Connecting 21st Century Students with 21st Century Technology – Videoconference…

22 01 2009

This afternoon I had the opportunity to connect up with a whole bunch of schools for a video conference from all around North Carolina put on the by the North Carolina Connectivity Council.  It was really cool.  We could see all of them and they could see us. 🙂  There should be an archive of the video posted soon.  Here is the excerpt from the announcement.  

The challenge for North Carolina educators is to ensure that every public school student graduates from high school, globally competitive for work and postsecondary education and prepared for life in the 21st Century.  Web 2.0 technologies, such as blogs, wikis and social networking sites, provide students the opportunity to communicate, create and collaborate in new and exciting ways.  However, some educators and parents are concerned that these “just in time”technologies create an unsafe environment for our children.

Technology specialists from four NC school districts will describe their school systems’ approach to using Web 2.0 in teaching and learning.  Panelists will present the best practices from their respective districts while discussing the challenges of implementing these new technologies. 

Ideas from around North Carolina that Teacher are currently using that IS working:

  • Teacher Created Wiki’s
  • Teacher Created Blogs for Professional Development
  • District Blog to model, share resources, and collaborate. 

Things Students are doing that is working.

  • Green County Schools have a 1 to 1 laptop program.  (Wow)
  • Student created Wiki’s – Creating based on the information that is created in class.  Do it in the class while the teacher is speaking. 
  • Kids created blogs and commenting on other blogs. 
  • Book Study through Wiki

Tools that People ARE using

Challenges

  • Time on Task… there are a ton of kids online and it is hard to monitor what they are doing.  
  • Social Networking (Teachers are no longer allowed to be friends with students in some schools… good idea.)
  • Keeping Acceptable Use Policy up to date
  • Time… there are so MANY tools… not enough time to address them all. 
  • Expanding the global learning network so that learning can be global.   Finding people to collaborate with people around the world via Skype and other technologies above. 

Trainings for Teachers

I found it interesting that in many cases the instructional technologist are working with a group of teachers to train and prepare them to use this web 2.0 technology.  It is sometimes done as a monthly meeting, a mandated technology hour requirement, training classes, an annual fall conference, or using the web 2.0 technologies themselves.





Exploring the Construction Zone inside the Media Gap – Paul Jones – Founder of ibiblio.org

21 01 2009

This afternoon a group we have here on campus, the Carolina Technology Consultants (CTC) sponsored a talk from Paul Jones here on campus.  He is a professor in the SILS department here on campus and really one of the most forward thinkers here on UNC’s campus in regard to technology.  

He titled his presentation “Exploring the Construction Zone inside the Media Gap.”  I put the important stuff here, but he did a Google presentation that can be seen here that I would highly recommend. 

Theory Background – Like any good professor, he laid out some of the history back to the early 80’s when we started thinking about media and social media and communication.  It is interesting that we have been thinking about this since then.  He also lays out three laws that guide our progression of media to social media today.  He then moves into social media. 

Clay Shirky’s “Here Comes Everybody” – Categories for publishing in the Media Gap

 

  1. Sharing culture of Flickr
  2. Collaborative nature of Wikipedia
  3. Collective action of internet groupings, like the use of a Facebook group to force HSBC to reverse it’s decision on withdrawing students’ interest-free overdrafts.

 

How American Nerds Fill the Gap

This was really one of my favorite parts of the presentation.  He obviously spoke to me as a nerd, but also used traits of nerds to lay out the emergence of social media.  We as nerds have these strange weaknesses that are “engineered away’ ===> into 5 SuperPowers!

 

  1. Attention Deficit Disorder ===> Multi-Tasking
  2. Asperger inablity to get visual emotional cues ===> Text-based interactions replace human Face2Face.  Visual cues become emoticons ;->
  3. Hyper-literality; jargon of the tasks and games ===> OMG!  Mainstreaming of our jargon into slang.
  4. Friendless geeks ===> Redefining Friendship (Dunbar’s number)
  5. Idiocentric Humor ===> The power of Internet memes; our shared mindspace.

 

Future of the Nerd

Someone asked about the future of the Nerd.  This is really a great question.  “Nerds” have become mainstream.  Everyone is now using social media.  Everyone has 4000 friends on Facebook.  So what do you think?  What is the future of the Nerd?  What is our future?

Bibliography

Paul put together an AWESOME bibliography for anyone interested in social media.  This is fantastic.  He said it as okay to share so I thought I might post it here for y’all.  Thanks Paul!!

 





Collaborate and Learn AND EARN MONEY doing it! StudyBlue.com

20 01 2009

I ran across a great website called StudyBlue.com.  I have long been a fan of these types of websites and there are more than a few of them, but what makes this one really stick out in my mind is the ability for students to earn money.  I was one of those students that took copious notes and often shared my labors, notecards, and flashcards with other students in the class to help them out.  This not only helps make this easier, but it actually pays people for it too!  AWESOME!  What student can’t use a little extra food money?





