I’ve been researching wiki platforms (again) and in the process, I rediscovered a really great resource for teachers and tech coordinators. It is a wiki titled Teaching Hacks. I think I must have visited it before because I discovered it in my own set of del.icioi.us bookmarks — nice to see that I find such good resources 😀
In any case, it has become a most impressive resource. The page with information about wikis in education is well organized and stuffed full of useful information. Here is a partial list of it’s contents.
- What is a Wiki?
- Quick Ideas Around Classroom Uses of Wikis.
- Pedagogy
- Software (hosted wikis, server-side wikis, desktop wikis)
- Practical Advice for Classroom Use (including model collaboration, assigning roles, assigning tasks, looking at contributions, recording accomplishments, using the style guide)
The actual list is much longer than this, so check it out yourself. That last item I listed really has my attention. As I read through it, I got a bunch of practical ideas for how to make wikis work in my curriculum. These aren’t project ideas; they are process ideas. That information always feels like a set of power tools when I am lucky enough to find it. It jump starts me into a successful project.
And here is a list of the entire wiki’s main contents. (Note: I pasted it here. Clicking on any link will take you to the actual wiki’s table of contents where you make find and click any of these individual links for real.) Enjoy!
K-12 Educators Guide To Web 2.0 Weblogs in Education Alpha Stage Social Bookmarking Tools in Education Ideas Stage Folksonomy and Tagging Ideas Stage Wiki: Collaborative Editing in Education Beta Stage RSS Ideas in Education Beta Stage Creative Commons Ideas Stage Instant Messaging Ideas Stage Geocaching for Educators Information Literacy Ideas Stage Photo Sharing in Education Ideas Stage Video Sharing in Education Ideas Stage Google Earth 101 for Educators Cyberbullying 101 for Educators Ideas for Repurposing Online Tools Ideas Stage
Anne Davis, one of my original inspirations to start blogging with kids, has created a great blogging webquest for students. She used Bernie Dodge’s Quest Garden to create it. She uses a read, pair, share strategy as the process. In her evaluation section, she even has a 6Trait Blogging rubric. It’s a great tool and I am eager to use it with children.
I’m enjoying Kim Cofino’s blog. She’s been reading Will’s book and she’s diving into using new, collaborative technologies with students.
Today she blogs about being overwhelmed. At the moment, she seems to be faced with insurmountable options; there are so many good things to try, what should she try next?
Her post got me thinking about a few lessons I’ve learned as a technology specialist. As I typed them as a comment into her blog, I decided to also post them here.
I don’t know that it so much matters where you start. Just keep these things in mind…
- It takes three years to get most new ventures really solid. The second year is better, but the third year is golden. Multiply this by 3 if you are trying to move an entire school in a new direction instead of just yourself. (And so, be patient with yourself.)
- Start small so that you don’t have to fix each mistake 32 times (as in, for each of your 32 classes.
- Keep it simple until the kids make it complex. I’ve seen too many tech projects on which the teachers did most of the learning (and most of the work) because the project was too big and too complex for the students. The final product looked great because the teacher did good work. On the flip side, I’ve seen great things happen when a few students ran with an idea. They showed up before school, after school, during recess because they were caught up in what they were doing. I don’t make them keep it simple 🙂
- Start with one really enthusiastic teacher. Again and again, I’ve found that one excited classroom teacher who had a good success with a new technology has far more power to get other teachers on board than you will ever have as the tech specialist.
- If possible, keep on adding things in for your pilot class. What I find is that once they have an understanding of blogging, adding wikis or Moodle or something else doesn’t take as much start up time. I found that each new thing I added (within reason) required less start up time than the one before it. It doesn’t sound equitable, but remember that this is a pilot and that you’ll be using what you learn to involve more classes at a later time.
- There isn’t time to fully document what you are doing. The two most important things to try to write down are your sequence (e.g. week 1 we showed the kids the blogs, set up the accounts and got everyone logged in), and to keep a notebook that is just a list of what to change for next year. It doesn’t need to be pretty or organized. It just needs to be ONE place to track all those Ahas! of how you should do it differently next time. — And DON’T wait to do it all at the end of the unit. You will have forgotten half of it, and you’ll be too busy gearing up for the next unit to write.
There. None of these are earth-shattering. All of them have been said better by someone before. Now they are here. I hope they help someone.
I was using Flock as my main browser for many months. Then a month or two ago, it developed a bad habit. When I was surfing, it kept popping up a window related to del.ico.us.api, asking for my login name and password. It was doing this on all sorts of sites, even some sites that don’t require a user name and password. Not only would it ask for that information, but it was slow to ask for it and then would complain via other pop up windows when I wouldn’t give it the information. It was making the browser unusable.
I wracked my brain…
Am I running an old version of Flock? Nope. Is this a virus on my iBook? If it was, it was Flock-specific. Is this some extension gone bad? I kept looking in my list of Flock extensions trying to figure out what could be causing it. Being in a new country and working in a new job, I didn’t have time to keep dealing with it, so I switched back to Firefox.
