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April 9, 2009

Podstock in May…

Filed under: conferences, warlick
Tags: , , , , — David Warlick @ 6:13 am with (2) Comments


I’ve known about this one for some time and not sure why I haven’t promoted or even mentioned it before now.  Perhaps it’s because I watched a bit of Woodstock last night from VH1.  Kind’a embarrassing, though great to see Santana and CSN’s performances again.

That’s not what this is about.  In the words of Podstock organizer, Kevin Honeycutt

Podstock is a brand new conference designed to bring podcast creators and those who see the real value of podcasting as creators and consumers together.

We’ll have breakout sessions on podcasting for beginners, as well as sessions for and by seasoned pros. We’ll explore podcasting as well as many other web 2.0 tools that can enhance learning and communication in your world.

Here are the particulars:

Time: May 1, 2009 to May 2, 2009

Location: Hotel at Old Town

Street: Wichita

City/Town: Kansas

Website or Map: http://podstockcon.com/

Event Type: mentorshipart-of-peace, edutainment, collaboratory
Organized By: ESSDACK Education Futures Forum
Latest Activity: Feb 24

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March 6, 2009

iPod Touch in the Classroom

Filed under: education
David Warlick @ 1:07 pm with (26) Comments


I’m sitting in a session at NCTIES about iPod Touches in the classroom.  The presenters represent an exciting project at Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools — using the handheld devices with middle school students.  I met the principal a few months ago at their school district opening, and they were very gong-ho, and I was very interested, because there were just beginning to imagine the possibilities.

They wanted a device, but they didn’t want to phone and they didn’t want to camera.

I’m interested in this, because of a comment that Vicki Davis said yesterday in her keynote, that she would rather have iPod Touches for her students than laptops.  I may well have misunderstood.  But I definitely jerked my knee when I heard it.

Now one of the developers is talking, his company located in RTP.  He says that part of the appeal of the iPod T is that a $200 device makes more sense than a $1000 laptop.  “It’s cheap!  It’s out there.”  Another advantage is development practicality.  Writing applications is much simpler, and it takes much less time than developing for computers.

One of the instructional tech people is talking now,  describing the teachers’ first experiences with the Touches.  She says that they got very excited fairly immediately, talking about the possibilities, which were all aimed at student learning.  They saw very little pushback from the teachers (average age is 47).  Even the community got excited.  Now understand, that this is Chapel Hill — very sophisticated community.

We don’t have to teach the kids how to operate it.  They figure it all out.  They can take their notes on their Touches, but they can’t write a paper.  They are now talking about specific apps.  It reminds me of the handheld thing, where they are listing all of the apps, each very cool, but would all of them serve your classroom.  How many of them apply to your class, your students.

I just asked, “What do you wish it would do?”  Entirely unfair, because they came in prepared to talk about what they are doing.  Here the answer was that it was doing everything they wanted and then some, and then started talking about the near future when they’ll be utilizing podcasting.  This is very exciting.  But I can’t help but be a bit hesitant about anything that does everything.  I know, I’m old and turning into a curmudgeon before my own eyes — and it isn’t pretty.

She said that they still need laptops and desktop computers.  I need to visit their school.  It’s just up the road.  I’d love to have my skepticism satisfied.

I guess my main objection is this — and I may have jotted this down in another conference blog entry, which I haven’t posted yet.  My fear is that people see this and hear all of this enthusiasm, and come back saying, “This is the solution to our 1:1 problem.  Cheaper way to go 1:1.

There are no shortcuts, folks!

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September 4, 2008

Justifying Blogging

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 1:06 pm with (16) Comments


Picture of book, What No One Tells you about Blogging and PodcastingI just received an e-mail message from a teacher who would like to introduce blogging in his classroom — student blogging.  He says…

I asked my supervisor if i could get the techno guy at my school to unblock a website so my kids can use blogs in my language arts class.  I was told I need to write a letter to the superintendent to explain my justification for using blogs in the classroom.

Surprisingly, this is the first time I’ve received this kind of e-mail, and from certain perspectives it actually makes a lot of sense.  Rather than just sending him my 2¢ Worth, I thought I would open it up to my readers.  [[image1]]

  • So why should students be blogging in the classroom?
  • Are your students blogging?
  • What’s the benefit?
  • What’s the down-side?
  • Are there other surprise impacts?

Please keep it short and sweet, as he’s only been asked for one letter.

Thanks from me!

