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Audiocasting &General   25 Nov 2005 04:39 am

What a concept    

Not only do today’s novices use technologies unavailable at the time their teachers were becoming masters, but the quantity and types of information students need to assess has also expanded exponentially. Part of this shift in learning brought about by today’s digital, networked information results from the fact that we now often work, share, and search at the data level as opposed the level of conclusions, narratives, catalogs, or indices. That is, students are not limited to browsing a card catalogue to find just those books that their college library had the resources to purchase and that were described with Library of Congress subject terms as addressing a particular topic and which a publishing house has selected for publication by an author who had created a narrative by sorting and synthesizing years’ worth of research into a comprehensible whole. They can use search and collaboration tools to get at the primary source data as well as a wider variety of studies of the data. By so doing, they can wade through and remove four levels of filters between themselves and the information.

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One year ago: Blogging Across the Curriculum
Audiocasting &General   07 Nov 2005 07:32 am

Class Skypecast    

The highlight of my weekend (and please remember, I have no life) was the Skypecast that my class at Seton Hall and I participated in at Worldbridges.com. Dave Cormier and Jeff Lebow are doing seriously groundbreaking work with all of this and it a word or two, it left us all pretty amazed. But the best part for me was that they also had Barbara Ganley on the show, and we were able to ask her a couple of questions about blogging in the classroom and writing practice. If you’re new to all of this stuff, or even if you’ve been working through it in your classrooms, you need to listen to the way she talks about her experiences at Middlebury College. (Have I mentioned that I want to go back to school and be in Barbara’s class?)
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One year ago: Blogging in Academia at BloggerCon
Audiocasting &General   27 Oct 2005 12:19 pm

Skype Ideas    

So I already think Skype is pretty amazing in terms of facilitating the ever more infrequent Ed Tech Coast to Coast podcasts (though there may be a new one shortly!) But I happened to be watching an online presentation by my friend Alan November yesterday and he suggested a use that just made me slap my forehead in a “Doh!” moment: Skype to allow parents to listen to their child’s presentations at school!

And while we’re at it:

  • Skyping class discussions for kids who are home sick.
  • Skyping interviews with outside the school resources.
  • Skyping with kids who are home schooled.
  • Skyping between teachers and students after hours to ask questions. (I can hear the response now…)
  • Skyping presentations between schools in disparate geographies.
  • Skype debates.
  • Skyping foreign language classrooms from around the world.
  • Skyped reports from onsite at museums, etc.
  • Skyping…

    If there is anyone out there interested in piloting some Skype in the curriculum, let me know.

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    One year ago: Wall Street Journal on K-12 Classroom Blogs, Business Week on RSS and Recently Furled
    Audiocasting &General   20 Oct 2005 11:31 am

    iPods Become Music to Teachers’ Ears    

    From MSNBC comes this really nice article on podcasting in classrooms. Sounds like it’s becoming a hit:

    Using little more than an iPod and a school computer, Gagliolo and her students have been making podcasts — online radio shows that can be downloaded to an iPod or other portable MP3 player. Avidly discussing their favorite iPod colors and models while they made recordings of their poems and book reports the other day, the fifth-graders bubbled with ideas for future subjects.

    “We could read parts of books, to show why we like them. We could do interviews. If there’s a field trip, we could make a recording of it and post it,” said Mohamed El-Sayed, 10. “Kids anywhere will like to hear about us.”

    No doubt there is some energy in that quote. Could it be that podcasting has more appeal on the elementary level??? Some great implementations are described that really bring the potential of the technology to life.

    I’m loving seeing more and more of these articles…

    (Thanks to Elizabeth Fullerton for the link.)
    —–

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    One year ago: The RSS/Wiki/Furl/Bloglines/del.icio.us Thing, Webnote Weirdness (Con't)
    Audiocasting &General   16 Oct 2005 09:24 am

    Worldbridges Broadcast/Podcast    

    I just spent most of the last couple of hours participating in a Worldbridges streamed Skype call/Webcast with Stephen Downes, Dave Cormier and Jeff Lebow (which is being restreamed right now if you’re interested.) And all the while there was a chat room with people listening and asking questions, sometimes Skyping in and joining the conversation. It was great fun, despite the fact that about 10 minutes into the show the power here at home went out and I lost my connection. (Great timing.) Took me about 30 minutes of e-mailing back and forth through my cell phone to get a Skype-in number so I could spend the last 75 minutes or so joining in.

    Anyway, some good talk about the state of the Read/Write Web, and it was another one of those “couldn’t have done this a couple of years ago” learning experiences that have me thinking. And it was definitely a treat to be able to meet (albeit virtually) Stephen and get a chance to interact with him.

    By the way, Jeff and Dave have done 20 of these shows at Worldbridges, live every Sunday at 10 EST, open to listener participation. Some more good stuff to consume.

