About Judy O'Connell

Educator, learner, blogger, librarian, technology girl, author and consultant. Transforming education and libraries. Innovation for life.

Now go collect!

If you like organising your things, and maybe even cataloguing things….if you like Library Thing, and if you are a collector of things, then Squirl might be the place for you.

Just this weekend I have been musing over my vast CD music collection, and thinking that a Library Thing approach to my CDs and even my vintage collectibles wouldn’t be such a bad idea!

So being alerted to Squirl seemed timely and ‘kinda fun!’ Now I just want to see how many of my Library Thing friends make the jump! You have the option of creating a public or private collection, and a number of templates are provided. Squirl also incorporates the option of organising your book collection too – good if you want to keep things that you organise within the same management space.

Our Schools are Flat

Warlick: Our Schools are Flat

Originally uploaded by mstephens7.

David Warlick shares his presentation from the SLJ leadership summit, and I really appreciated this particular image. I picked this up from Michael Stephen’s Flickr collection – I’ve got him in my list of contacts.

So this image shows how not only schools are flat but we are getting flat too! From David to Michael to Judy, via flickr, and the blogging template embedded within Flickr, which I am testing now.

I am also reading The World is Flat by Thomas L Friedman. Wow!

He says in his introduction:

It is now possible for more people than ever to collaborate and compete in real time with more other people on more different kinds of work from more different corners of the planet and on a more equal footing than at any previous time in the history of the world – using computers, e=mail, fiber-optic netowrks, teleconferencing, and dynamic new software.

I am also listening in to the Fireside Chat of the K12 online conference via Skype!

Whether we like it or not our world is flat, and all the better for it,  when we recognise the amazing power of this new information landscape.

Graphical images everywhere!

Another librarian in comics, this time The Librarian, from the made-for-TV movie, Return to King Solomon’s Mines.

Flynn Carson, guardian of mystical artifacts scattered throughout world history! Originally appearing in the hugely popular made-for-cable film “The Librarian: Quest for the Spear”, Carson is back and this time his mission is to prevent the powerful Key of Solomon from falling into the hands of a ruthless warlord! He is joined in his quest by Emily Davenport, a beautiful fellow scientist who may be his only hope to locate the legendary Mines of King Solomon before it is too late!

Not to be outdone by movies and comics, we also have the microsoft powered LiveSearch of Ms Dewey – leaving many of us wondering if this new interface actually works!

Take a look and enjoy!

But it does have potential doesn’t it? in making the knowledge work of information seeking fun in the first instance and bringing a new interface to searching which just might hook kids?

It is a real ‘information’ problem – a globe of information – and the only discussion in some circles revolves around how to engage students with use of technology tools, forgetting that engagement involves cognitive and affective domains – i.e. I seek, I get confused, I want help, I don’t undersand, etc. While it is vital to learn to integrate technology and Web 2.0 thinking, it is also a gross error to assume that using technology = using our intelligence to full capacity.

Human knowledge is complex and requires deep thinking – and sometimes a deep capacity to search, find, sort and synthesise information, viewpoints and knowledge. 21st century wisdom builds on all that came before.

Let’s not forget the cognitive dimension of Web 2.0 and technology integration – and lets have fun with Ms Dewey and King Solomon’s mines.

Internet futures

Interesting to think about the future of the internet locally and globally, as Web 2.0 launches the digital future.

BBC news reports on the global Internet Governance Group. In a column for the BBC News website, Mr Desai said: “The forum will give voice to the citizens of the global net and help identify emerging issues which need to be tackled in the formal processes.” The forum is not a decision-making body but instead is designed to give stakeholders in the internet a chance to form consensus around key areas.

The four key agendas for the conference are security, diversity, openness and access.

[The forum] is about the future, the net as it will be some years from now and how we can give a voice to all who use it…… Nith Desai

Two things of particular interest:

  1. Have Your Say: What is the future of the internet? Read the comments!
  2. BBC Net safety guide The pdf is worth downloading, as the focus is broader, as it includes security and network issues.

You might like to Read the views of the global internet panel.

Well, this delightful picture of the Dharamsala wireless mesh and the latest addition to the Mesh at the Lower-TCV School shows how the expanding technology blanket is being wrapped around the globe.

Best of the Best… in Web 2.0

One way  that many of us try and keep informed about professional directions in education is by the sharing of ideas through blogging – and by tracking the blogosphere via our chosen RSS news feed.

Even so, good information slips through the cracks, so we rely on our exchange of ideas to help stay in touch.

So I had a Eureka moment when I dipped back into PopURLs this morning. If you haven’t paid a visit, check out the way this tool updates the action on digg.com, delicious, reddit.com, flickr, newsvine, metafilter and tailrank, YouTube, news, odeo, furl, etc etc etc. Very nice!