  1. Penn, Christopher. "Ted Demopoulos' book Finally Arrives." Financial Aid Podcast's Photostream. 18 Jan 2007. 4 Sep 2008 <http://flickr.com/photos/financialaidpodcast/361533467/>. []

August 24, 2008

Puzzling Your Textbook

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 6:09 am with (0) Comments


I started a blog post a few weeks ago about digital textbooks, and some of the wiki projects and customizable digital textbook projects going on out there.  Alas, I never got it finished and I’ve lost the notes now.  But I was reminded of the topic when a MEGA mailing list message came across my inbox, announcing a new North Carolina History textbook — that’s digital.1

Click to Enlarge
Developed by LEARN NC, a long-standing and consistent support agent for digital education in NC, Grand Visions, Rough Realities: The Development of Colonial North Carolina [flyer PDF, 95kb] is an web-based document that contains, among other things,

…67 pages of primary sources and background reading, plus guides for using the kinds of primary sources provided.

To collect content, LEARN NC worked with the North Carolina Office of Archives and History, the North Carolina Museum of History, UNC Libraries, Fort Dobbs State Historic Site, the North Carolina Literary Review, and other partners.
According to the e-mail, from Bill Ferris,

LEARN NC?s ?digital textbook? for 8th-grade North Carolina history provides a new model for teaching and learning. It makes primary sources central to the learning experience, using them to tell the stories of the past rather than merely illustrating it. Special web-based tools help students learn to read those sources and ask good questions of them. And because it?s on the web, this textbook relies on multimedia whenever possible to supplement or even replace text.

I found a chapter in the book about the German migration into North Carolina, a topic that I’ve not seen before in any NC History course I have taken.  It was an interesting read for me, as my ancestors on my father’s side were part of the early 1700s immigration.  I was intrigued by the circumstances in Europe, mostly religious wars, that forced so many German families to leave for the New World.

Picture of YouTube VideoWith this still in my head this morning, I coincidentally ran across this video (Sharing the Sights and Sounds of Europe!) from the EU, through an unrelated recommendation that popped into my Twitter client.  The YouTube video describe the Audiovisual Service of the European Commission, which appears to archive digital media related to a broad spectrum topics.  The media is “free of charge / free of rights.”

Content can be found by search engine, thematic classification, or via the Europe by Satellite (EbS) service.  Information is also streamed via vodcasting, podcasting, RSS feeds, and live and VOD streaming.

What got me thinking was a marriage of what LEARN NC is doing and a product like the Audiovisual Service, where the “textbook” arrives as an broad topic, multimedia encyclopedia that is not only searchable but also pluckable.  Teachers and students might have a chapter described to them via discussion or presentation of a problem, and then work toward identifying content from the encyclopedia, assembling it into a personalized study resource gear not only toward the subject or problem, but also toward the individuals learning styles.

In a sense this would cause the traditional consumption approach to education and the emerging emphasis on production to overlap far more effectively than simply asking students to produce a multimedia presentation at the end of the chapter.

————————–

Here is the very funny video (Chemical Party) that actually connected me with the Audiovisual Service, suggested by Seesmic’s Loic Le Meur. It is designed to promote interest in science and chemistry, also from the European Commission.

  1. Ferris, Bill. “[MEGA] North Carolina History Digital textbook, Part 2 from LEARN NC.” E-mail to Author.20 Aug 2008. []

June 27, 2008

Words of NECC

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 8:09 pm with (3) Comments


I’ve been in San Antonio for almost a two hours now, mostly walking out to stock up on diet pepsis for my room, and watching CNN (pretty rare for me).  In a few minutes, I’ll go out to a place called Boudros’ for dinner with a bunch of folks — don’t recall who — hope I’ll recognize them.

Anyway, while paying half of my attention on the news, and a quarter of it on the clock, I’ve been doing some searches of the NECC program for a few key words that occurred to me.  Here is a listing of those words and the number of conference sessions or other events that included them.  They are not listed in any particular order, just as I thought of them.

Blog 27
Wiki 35
wikipedia 1
Podcast 39
game 38
web 2.0 46
Second Life 10
open source 19
visualization 6
computational 3
21st century skills 4
literacy 42
social network 13
social 40
moodle 17
flat 5
creativ 31
ebook 2
muve 3
nets?s 11

I also found the PDF of the final entire program and ran the session through TagCrowd.  Here are the 75 most used words in the sessions, in a tag cloud.