    I’ll post a quick link to the podcast version when it gets published.
    —–

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    One year ago: Newsweek on RSS, Webnote Weirdness
    Audiocasting &General   10 Oct 2005 02:21 pm

    Where’s Education?    

    Quick mini-rant here…

    Yahoo just launched a Podcast portal. Cool! But why isn’t there an Education category in the main list? WHY? (I guess I should be happy we’re listed, however…)

    I can’t recall all of the ones I’ve seen lately, but I’m constantly amazed at how sites launch with all sorts of categories but none dedicated to education.

    Oy.

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    Audiocasting &General   04 Oct 2005 03:39 pm

    Podcasts Offer the Audience Pupils Crave (!)    

    Cynicism gone! All is right with the world thanks to Steve O’Hear‘s uplifting article on podcasting in the Guardian:

    “Teamwork, enterprise skills, technical skills and technical literacy are still not taught ‘for real’ in the classroom. There are often bogus initiatives that touch the surface but don’t get the kids really working on a meaningful product in the long term. These kids see themselves as podcasters till they leave school, and probably beyond,” says McIntosh.

    As a result the project is also helping to raise standards. “You would never be able to tell which ones struggle in ‘regular’ class work,” says McIntosh. He also points out that, while on the surface students are working with audio, producing a podcast involves written work, too.

    “Bearing in mind that most podcasts require a script, it’s not replacing the written word. In fact, it’s the opposite because kids need to redraft to make it fit the time slot they are given.”

    Good stuff.

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    One year ago: Hello There-
    Audiocasting &General   29 Sep 2005 12:04 pm

    The Value of Connections    

    One of the things I really like about David Weinberger is his interesting, unique vision of what is happening to knowledge because of what is happening on the Web. That and the fact that he pushes my own thinking so much. He’s a perfect example of that whole “the teachers we find are better than the ones we are given” potential of the Read/Write Web. He (and a few select others which I mention here often) challenges me in ways that are relevant to me, to my passions, leading me to new insights and connecting me to new teachers.

    Another example of this is his latest essay “The New Is.” It’s a further evolution of what he articulated at his NECC keynote in Philadelphia earlier this month, and it’s a mind bender, at least for me. So this will be one of those scary “work through it in a blog post” type of posts. And maybe, the beginnings of a conversation.

    Start with this:

    We are entering the age where to understand something is to see how it isn’t what it is.

    As opposed, I would guess, to an age where to understand something is to think we see what it is, right? An age in education when we teach by the “here it is and here is what it means” method based on a system of structured knowledge with absolute answers. An age in which, because we’ve had limited access to other voices and other sources, there is an urge for everyone to conform to traditional understandings.

    But on the Web, Weinberg asserts, structure is a problem because very few ideas fit so neatly into the traditional schemes. Most ideas, most understandings are nuanced in ways that make them more personal rather than one size fits all. In fact, meaning and knowledge is evolving through millions of conversations and interactions that were not possible before, with different people “tagging” similar ideas in dissimilar ways, creating a messiness that he says is a sign of “successful order.”

    We don’t need perfect knowledge in an age of knowledge abundance. We just need pretty good knowledge, and that’s something we don’t need perfect gatekeepers for. To the gatekeepers what looks like chaos and the degradation of learning to Netizens looks like an exponential increase in intelligence.

    And who are the gatekeepers, you think? I can’t tell you how much angst this “exponential increase in intelligence” is causing in certain circles, and we’ve all heard it, I know. “It can’t be trusted.” “What authority does the source have?” “How do you know that?” All legitimate questions in certain circumstances. But questions whose acceptable answers are not changing, as of yet, with the new realities of information and knowledge.

    And then there’s this, one of my favorite Weinberger riffs:

    The difference in views occurs in part because the Net explodes the old view of intelligence as the containing of lots of knowledge. This container model is reflected in how we talk about documents: We say they have contents even though print is as 2-dimensional as a shadow. On the Net, documents ( pages ) get their value to a large degree not from what they contain but from what they point to.

    I just love that concept, and I love the way it relates back to George Siemens and Barbara Ganley who see that not only are their texts not simply containers any longer, neither are their students. And isn’t that how we’ve thought about students, really, for a long time, ultimately as containers of the information we impart? But with the Web, they become much more than that, because, like pages and online texts, then can connect their own messy knowledge to the messy understandings of others and, in the process, exponentially increase their intelligence. I am so struck by how limiting I see the traditional classroom any more, the restrictive nature of it. (Much like what I think of paper anymore, btw.) So look at the last quote again and think students, not documents.

    On the Net, [students] get their value to a large degree not from what they contain but from what they point to.

    That’s a bit of a shift, huh?