Before switching I submitted a bug report to Flock. To my amazed delight, I received a very informative letter in response to that report. One bit of information was especially helpful. It mentioned that del.icio.us was making some changes on its end. That gave me hope that it wasn’t really a Flock problem, but just something related to some extension that was using del.icio.us.
Today, while trying to fix my RSS feed problems, I opened Flock again. As usual, the pop up windows began demanding information. I gritted my teeth, opened up the extensions list, and deleted all but my most trusted extensions. I restarted the application and for the first time in months, was NOT greeted with a pop up window. Were I a good scientist, I would have deleted the extensions one at a time to identify the culprit. Instead, I’m a harried tech coordinator who is delighted to have this item checked off my to-do list.
To celebrate, I’m drafting this blog entry using the Flock blogging tools. It feels good to be using this rich tool again.
[P.S. In the end, I couldn’t get it to publish via Flock and had to cut it and paste it directly into Blogger. I guess all problems aren’t solved. ]
When I first started aggregating blog feeds to make it easier to keep up with my favorite blogs, I often had trouble finding the correct subscription address. This was complicated by Pluck. I was using an early version of it and when I would click on a link to someone’s RSS feed, Pluck would feel obliged to launch and complicate matters, since I didn’t want to store the feed in Pluck.
Over time, as Pluck matured and became a stable tool, I came to rely on it to help me find elusive RSS feeds. I would then copy the address into my NetNewsWire Lite. This has worked well for the past year.Â
Now I am having troubles again. Numerous times in the past week I’ve wanted to subscribe to the feeds on new blogs, but haven’t been able to get the real feed URL. The one that Pluck gives me doesn’t work in NetNewsWIre. I tried using the Live Bookmark feature in Firefox instead, but that was no better. I tried finding it using Flock, a web browser designed to play nicely with social web technologies, but that isn’t working either.Â
I thought it might be a problem with NetNewsWire Lite. In the forums I see people are having trouble with the latest version- it isn’t always updating feeds. However, I see no mention of my particular problem, and my feeds seem to be refreshing just fine.
I’m wondering if some of the problem is arising from new bloggers using templates with built in feed links. It may be that they haven’t activated the RSS feed feature. I’m especially having trouble with Edublogger blog feeds, which would make sense as new teachers, not familiar with RSS, make their first attempts at blogging.
Is anyone else having this problem lately? Anyone found a solution? I’d love to hear about it.
technorati tags:RSS, edublogs
Blogged with Flock
One of the most difficult aspects of living in Singapore is being so far from my family and friends back home.
One solution has been using instant messaging and VOIP (Voice Over Internet Protocal) programs such as iChat or the free Skype program. I also put money into a Skype Out account so that I could use my computer to call people’s telephones. To get a Skype Out account, I just followed the link within Skype. I used a credit card to purchase ten euros worth of talk time. I’m paying USD $0.02 cents per minute when I call the USA. [NOTE: Skype Out is free until the end of 2006 for making calls from computers in the USA to telephones within the USA.]
Sound quality with Skype Out is better than it was with many of the calling cards I used to purchase in Malaysia. It helps that Kent purchased an Altec Lansing headphone/ microphone combination. It plugs into a USB port and greatly improves the sound. Without a headphone, the microphone would pick up the other person’s end of the conversation that was playing through the speakers. This caused annoying echoes.
When I first arrived in Singapore, I discovered that my iBook G4 didn’t play nicely with Skype when running on battery. It would work fine for a few minutes, but then the person I was talking to would suddenly not be able to hear me at all. I could hear them, but nothing, including hanging up and calling them again, would restore the sound for them. Kent didn’t experience this problem on his Powerbook.
Recently, Skype became even better. There is a beta version out that allows people using Macs to video chat. Although it is a beta, we have found it to be stable and easy to use. The video capabilities have been available in the Windows version of Skype for a while, so it’s good to see it finally available for the Mac.
In the past week, my life took a good turn. Since moving to Singapore, I had not had much contact with my parents. I did not yet have a telephone in my home, and my parents had virus-plagued, old Windows computers so they were not able to get onto the internet at home. Tired of this situation, I bit the bullet and purchased a refurbished iMac for my parents. A great friend back home configured it and spent a few hours helping them make it play nicely with their Comcast account. This is their first foray into broadband. This is also their first Mac.
The day she brought them the computer, I received a photo they snapped of themselves using the built-in iSight camera. I am now receiving regular emails from them, and they are having fun exploring the iapps such as iTunes.
The best part came two days ago. I had the pleasure of opening Skype and seeing that my parents were online. I called their computer and within moments, I could see them and they could see me. I was able to turn my camera around so they could see my apartment and watch the cats scampering past. I could see them sitting at the desk in my childhood home. All of sudden, Minnesota feels much closer to Singapore.
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