<!– #htmltagcloud{ font-family:’lucida grande’,trebuchet,’trebuchet ms’,verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; line-height:2.4em; word-spacing:normal; letter-spacing:normal; text-decoration:none; text-transform:none; text-align:justify; text-indent:0ex; background-color:#fff; margin:1em 1em 0em 1em; border:2px dotted #ddd; padding:2em}#htmltagcloud a:link{text-decoration:none}#htmltagcloud a:visited{text-decoration:none}#htmltagcloud a:hover{text-decoration:none;color:white;background-color:#05f}#htmltagcloud a:active{text-decoration:none;color:white;background-color:#03d}span.tagcloud0{font-size:1.0em;padding:0em;color:#ACC1F3;z-index:10;position:relative}span.tagcloud0 a{text-decoration:none; color:#ACC1F3}span.tagcloud1{font-size:1.4em;padding:0em;color:#ACC1F3;z-index:9;position:relative}span.tagcloud1 a{text-decoration:none;color:#ACC1F3}span.tagcloud2{font-size:1.8em;padding:0em;color:#86A0DC;z-index:8;position:relative}span.tagcloud2 a{text-decoration:none;color:#86A0DC}span.tagcloud3{font-size:2.2em;padding:0em;color:#86A0DC;z-index:7;position:relative}span.tagcloud3 a{text-decoration:none;color:#86A0DC}span.tagcloud4{font-size:2.6em;padding:0em;color:#607EC5;z-index:6;position:relative}span.tagcloud4 a{text-decoration:none;color:#607EC5}span.tagcloud5{font-size:3.0em;padding:0em;color:#607EC5;z-index:5;position:relative}span.tagcloud5 a{text-decoration:none;color:#607EC5}span.tagcloud6{font-size:3.3em;padding:0em;color:#4C6DB9;z-index:4;position:relative}span.tagcloud6 a{text-decoration:none;color:#4C6DB9}span.tagcloud7{font-size:3.6em;padding:0em;color:#395CAE;z-index:3;position:relative}span.tagcloud7 a{text-decoration:none;color:#395CAE}span.tagcloud8{font-size:3.9em;padding:0em;color:#264CA2;z-index:2;position:relative}span.tagcloud8 a{text-decoration:none;color:#264CA2}span.tagcloud9{font-size:4.2em;padding:0em;color:#133B97;z-index:1;position:relative}span.tagcloud9 a{text-decoration:none;color:#133B97}span.tagcloud10{font-size:4.5em;padding:0em;color:#002A8B;z-index:0;position:relative}span.tagcloud10 a{text-decoration:none;color:#002A8B}span.freq{font-size:10pt !important;color:#bbb}#credit{text-align:center; font-size:0.7em; color:#333; margin-bottom:0.6em; font-family:’lucida grande’,trebuchet,’trebuchet ms’,verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;}#credit a:link{color:#777; text-decoration:none;}#credit a:visited{color:#777; text-decoration:none;}#credit a:hover{text-decoration:none; color:white; background-color:#05f;}#credit a:active{text-decoration:underline;}// –>

created at TagCrowd.com

June 14, 2008

NECC Sessions…

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 9:59 am with (10) Comments


It’s quiet at Newark airport, where Brenda and I are waiting for our connection to Buffalo, where we’ll get a cab across the border to the Canadian side of Niagara Falls.  I’ll be speaking at the Ontario School Boards Association conference tomorrow, and they selected one of my more provocative topics.  We’ll see how that goes.

It’s customary for us to post the NECC session(s) we will be presenting.  For me, I’ll be doing some work with David Thornburg for SETDA (State Education Technology Directors’ Association) on Sunday.  I’m not sure what I’ll be presenting.  I know I will not have much time.  If Thornburg presents on science, then I may counter with something on the creative arts.  Not sure yet.  But it will be fun.

Picture of my NECC Calendar
One of my days at NECC. Lots of decisions yet to be made.
Then, on Monday, at 12:30, in the HGCC Lila Cockrell Theatre, I’ll talk about our students and our worlds, describing three disruptive conditions that are converging on every school, classroom, teacher, and learner.   It’s a fairly big-picture session that I have not done at NECC before, though it is being increasingly requested by conference planners as a large group general addresses.

I spent some time last night going through the conference program, selecting the sessions I was interested in.  After finishing, I had my calendar subscribe to my selected sessions as an iCal file, and my calendar gave an audible groan under the strain.

A couple of things did strike me as I was reading through the sessions.  Their attraction may have had more to do with things I’ve been thinking about lately, rather than a count of sessions. 

