Saturday, January 31, 2009
Thing #22 - 23 things
Thing #21 - 23 Things
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Thing #20- 23 Things
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Thing #19 - 23 Things
Thing #18 - 23 Things
Monday, January 26, 2009
Thing #17 - 23 Things
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Thing #16 - 23 Things
Sir Ken Robinson speaking in "Do Schools Kill Creativity" makes some interesting points. My favorite quote to carry away from that speech is "if you're not prepared to be wrong you'll never come up with anything original." The major emphasis in education now is preparing students to take test and to make sure we are all teaching the same thing for common assessments. Neither of these allow much room for "being wrong" or for creativity. Projects and activities that allow students and teachers to take risk, be creative, or allow time for being wrong are being cut from the curriculum. Activities that allow for dancing, moving, dramatics and creativity are being cut and it has very little to do with technology but has to do with time and resources. I strongly agree that we need to develop people's gifts of imagination and educate the whole being and technology tools should be a part of that.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Thing #15 - 23 Things
Thing #14 - 23 Things
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Thing #13 - 23 Things
For this lesson I uploaded part of my PowerPoint lesson on Internet Safety. My links came in well and most of my plain next, obviously my animations and transitions didn't come in so well. I wouldn't really be able to upload my PowerPoints with videos and other copyrighted materials though. If we were using white boards to capture lessons I could see some of these online presentation tools being very helpful for sharing and posting class activities. These online presentation tools have most of what the students need and use and could be a good alternative to PowerPoint.
http://show.zoho.com/public/bluntkimberly/RFC-internet-safety-08
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Thing 12 - 23 Things
Zoho looked interesting because I have several projects were students work in groups on PowerPoints. I think both Google prentation and Zoho could be use with the students. Projects could be worked on from multiple locations with teams or partnerships. Both programs are easy to use and have enough features to be useful. I like the way Zoho could be used for remote presentations but I don't have a specific use for that feature at this time.
Trailfire was a new application for me and I was impressed, I can see using Trailfire to set up webquest type activites for students and for having students create a webtrail with notes highlighting what they have learned. Other students could follow trails created by their classmates to review and study from. I'm trying to think of some topics and activities that will lend themselves to the trailfire app, I plan to share this with some teachers as soon as I find out if it is blocked at school.
Thing 11- 23 Things
- They don't all have the same program we use at school and not all documents will convert to our format, I've used Zamzar to convert documents on a regular basis, works great but takes time.
- Our students don't all have e-mail programs to forward documents to and e-mail servers are sometimes blocked.
- Students working with partners or groups usually need to use SharePoint to share documents but they don't have access to SharePoint from home or teachers have to move documents between teacher's folders and students. Both good work arounds, but not very efficient.
Google docs does allow sharing and portability but for school use and in the future I can see where we will be paying for some type of secure service - so yes Microsoft has some competition. I wouldn't store or share everything there and I would want backups of important documents. Since the Internet is sometimes slow, blocked or otherwise unavailable I wouldn't want to count on it for a presentation without a plan B. Technology as I am sure most of you would agree needs a plan A, plan B and just in case a plan C -that comes with a large bottle of aspirin.
I'm actually getting ready to use this with some students but I still have some questions and concerns. In their Terms of Service document :
- section 4, they can stop the service at any time without giving you access to your files
- section 11.1 " By submitting, posting or displaying the content you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive licence to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services."
- section 2.3 you may not accept the contract if you are not of "legal age"
WHAT IS THE LEGAL AGE for students? I can see in the elementary setting up student accounts and a teacher controlling them much they way I'm doing student blog accounts right now, but at what age can we ask a student to set up an account?
Monday, January 05, 2009
Thing # 10 - 23 Things
Wikis could be useful for class projects where collaboration was an important part. Students could upload files, images, sounds etc. Students could comment and edit each other's work. That's why I thought that the wiki would be a good place for students to publish and post creative writing and book reviews. Wikis could also be used for professional projects where teachers want to collaborate and share ideas in one space, a white board so to speak.
Sunday, January 04, 2009
Thing #9 - 23 Things
wikiHow is laid out very nicely, easy to navigate by using the categories, organized links and interesting "how to" articles that people could edit and add to. I could see some classroom uses for the topics but also some classes would lend themselves to the same type of "how to" wiki. "How to": play a sport, do a science lab, cook a meal etc. I think it is a nice use of the social tool but like a lot of social sites not all the participants and pages were appropriate.
Michigan Policy Network is run by MSU college students, it has some interesting articles and the headings at the top and the menu on the right side make it easy to navigate. The print and the color scheme make it easy to read. The MSU site looked and felt very professional students could use it for local and state issues but they political classes could also build their own similar site for issues that they are studying.
I also came across some professional education wikis that covered some interesting topics but for the most part they would only be useful for general information, not in depth. Using wikis for information is like using any webpage and I always feel the need to investigate and evaluate the source before I give it serious credit. The fluid nature of the wiki is cool and is it's strength and weakness.
Friday, January 02, 2009
23 Things - Thing #8
To keep track of blogs and news stories I added Technorati to my Diigo account, to search for blogs I added Google Blog search. I could see using either or both of those tools with students to search for current events, teach about evaluating sources, and to look up specific events (if blogs weren't blocked at school.)

