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A program that helps teachers and students learn to use the Internet
as an educational tool is gaining momentum under the sponsorship of the
University of Wisconsin-Stout.
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WebFair coordinators Alice Clausing (left) and
Juliette Fox.
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The university took over the Wisconsin WebFair program from UW-Extension
last year and is working to reach teachers and students throughout the
state with its annual Wisconsin WebFair competition and summer institute.
Alice Clausing, outreach program manager at UW-Stout, said it made sense
for Stout to take over the program, since the Menomonie campus is technology-oriented.
UW-Stout is known as the laptop university because it now
requires new students to have a laptop computer.
We feel this is the wave of the future. Its about education
via the Internet, Clausing said of WebFair.
Students and schools have until February or March every year to enter
the statewide competition of Web pages used for education, from kindergarten
through college. Winners are announced in April.
The program also includes a Web Fair Summer Institute for students and
teachers to demonstrate their projects, learn from each other, and explore
new options for tying the Internet to the curriculum and developing creative
Web page design. The three-day institute features presenters from Web
design firms.
The Wisconsin WebFair is modeled after the traditional science fair.
Each students academic work is displayed on the Internet. Any topic
used for a class can become an entry.
There have been four annual WebFair contests. The goals are:
As you would expect, registration for WebFair is online, and the programs
Web site is filled with information about the competition and resources
to help teachers and students develop innovative Web pages.
Last year, more than 60 Web pages were entered into the competition,
and more than 500 students were involved in developing those pages, Clausing
said.
Each Web entry is tied to classroom curriculum, said Juliette Fox, a
UW-Stout lecturer and co-director of the WebFair Summer Institute.
One of this years winning entries is called History Through
Architec-ture and was created by Ellyn Thibodeau's 4th-grade class
at Sparta Meadowview Intermediate School. The class took digital photos
of historical buildings in Sparta, conducted research, and posted the
photos and information on a community Web site. It includes a PowerPoint
presentation. The site is at: http://www.spartan.org/meadowview
/intermediate/architecture/index.html.
Another winner was put together by West Allis 4th-graders Frances Thomas,
Callie Abing, and Heather Schaal, who are in Julie Stringers class
at Walker School. They created a site focusing on the Fire Departments
Survive Alive House. The purpose of the site, they wrote, is to
show people what we learned at the Survive Alive House and in school.
The site is at: http://www.schoolinks.net/walker_web_weavers/Survive
Alive Page/walker_survive_alive.htm.
Fox said Web entries include everything from research projects, science
experiments, travel journals, and informational pages.
This is a way for teachers to re-evaluate how they are teaching,
Fox said. With Internet projects, she said, teachers can empower students
to use technology to be more creative and flexible in how they learn.
Fox said she is working on a related new project called Wisconsin Web
Weavers, or WWW Clubs, which would develop Web design clubs in schools
throughout the state, but funding is an issue.
Currently, the program is funded largely through a grant from the UW-Stout
Nakatani Center for Learning Technology Services, but the future of that
money is uncertain.
Fox and Clausing said the WebFair, Summer Institute and WWW Club programs
need a more secure base of funding. They are actively soliciting grant
opportunities, business sponsorships, and teacher volunteers.
We would be happy to hear from any teachers who would like to volunteer
or give us input into what types of programs they would like to see us
develop, Clausing said.
Provided funding can be secured, she said, The skys the limit.
Posted October 29, 2002