    And so what does all of this mean for instruction? I think he starts to paint that picture as well.

    If you want to know about an idea, you could go to an encyclopedia and read what an expert says about it. Or you could find a blog that talks about it and start following the web of links. You’ll not just see multiple points of view, you’ll hear those points of view in conversation. That’s new in the world. The old dream of finding a single knowledge for the entire world, having knowledge be like reality, in other words, is dying rapidly. The connectedness of the Net has made it too clear that the world is not going to come to agreement and be able to write its single encyclopedia, covering everything we need to know without dissent. To understand now means to hear the multiplicity of meaning talked about across the world. The more of the world we get into the conversation, the more the world will mean.

    And that then becomes the task, to get teachers and students to enter into the conversation, to get them connected (in more ways than one) to the idea that understanding and meaning and knowledge is no longer quite as easily defined, that we find them in negotiation and interaction, in the “continuousness of conversation” as he puts it.

    How tough could that be?

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    One year ago: Motivating Student Writing with Weblogs
    Audiocasting &General   22 Sep 2005 10:35 am

    ETC2C Podcast #3    

    Three out of the four of us got together Tuesday night and chatted via Skype for about 45 minutes primarily about access, access to the Web, access to the tools, access to the content. In a nutshell, I’m the depressing one. The longer it takes everyone to get connected, the more the divide is going to grow. There’s just no question in my mind that not providing THE most powerful and important technology out there to every kid is just absolutely unfair at best and really immoral at worst.

    Just a couple of show notes…I’m amazed at the quality of what Tim Wilson has been able to produce in the “Pod Cave” and the quality of Skype conference. It may be drivel, but it’s really well produced drivel. And the more I get into this, the more appeal it has in terms of classroom applications. Next week, I mean it, I’m gonna get my teachers Skyping…

    At any rate, here’s the link to the show. Enjoy!
    —–

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    One year ago: Another Tweak for Search Feeds, Blogless Barbara
    Audiocasting &General   16 Sep 2005 01:43 pm

    Changing Education    

    Thomas Friedman continues to make the case for change in education today in the soon to be closed New York Times opinion pages. It’s about efforts in Singapore to bring high level math instruction to students. And the good news (I think) is it’s all about the changes we’ve been talking about in this community for quite some time now: creation and sharing of content, collaboration, a shifting notion of what it means to teach. A couple of points of emphasis, first from a principal:

    “We have shifted the emphasis from content alone to making use of the content” on the principle that “knowledge can be created in the classroom and doesn’t just have to come from the teacher.”

    And this, from the developer of an online math curriculum:

    “What we have tried to do is create a platform for the continuous sharing of the best practices for teaching math concepts. So a teacher might say: ‘I have a problem teaching congruence to 14-year-olds. What is the method they use in India or Shanghai?’

    HeyMath’s mission is to be the math Google – to establish a Web-based platform that enables every student and teacher to learn from the “best teacher in the world” for every math concept and to also be able to benchmark themselves against their peers globally.

    The Web gives us access to much more in the way of individualized and quality resources than we’ve been able to access in the past, and it now allows us to create and to use classroom created content to teach wider audiences and serve real purposes. And it’s facilitating a much more collaborative approach to learning and creating. Obviously, these shifts are occurring in business, politics etc. as well. But the bad news is we’re just not getting that message here, it seems…

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    One year ago: Firefox and RSS, Classroom Weblog Model #745
    Audiocasting &General   04 Sep 2005 02:37 pm

    Purdue Gets Podcasting    

    (Via Gardner Campbell) So why go to class any more? At Purdue, you can have the class come to your iPod.

    BoilerCast uses current digital audio delivery technology to deliver classroom audio recordings to the students at their request. These recordings are often used as review of the day’s material for use on homework assignments and review before exams. BoilerCast is a service available to all credit courses held on the West Lafayette campus and is capable of recording lectures from over 70 classrooms on campus with no lead time, and any other campus classroom with sufficient notice.

    The real benefit of BoilerCast is that the instructor orders the service at the beginning of the semester and everything else is automatically handled. Instructors do not need to worry about recording a class or posting in on their website as this is all handled for them as part of the service. Instructors using Purdue’s central course management system, Vista, can integrate the service into their course materials by simply creating a link to the course audio website set up for them.

    All served up via podcast if you want it…

    More. Content. Online.
    —–

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    Audiocasting &General   03 Sep 2005 07:59 am

    ETC2C Podcast #2    

    Steve Burt is vacationing in Peru, but the other three of us got together Thursday night via Skype for a discussion centered around barriers to implementation of some of these technologies in our schools. I’ve been writing quite a bit about this lately, and I worry that I’m starting to paint a picture of teachers that they are more resistant than they really are. Listening to this discussion again, I think the time issue is really such a big part of it. Tim Lauer has been able to carve out different ways for teachers to start working with these tools in a pretty seamless way, and I really admire the way Tim Wilson approaches the sales part of this with his staff. It’s true that a part of this is going to be helping people to understand the need to make these changes. Lots of work to do.

