Archive for the 'Resources' Category

Diigo Update (weekly)

Good Reads

Screen shot 2009-11-15 at 8.45.13 AM

Good Reads is a free online community that reviews and talks about books. Nothing new in that perhaps, but interestingly, this one has a number of teacher-friendly features that make it a good option for schools. If you must have a walled garden, then this is an internet site – so you can’t block out other groups or books that don’t suit you. But, if you are a teacher who wants students to encounter books, then basing class inside Good Reads might be fertile ground.

They have included the public/private groups of course, so it’s a cinch to set up a class group. Here’s a high school group for example. It is also a social network (another exit point for some) – but it allows students to put in reviews of books, see other reviews, add to a shelf of books to read etc. It also allows some collaboration, in that you can compare reviews. If you are modelling writing, this would be a great way to compare several styles. Good books is not just a fan site – and much of what I’ve explored has very well constructed reviews and discussions. Many books have role-play groups set up around a book, and well worth looking into. Imagine if young people are going to role play in a book-forum, how well this could be augmented in a virtual world!.

Communication and interest – the first two levels of community building – can be well served here I think. Building a literacy or writing class in the middle of Good Reads is probably going to see students encounter more than the class text. There are hundreds of young adult and school groups in Good Reads – and many are open to having more members than just their class. I’ve only just started using it to look for recommendations, but have found that it’s functionality and ease of use makes it a good companion service, and certainly offers the functionality most classes need.

University Students and Digital Media Study

Diigo Update (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Diigo Update (weekly)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Kindersite

Picture 4 Kindersite is a fantastic site for teachers and parents. Where children play and teachers learn is just so inviting. I really like the way that the site has not felt the need to add bling; but focus on quality learning experiences. The site states it’s mission

1. To offer early learners, from the age of 2 years, a safe and engaging environment whereby they can find and use appropriate content on the Internet, in the form of games, stories and songs.

2. To offer academic educational researchers a tool that can measure and correlate data on children’s use of content on the site, according to their research criteria. The project will incorporate a mechanism whereby the research can be followed-up offline.

The site has a some great applications and more interestingly; an active community of schools, parents and teachers collaborating. The site has a few bad links; but can be forgiven in that the wide range of activities are being provided in the cause of learning; not adsense or other attempt at generating micro-revenue. The site does pull resources from other sites such as Fisher Price and this is going to be good for parents.

Breathing Earth – Visualisation of our world

VISUALISING information is something that today’s online generation recognises as ‘feedback’. The interface is not so much a ‘tool’ to intereact; but a system from which they gather information about the ‘world’ and their impact though the cycle of decision/outcome that occurs. Breathing Earth is a stunning example of what ‘good design’ beings to statistical information and how colour, layout and typographic information helps create a more engaging shared reality. There are numerous uses for this; not least in playful learning, and well worth checking out.

How to play wiki-tag!


WONDERING what to do when first faced with a 9th grade class armed with 1:1 laptops? Here’s a couple of ideas … let’s kick off with the bad way… then move to a fun way. All you need to play is a PBWorks. This is one of those learn it in 10 minute things.

Some will set about establishing THE ‘rules’ – what you can’t do and how you will behave in MY classroom – or else.
They start with threats, expose weakness, discount opportunity and never test student strengths.

You know what I’d do? Play Wiki-Tag!

I’d teach them how teach each other about how to look after their laptop! I’d get the kids to create a resource of awesomeness that everyone could share or add to. I’d create a student-help desk, right there and then. I’d create a learning community. I’d empower everyone. I’d establish a new norm – and at the same time knock over half a dozen outcomes. I’d mix that with their ‘regular’ lessons … yep, I’m crazy enough to do two-things at once.