First of all, I saw a lot of sessions about using technology in science instruction.  There is certainly a lot of interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics right now, so this shouldn’t be a surprise.  I also saw a lot of sessions with Web 2.0 in the title or description.  What was interesting was the many of them seemed to assume a basic knowledge of the tools.  The sessions were geared toward bringing together some meaning to these new tools within the context of teaching, learning, and improving student performance (not one of my favorite phrases).

I also found it interesting that podcasting seems to have fallen in popularity from the past couple of years, but what has risen is ePortfolios.  I’ve been sensing a renewed interest in alternative assessment methods, and there may be some logical and valuable connections between collecting artifacts of learning and the increasing interest in blogs, wikis, mashups, and other Web 2.0 applications.

June 8, 2008

Chance Meeting at Airport

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 11:58 am with (1) Comments


Picture of flight to Honolulu
This is my ride to Honolulu
I love that American Airlines now has electric outlets at most of the seats of their larger planes, MD-80s (Mad Dog 80) and up.  It makes such a difference, especially considering the multitude of hours I’ll be in the air between Dallas and Honolulu — have to admit that’s sounding pretty exciting now.

As I was finishing up a blog entry at gate C15, across from me sits Bethany Smith.  I’m not sure what her job is, but Bethany works at the Friday Institute, which I’ve blogged about on several occassions.  She’s become a go-to person for several specific technology applications including podcasting and Moodle.  She’s on her way to San Francisco for a Moodle conference.  Bethany is also involved in an initiative at North Carolina State University to re-invent their educator pre-service program, which I hope to be a part of — schedule permitting.

We talked a bit about Moodle and how NCSU is looking to adopt the software for their online learning programs.  She’s obviously an enthusiast, but equally versed in BlackBoard, Web CT, and their combined product(s).  At any rate is was nice to have someone so pleasant to talk to at the airport.

For most of the rest of these flights, I’ll be finishing up an article about Personal Learning Networks (PLN) and simultaneously finishing up a re-build of my PLN conference presentation, which I’ll be doing three or four times at EdTech, in Honolulu.  One thing that I want to do is to reconcile the fact that there is nothing new about personal learning networks (just like there’s nothing new about do it yourself (DIY) education practices — aka, Edupunk).

I’m struggling with the fear that I may be de-constructing PLN techniques a little too much, for the sake of acknowledging what many will say, “Hey!  We’ve been doing that for years!”  It’s true.  But in the case of PLNs, new information and communication technologies have availed dramatically new avenues for learning from each other and for learning by mining larger conversations for value.  Also critical to this conversation is how important lifelong learning (learning lifestyle) is to education and how necessary it is for teachers to not only practice it, but model the skills of using the networks for learning.

More about DIY/Edupunk later — perhaps the next flight.

April 28, 2008

Another Wopping Web 2.0 Resource Site

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 9:56 am with (6) Comments


Picture of the Wiki Page
Web Tools 4 U 2 Use Wiki Site
Marlene Woo-Lun just forwarded to me a post from LM-Net (about 9 million librarians online), apparently posted by Donna (taglines) Baumbach, of University of Central Florida.1 The message is thanking more than 600 LM-Net members (school librarians) who contributed information for a giant wiki site on Web 2.0 tools — Web Tools 4 U 2 Use.  This is possibly the largest and best organized new-web resources site I’ve seen, and I’ve del.icio.us’ed it already.

The headings include:

  • Audio & Podcasting
  • Blogs
  • Calendars, Task Management, & ToDo Lists
  • Drawing
  • Photo & Photo Sharing
  • Portal & WebPage starting tools
  • Presentaiton Tools
  • Quiz & Polling tools
  • RSS & Aggregators
  • Social Bookmarking
  • Social Networks, and others.

This amazing resource site was created for the Florida Library Media Supervisors’ Conference (couldn’t find URL) in May 2008.  I hope that it continues to be available to us.

Thanks Donna!

  1. Baumbach, Donna. “Web 2.0 Tools – Need Your Input.” E-mail to LM_NET Mailing List.25 Apr 2008. []

April 5, 2008

What Place Personalization

Filed under: education
David Warlick @ 9:09 am with (10) Comments


Smarter than yesterdayOne of the topics of my workshop in San Diego was podcasting.  It was a real bear, as my Audacity refused to operate predictably — (Tech is wonderful until you use technology to demonstrate technology).  That problem, however, has been solved by reinstalling Audacity.

