed us how they do studies on bats — the bats fly into these nets and they catch them and very slowly untangle them. Even though we were all so hot and sweaty and tired at this point, the kids were just in awe, getting to see this bat up close. We were like ten feet away from it and they're explaining all of the anatomy about the bats, about how the bats are all so different from one another. That was definitely one of the highlights. Another was zip lining through the rainforest — one of the longest zip lines there. That trip was more for the adventurous kid, the kid that likes to get their hands dirty.

Vicki Davis: Yeah.

Angela Cannava: A very different type of trip, and some advice I'd give to teachers thinking of traveling is make sure kids know what they're getting into. Belize from Ridge to Reef — exactly as it says, Ridge to Reef. Three days were in the mountains, four days were in the ocean. So the kids kept asking, when are we going to the ocean? When are we going to the ocean? And we're like, we'll get there, but it's from Ridge to Reef. They thought they'd be hanging out at the beach the whole time. So really setting students up with the expectation for the trip is super important. Versus going on the Health Sciences in Great Britain — you need to be ready to walk five, six, seven miles a day and handle it without complaining. Very different types of trips. One of my other favorite memories of Belize is we got to go on a boat tour, and it was so eye-opening. I don't teach any of those science courses such as biology or ecology or earth science, but the kids were making connections on that boat tour to their other classes, which was so cool. They were like, oh my gosh, I remember learning in Mr. Bobbler's class that this type of tree is unique to islands — saying all these facts and connecting what they were learning in other classes as well. We went snorkeling, learned all the different species of fish, just got to be immersed within Belize. And that tour director was so life-changing for so many students, because he told his life story of being born in Belize. When we were on the bus he would always be telling stories, and the kids were like, does this guy ever be quiet? And I'm like, no, he's telling us a story. And they just started to eat it up — stories about how people build their houses from the ground up, building it as a family, and about how different the culture is there. I remember him having the bus pull over to get some fresh fruit for us — he got a bunch of mangoes and cut them up and gave them to the kids, and the kids were like, oh my gosh, this is so fresh, I've never had fruit like this in my life. The tour director said, I want you to taste Belize, I want you to feel Belize, I want you to experience Belize, and then bring that learning back to your classroom. We did a beach cleanup and talked about microplastics — the kids felt like they were impacting the world, which we were. And my absolute favorite thing that came from that is one of the students who went on that trip is actually going to work at the NGO this summer where we did the bat workshop. He just told me that last week and I was like, good for you, how cool! So not just classroom connections, but connections beyond that, for life.

Vicki Davis: Really? Wow. So as you look at what's next for you and your students, how do you go about making that choice?

Angela Cannava: I like to get student interests, so I'll give out a survey and ask kids if they're interested in traveling and where they'd like to go. That seems to help with our enrollment numbers. A lot of the kids really want to go to Europe, that's what I've noticed. But then once we came back from Belize and the kids were hearing the stories, they were like, wait, can you do Belize again? In a couple of years, please. So what's next? I'm actually running a trip this summer on the Mediterranean coast and the Swiss Alps with another EF tour, chaperoning that one. And then I'm doing Health Sciences in Great Britain again — not this summer, but next summer, because it was such a hit.

Vicki Davis: That is great. So Angela, is this something that somebody who doesn't really have a lot of experience traveling with kids can do?

Angela Cannava: Yes. My biggest piece of advice would be to make sure you go with some sort of travel company, travel agent, or travel group. There are a lot of them out there. EF is our flagship for our school, so we all use EF, and we have a travel program at our school with a lot of different trips going to lots of different areas of the world. Definitely having somebody that can help with the organization and the planning — because we're so busy as teachers, as you all know, we have no time. EF makes it so easy. They make my flyers, they make my PowerPoints, they make everything for me, and it's just ready to go for my promotion nights. They give you deadlines, a website to help kids raise money. Having that tour director and having all the hotels and meals ready for you — making it doable for the workload. It definitely can be done. I was very nervous at first, but now I am not. Now I'm not going to stop. I love it.

Vicki Davis: That's wonderful. So Angela Cannava, a high school science and career technical education teacher in Denver, has been doing that for 19 years, and she also works with the Future Health Professionals. Thank you for coming on the show and telling us your story of travel with kids. I just love these stories and they really fit with my experiences. I planned a lot of my trips myself — I wish I had used EF Tours now.

Angela Cannava: Absolutely. Thank you so much.

Vicki Davis: Thanks for coming on the show, Angela.

Vicki Davis (Sponsor — EF Explore America STEM Tours): If you're a STEM teacher like me, you want your students to see how STEM impacts the real world, not just read about it. On an EF Explore America STEM tour, they might code robots with MassRobotics at MIT, explore marine ecosystems in Florida's coral reefs, or even sit down with a former spy in Washington DC to discover how STEM thinking shows up where you least expect it. Every itinerary is designed by experts to amplify what you teach through hands-on experiences that can't be replicated in the classroom. Visit efexploreamerica.com/STEM and see what an EF Explore America STEM tour can do for your students. Some of the greatest things I've ever done with my students have been tours — and they make it all easy for you. So again, check out efexploreamerica.com/STEM.

Disclosure of Material Connection: This is a sponsored episode and blog post. EF Explore America has compensated me to share information about their STEM Tours. However, all opinions expressed are my own. I have personally reviewed these resources and only recommend tools I believe offer genuine value to classroom teachers. My endorsement is limited to the educational products and services discussed in this episode. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.” The sponsor has no impact on the editorial content of this show.

The post Experiential Learning Through Travel appeared first on Cool Cat Teacher Blog by Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher helping educators be excellent every day. Meow!

If you're seeing this on another site, they are "scraping" my feed and taking my content to present it to you so be aware of this.


from Cool Cat Teacher Blog
https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e942/