Edmodo Screencast

6 03 2008

A couple of days ago I wrote about a new twitter-like service designed especially for educators, called Edmodo. They posted a little screencast today. Looks promising:





Twitter In the Classroom – Edmodo

3 03 2008

Last week I linked to a great article about using Twitter in the classroom.  Today I saw a new service that is in Beta right now that is a twitter-like web app specifically designed for the Classroom…  Edmodo.  I was not able to get in, but you can see some screenshots here. 

It promises to be the service to connect schools, teachers, parents and students. 

Instant communication and connection is a great thing and if a whole school buys into something like this it could be fantastically popular and useful, but you will lose the greater Twitter community which is part of the power of Twitter. 





YouTube LIVE! Educational Use…

29 02 2008

So there have been live online streaming services for a while now, but none of them have seemed to take off.
Today TechCrunch linked to a video that said YouTube was going to have offer live video streaming services sometime later this year.

Aside from being a huge Google fan, this could potentially be important in Education for one reason… users. YouTube has a HUGE user base.

A lot of teachers are already familiar with YouTube and will be more likely to start using a feature in a program they already use. I need not repeat the value of live streaming for a classroom. Teachers can teach for distance education, not to mention a global audience! With real time feedback tools like chat and twitter, teachers can also get real time feedback from around the world! 🙂

Students will also find a much larger user base to present to.

Those are just some ideas off the top of my head. What about you? What other things can you think of?





QipIt – Mobile Phone Capture

28 02 2008

So couple of days ago I posted about a new Google Chat client that I have embedded on my blog.  First off, it has been great fun to interact with all sorts of people that I normally wouldn’t get the chance to chat with!  A lot of you just entered to see if worked, but never said anything.  But I did have some good conversations. 

This morning I received a chat invitation from a Philippe Dewost, a young guy from France, who was reading a popular post from about a year ago: “8 Ways to use Camera Phones in Education.“  Philippe is a the guy behind, or at least a part of a cool program called Qipit that I thought might be of use to some of you out there. 

Functionality

Basically it allows students/teachers to take a pictures of notes/whiteboards/etc. and email them to a service that converts them over to PDF.  It actually works pretty good.  It takes out all the ugly from the picture and makes a pretty good copy of what ever you are seeing (but it does have to be large). 

Cons

  • Multiple pages is somewhat hard.  You can do it by attaching multiple pictures to an e-mail, but that is difficult on a phone.  From what I can see there is no way to edit it once it has been sent and combine pictures together.
  • UPDATE: Qipit does offer a “merge” feature that allows to reorder your pages and combine them in a single PDF. For multiple uploads we also offer an HTTP uploader (10 pages at a time, including pre scanning page rotate) so you can unload your cell phone using bluetooth and upload at once to Qipit
  • 100 page limit… okay, this really probably isn’t an issue for most people, but there is a limit.
    • UPDATE: The 100 page limit is an online storage limit.  You always receive your qipit copies by e-mail.
  • Still new… there might be others…
  • Uses

    The uses in education are obvious.  Students can scan in hand written notes and share them easily with friends (and save paper!).  Teacher’s can scan in notes from class on a board they want to remember… or even assignments. 

    What other uses can you think of?  There is a Facebook group devoted Qipit too…





    How to Read Easier Online – Speed Reading Programs

    20 02 2008

    As we more more and more toward a completely paperless society we really need to address digital reading.  There are some great new device’s coming out (like Amazon’s Kindle), but most people, especially us educators, can’t afford a dedicated reading device, especially a $400 one. 🙂 

    So, what do you do?  Use your laptop! 🙂  Yesterday I read a great article on Lifehacker about doubling your reading speed. They introduced three new programs to me that will flash words on a screen at a high rate. 

    Why this is Better than books!

    To me, this is using technology to help us.  So often we look down at reading online, but this would actually be BETTER than a regular book because it keeps your undivided attention.  And I know we can all read faster than we do, when we have to. 

    Of course, if your goal is to ENJOY the book… this might not be the best solution… 🙂

    Personal Experience

    When I was in grad school I had to read LARGE books, and several a week.  When I was drowning in stuff to do, I found a way to download books on my palm pilot and using the auto scroll feature read entire books in half the time it would normally take me.  I have not tried these particular programs yet, but I can imagine how awesome this would be. 

    Has anyone else out there tried using these programs?  What about another program?  What other ideas do you have for making reading online easier?  Do share your thoughts in the comments section!





    Second Life on mobile device’s?

    20 02 2008

    Last year when Google announced their Android platform they demo’d a device with a virtual environment.  This morning I read an article about a hack that allowed someone to access Second Life on an iPhone, and a new company that is going to make Second Life accessible on 3G Handsets… Sweet!

    Now your second life can become a bigger part of your first life. 🙂





    Translate Text from WebPage Inline

    19 02 2008

    I have been very impressed with Google Translate for a while.  The ability to translate chat’s, and pretty much anything is changing the way we do research.  Well, here is another little tool to help in the process.  

    I read about a new Firefox extension today called gTranslate.  It allows you to select text on any page and translate it to any of the languages that GoogleTranslate supports.  Awesome!