Since we did not have access to microphones for the audience, I recorded a podcast with the group, by asking them some questions about what they’d learned so far and the impact that they saw with student performance and their own performance as teachers.  One of the members of the group of 30 mentioned something that I’d heard before.  But the way that he said it sent me in a new direction.  He said something about how blogs, wikis, and podcasting allow our students’ learning experiences to be more personalized.

At this, it occurred to me that as our youngsters are engaged in their social networks at home, it appears that they do not endeavor to create MySpace pages that are just like those of their friends.  Instead, it seems that one of the goals is to establish and illustrate their uniqueness.  They use their online information experience to project their individuality — their person.  Of course, their expressions isn’t always authentic, that they will often project a person they are not, as experiment or as fun.  But it is uniqueness none the less.

So what is it in the learning experiences that we maintain for our students in our classrooms that calls on their uniqueness, that asks them to personalize?  If, rather than expecting them to turn in work that is the same as everyone else, we expected them to express what they are learning in a way that is unlike anyone else, might this be one way of starting to integrate, among other things, the Creativity and Innovation that the new ISTE NETS are calling for?

I don’t know.  What do you think?  What might this look like?

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Tags: , , , , ,

February 24, 2008

Stepping Back to the Future

Filed under: blogging
David Warlick @ 12:55 pm with (8) Comments


I had an unusual request from a client a few weeks ago.   They were organizing a professional learning conference day for their school district and asked me to open the day with a keynote, selecting an address on contemporary literacy.  Nothing unusual there.  However, agreeing to also do three breakout sessions, they requested the three presentation topics that I am least frequently asked to deliver — all three of them.

I was a little taken a’back, since I’d not presented any of them in at least a year, more than two or three years for two of them.  My initial inclination was to say, “Oh!  I’ve been meaning to take those (all three) off my list.  Would you mind selecting three others.”

However, they selected those particular sessions for a reason, so I went with it, and spent a good bit of time preparing.  The real surprise was that as I continued to refresh the presentations the more relevant they became, especially in light of the keynote I was delivering.  For instance, the first element of contemporary literacy that I address in the speech corresponds with the first R, Reading.  In today’s information environment, I believe that the ability to find information that is appropriate to what we are trying to achieve is as important and as basic as being able to read it.  Evaluation, decoding, translating, etc. are also in there.

So one of the oldies requested was “Finding It on the Net: Being a Digital Detective.”  The last time I’d taught that one, I was still introducing folks to Google and boolean searching.  But today, it involves so much more.  Not just finding the evidence, as a digital detective, but also witnesses.  So I included a discussion about blogs and wikis, and using Technorati and Google Blog search to locate and select experts in a given field, and to use BlogPulse to map the frequency of specific conversations.  We also looked at some examples of using wikis to tap into the collective knowledge of communities.

When it came to the digital detective seeking evidence, I did an old demo, illustrating a process-approach to conducting searches.  I call it SEARCH, which is an acronym for the process.  We also discussed the Wikipedia and other social content sites and their effectiveness as a reliable source.  This discussion, alas, continues.

Finally, I demo’ed RSS, as a tool for not just finding information, but for training information to find you.  So much more to finding information today.

The second breakout that I did was “Harnessing the Digital Landscape,” which matches almost perfectly the second R (arithmetic) — which I expand into a range of skills involved in employing or working the information.  The last time I’d don this session, it was entirely about digital cameras and what we can do to add value to digital images.  But, as a result of refreshing the session, It grew into a much more comprehensive exploration, including digital photos, but also looking at processing audio with Audacity, an intro to podcasting, some machinima (for fun), and then visualizations of data and text using TagClouds, IBM’s Many Eyes, and some network visualizers.  I closed that one with a few examples of web mashups, how data from various web sites is being combined and create new tools, such as Buzztracker and Twittervision.

Finally, and this was the tough one.  They wanted my presentation on Plagiarism, which plugs in to my forth E, ethical use of information.  It’s always been a difficult presentation, because it is not, for me, a daily working concern, as it is for teachers.  So I researched, looking for tips, put them on slides, and be absolute sure to cite the source ;-)  The problem — There is not a better way to do this than with slides and lots of bulleted lists — and I hate to use bulleted slides.  I apologized repeatedly to the audience, and they forgave me — and I did promise myself that I would remove this one from the list.  However, I had also been asked to do this presentation at the NC Community Colleges Association for Distance Learning conference after my trip to California, and decided to make it a test.  Is this plagiarism?  Why?  Why not?  That went much much better.  Plagiarism may be a keeper after all.

Anyway, it was an interesting exercise to dredge up some old presentations, do a refresh, and find life pulsing through those crusty joints.

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