Here’s how wiki-tag works

  1. Start with a brainstorm – get kids into groups to think/pair/share and list what they know about their new laptop and what think they are going to need to know. Go around and around students in the groups asking for ideas until all the ideas ran out.
  2. Then I’d go around and ask for responses until they run out.
  3. Put all the knows and need to knows on the wall.
  4. Give each student something to do from the list – and make a wiki-page. (yeah, you have to sign up to pbworks first).
  5. That student owns that page, until someone makes it better – by putting a suggestion in the discussion tab. If the group thinks the idea is better, then the kid who currently owns the page needs to find something else, and the kid with the suggestion now owns it. So the displaced kid has to go looking to improve someone else’s idea.
  6. Anyone not adding to the ideas; gets given and ideas to work on. The group will allocate a ‘task’… They’ll learn to be pro-active, as solving your own problems is more interesting that being given one. If the group can’t come up with one – then they get the teacher’s idea.
  7. You have to play everyday for month, and then have to do at least one thing a week for semester. (Appoint a wiki-administrator to give you a weekly report so you don’t have to).
  8. Students design an evaluation; to work out what activity gets the best marks, based a criteria such as; innovation; accuracy; importance; effort; supporting others (the 21st Century skills).
  9. Students grade their projects – those that contributed to the best page – share the marks (let them work out the formulas)
  10. There’s a weekly reward for participation – additional credit on your final term score.

Each day I had them, I’d give them a new problem to solve, or throw them a curve ball – and in solving it, lead them to explore new boundaries and find better ways to explain it. From resources on touch typing to help with configuring the wireless – my ideas would mix with theirs. I’d make pages; and they could make them better. With my wiki, I’d embed 75% of the pedagogical technology I need in one hit as kids learn to ‘mix’ and ‘mash’.

I’d get them to think of ways to evaluate our ideas, and the value of the improvements – a kind of ‘idea’ currency exchange.

  • If you stick to small stuff, you have to do more than if you create new big stuff. Huh? Well if you put up a simple page; then someone will find it easy to change and you are more likely to get bumped. Do a comprehensive page and you might keep it all semester (and focus on stuff you like).
  • That’s how life works, so that’s how I want my class to work.
  • I’d make the IT Helpdesk a wiki not a form or a phone call. And if I had IT help on staff – guess what, I’d make damn sure my kids knew that they didn’t need support or wait in line – as our wiki would be the best way to get help – anytime.
  • Not ‘can you help me to’ – I want to hear ‘Can you teach me to’ – and put it on our wiki.
  • I’d want our school to have the best wiki – and get dots on our map and get other schools to use it!

By the end of the month, my kids would be independent; co-productive and co-operative – ready to deal with whatever I wanted to teach next. Deeper learning rewards more than surface learning. Then I could play more wiki-tag, just by changing the topic – because they have learned a process in a realistic, relevant way.

Want to learn to play? – Drop me a line, sure we can hook it up. 50 ways to play wiki-tag … easy.

Word Sift

Picture 5 WORD Sift, is a site that allows you to paste in a passage of text create a visualisation of the word frequency, removing some 2000 most common English words. Word Sift allows the user to click the word to feed a visual thesaurus. The tool has been linked to a list of academic word list, developed by Averil Coxhead as her MA thesis at the School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies at Victoria University of Wellington.

Word clouds have already become a popular way of visualising text for students. Given the diverse language backgrounds of many Australian learners (K12 or otherwise), developing a list within a study area and then be able to relate that to the work of students with  discipline resources has tremendous possibilities. A great example of educational technology.

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Diigo – The power of collaborative thought

Shirky posted a very ‘oh my god’ post about the future of newspapers, weaving though it the problems faced by organisations when old ideas don’t work in new dimensions. This post becomes far more engaging for Diigo users, as there are numerous highlights though the text, with associated comments from people like Clary Burrell, who add the ‘educational’ dimension to the writing. At the time I read it, I think the blog post was up to about 900 comments with ping-backs, but the commentary though Diigo is something that I really value – when looking at the ‘power blogs’ like Shirky or Godin. Viewing the web with Internet Explorer and not Firefox is a little like listening to mono songs, verses surround sound these days. You miss the ’spacial’ nature of the information.

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Diigo is a great ‘classroom’ tool – given the ability to sign on whole classes and the ability to not only bookmark and classify information, but to offer collaborative reflection. It is another tool that requires very little adaption of the standard network in schools, not does it pose a safety issue – and allows teachers to scaffold learning pathways. Teaching Diigo for pedagogy should be manditory professional learning in my view – and without doubt – any Web2.0 workshop needs to show just how powerful it can be when properly aligned in curriculum.

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