    At any rate, here is the link to Ed Tech Coast to Coast Podcast #2. All feedback is surely welcomed.

    ETC2C-20050901 ((18.7 MB, 40:43)

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    One year ago: Weblogs as Website Update, Blogging and Invention
    Audiocasting &General   12 Aug 2005 11:18 am

    “Ed Tech Coast to Coast” Podcast    

    So thanks to Tim Wilson’s deepening interest in podcasting and his gentle prodding earlier this week, last night he got Tim Lauer, Steve Burt and me together on a Skype conference call and we did a 45-minute roundtable about Web 2.0 in schools a la the Gillmor Gang. And I have to say, that despite some issues with microphone levels and some pops and whirrs on occasion, it came out pretty darn good. About two seconds before we started recording, we lit on the “Coast to Coast” theme since Steve and Tim L. were in Oregon and I’m out here in Jersey. (The other Tim is in “flyover land” in Minn.) Tim W. lives up to his name as the Savvy Technologist with his smooth as silk intro music and voice over, and despite Steve calling me dead “wrong” at one point, what transpired was a fairly spirited and somewhat coherent discussion about the state of education in this new world.

    As often happens, some disparate ideas came together while we were talking. The most interesting, to me at least, is the segment on providing online information to draw parents into a more active relationship with schools. I’m not going to give away the details, but the upshot was that there seemed to be a difference in whether to entice parents with access to grades and absence reports or access to content. You can probably guess what camp I fell into.

    Anyway, the more meta reflection is about the podcast itself. I was really impressed by how well Skype seemed to work off my wireless connection at home. I didn’t realize how loud my mic was until I listened to the end result…we’ll have to work on that. But I guess I just really liked being able to talk about these issues with three smart, ed tech leaders out there who I’ve gotten to know fairly well over the last few years. Now the big question is whether or not potential listeners will find anything interesting in what we had to say. Please let me know what you think as we’re talking about trying to make this a regular event.

    Download: STP-ETC2C (18.6 MB, 40:28)

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    One year ago: Blogs and Trust, tnt beach and tnt beach
    Audiocasting &General   08 Aug 2005 06:57 am

    Instructional Technologies Summit, Franklin, IN    

    So I’m on the road again, today at Franklin College in Indiana to do a four-hour workshop with IT types from colleges around the state. Unlike my last trip (shudder), this one has been going a little better…free upgrade to a convertible last night when I got here and the whole newly renovated college alumni house with a cable modem connection all to myself last night and this morning. (Believe it or not, it has a “Richardson Dining Room.”)

    The plan is to talk about where things are regarding the Read/Write Web and then get them blogging and rssing and maybe Jot/Furling and Flickring. But we know how plans go. Maybe some scintillating photos from the workshop later.
    —–

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    One year ago: Almost Home
    Audiocasting &General   27 Jul 2005 11:48 am

    Pensacola Parents    

    So I made it to my hotel in Pensacola at 1 am CST last night after the pilot of the plane I was supposed to catch in Atlanta announced, and I quote, “Sorry ladies and gentlemen but the plane is broke.” That was my second broken plane of the day…not a good trend. And I almost didn’t even make it to Atlanta as I had to go back to security in Philly to get the full pat down treatment when the boarding gate guy said my pass hadn’t been punched correctly. Not a good day for traveling all around.

    But today has been better. I spoke to and with a very enthusiastic group of library media specialists about the new technologies of the Read/Write Web and while I think they left overwhelmed, I also think they left really excited about going home and trying to dive deeper into what I’d showed them. Now this was a 2.5 hour talk, no hands on, and by the end we were pretty much all mush (especially me, working on about four hours of sleep.) And now…free wifi at the Pensacola airport! Despite the thunder clouds brewing over the tarmac, maybe my luck is changing…

    Anyway, here the most interesting (I think) observation of the morning: Just about every person who came up to me at the break and at the end introduced themselves by saying “I have a 15 (or 13 or 18) year old at home and he’s (she’s) always on the Web…” It was really striking. The ideas were resonating with them on a parent level almost more than an educator level, which I guess shouldn’t surprise me at all. But it does remind me that these ideas need broad understanding, that parents really are just as much of an audience as educators. And more and more I’m thinking if we don’t teach them as well, we’re missing the boat.

    And, as always, I’m left with much to think about, many great questions and concerns to mull over as I try to make it home to Philly, which I see is “experiencing delays…” Go figure.
    —–

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    One year ago: K-12 Weblogs and Security, Wiki This and Technorati Looks Nice, But...

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