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Wednesday, November 30th, 2005

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General &On My Mind   30 Nov 2005 03:14 pm

Calling China    

So this is the way it works, now. Read Thomas Friedman about how the World is Flat and that the Chinese are immersing their kids in the study of math and science and pumping out engineers at a rapid clip, and then, just to make sure, ring up an edublogger in Shanghai using a free Internet phone service to do some fact checking.

I got to spend about 20 mintues on a Skype call chatting with Jeff Utecht this afternoon (about 5 am his time) about what it’s like to teach in China, the state of the Chinese blogosphere, and what Chinese kids do after school. It was really interesting on a number of levels, first the incredible quality of the call from literally half a world away, and second, obviously, getting the lowdown on whether Friedman is just trying to scare our socks off or really telling it like it is. (Apparently, it’s the latter, which seems to provoke the former in quite a few people these days.) The only downside was that we had planned on doing this using Gizmo so that we could record it, but unfortunately, his install wasn’t working. Maybe next time.

Jeff has been teaching abroad for the last four years, three in Saudi Arabia and since August in Shanghai at the American School there. About 40% of his students hold U.S. passports and the remainder are Chinese tuition students. He’s teaching kindergarten, first and fifth grades, and the cool part is that his 130 fifth graders are all blogging over at David Warlick’s Blogmeister site, a blogging site it seems the Chinese government hasn’t decided to block…yet. Right now, all the Blogger blogs are out of sight, literally, as are many other blog servers. (Apparently even Tim Wilson’s Savvy Technologist blog is being blocked, even though the RSS feed gets through. So far, this site is still accessible…guess I’m not as politically extreme as Tim…) He hopes to get his first graders podcasting in the near future.

While the American kids go home and play soccer, the Chinese kids go home and get tutored in math and science for four hours. Jeff said that was more at the parents urging than anything else. They see it as a way to improve their kids’ lives, and to eventually be taken care of by their children. And while he’s only halfway through the book, Jeff says so far Friedman is “spot on” in his portrayal of how the world (at least in China) is changing. Shanghai is a boomtown, and everyone downtown is trading something, textiles, parts, whatever.

Jeff said he hadn’t really had a chance to spend time in any of the Chinese schools yet, and I was wondering if any of the Read/Write Web tools we’re playing with are being used over there. But I tend to doubt it. As Jeff said, he can’t imagine what would happen to that society should the Chinese get full access to the ideas and the tools on the Web right now. The world would definitely shake if that happened.

Really interesting stuff. And I just think it’s so wild that I could connect with him from my living room here in little old Stockton, NJ, for free no less. Even better, Jeff can add his own take to this little report should he get the urge (providing I haven’t been censored…) None of this could have happened even a few years ago.

What a cool new world this is.

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General &On My Mind   30 Nov 2005 06:39 am

Looking for a CMS    

So we’re at the point in our teacher model pilot that we want to add some curricular management systems to the mix with the hope of settling on one in the spring to implement in fall. We’ve been working with Moodle, which we like, but it doesn’t have the tie in to our student information system that we would like (I don’t think, at least.) We’ve also decided to look at Blackboard and Sharepoint (though not too enthusiastically on my part), and I’m personally interested in .LRN, the developers of which I met at the originaly BloggerCon so many years (two) ago.

So I’m wondering if anyone out there has any other suggestions to consider. We’re primarily PC with a Novell network and an SIS from a relatively small (but growing) company. We want a system that will allow teachers to easily move curriculum online, communicate with students, parents and colleagues, and create collaborative environments of all different types, and allow students and teachers to publish easily and widely.

Any nominations?

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