The post I want to highlight that ‘popped’ up this morning is from RealWorld Software Development on Best of the Best Web 2.0 Sites is a great compliation …. for now at least until things change again 🙂

Web 2.0 sites are cropping up all over the place! From Social Bookmarking Sites, to Real Estate sites, this list has only the best Web 2.0 Sites available today! What makes a site a Web 2.0 Site? Web 2.0 is the second coming of World Wide Web. New and improved sites that make the web their platform, provide users a way of interacting with each other, and organize and categorize their content are perfect examples of Web 2.0. Below is a list of web sites that are the best of the best!

……Best of the Best Web 2.0 Sites.

Web 2.0 Sushi train moves on

After spending an exhilerating couple of days at the Global Summit, I am happy to say that the opportunities for more learning haven’t stopped yet. Now it’t time to dip into the K12 Online conference which is already well underway.

Nevertheless, the roundup of the Global Summit has been a bit hard to track, therefore for anyone who missed out finding or following the Global Summit, here is the link that will give you all the papers, presentations, podcasts and related links. You’ll want to save some of these for later!

SummitPapers

But for now, if you haven’t already caught up with the news of the K12 Online Conference, go to it now! There has been some criticism of this initiative by some blogosphere gurus.

My take on this is that they are great leaders, but perhaps they could do with some grassroots involvement to see how important the material coming out of K12 online is for teachers and people like myself working with teachers who are wanting to learn more about Web 2.0.

I have promoted K12 Online to my schools – and at a Web 2.0 Workshop I ran last week was delighted to find that some teachers had picked up on the promotion, and were ‘cherrypicking’ the conference papers – and were very pleased with the information they were getting. I guess Stephen’s pessimistic comments aren’t true – at least not ‘downunder’.

I want to really thank those people who put up such great material in Week 1. This hands-on, step-by-step compilation of training and motivation via Web 2.0 is terrific and just what we need! I am not a great fan of online conferences personally, simply because I find it hard to follow online along with my usual busy day at work. But being able to pull down all the material during or after is ‘just the ticket’.

So the Web 2.0 sushi train has goodies from the Global Summit, and now K12 Online. Very nice thank you.

Some further thoughts.

I really like the idea of ‘grass-roots’ driven professional learning. After a couple of school terms promoting Web 2.0 via a number of routes, I am delighted to report that people are now ‘asking‘ to have a hands-on workshop – not formal training, but a ‘sandpit’ ‘lets learn this together’ approach.

In keeping with the informal but informative approach, and using Web 2.0 tools exclusively, I have begun to use delicious (with the tag ‘training’) (includes the link to set up the IE extension as part of the workshop – nice one!) and flickr to provide materials for these sessions – the point being that I provide these at the same time as working with folks to set up their own social bookmarking, and discovering what photosharing can do. Another one coming up this thursday….hard to keep up with the demand 😉

In addition, I held a full day session with school leaders of the Stanhope School Project – involving 3 schools. Greg Whitby was interviewed by Leigh Blackall about this. We have actually started the journey of change and this workshop was one of many more sessions to come. You can pick up a very short, very rough record of the day at Heyjude’s BlipTV.

Global Summit 06 – Geetha Narayanan

How do you measure the personal value of such a succesful event as the Global Summit hosted by Education.au? As John Connell pointed out so well, we had the opportunity to meet such a good group of leaders as well as practitioners, and we had the chance to engage in deep dialogue for two whole days. I was thrilled to have the opportunity!

However for me the highlight of the second day was the opportunity to see and hear Geetha Narayanan. Gerry White of Education.au said to me just before the start of the session that Geetha would be wonderful. I expected clever, or good ideas, or something along those lines. What we got was humbling and inspiring all in one magical combination.

Geetha has dedicated her life to finding and establishing new modesl of learning that are creative, synergistic and original in their approach. To know that she worked for many years with Seymour Papert indicates the type of thinking that energises her work. Geetha talked fervently about bringing people, technology and learning together within a new conceptual framework.

She suggests that what predominates is conventional thinking.WE need to ask more of technology. Can new technologies create a sense of well-being? Rather brilliantly, she argued against the ‘flat-land’ rhetoric of the digital age.

Working with literacy in the slums Geetha has moved to a new Project Vision, and is working with a hypotheses that embraces an ideology of critical pedagogy through media arts.

Now that we can do anything what will we do?

As a Science Fiction buff, I particularly enjoyed Geetha’s use of the movie Matrix, and the choices that Neo was asked to make being used as methaphor for significant life-shaping decisions.

She told us that there is NO better example of personal choice than that portrayed by Neo in the matrix – the choice between red and blue pills – the question is what will you choose?

BLUE PILL: if we concsioulsy make that choice it will leave us in the secure, routine, everyday, conventional thinking. We will stay as we are with habits and secure in the safety of our beliefs.
RED PILL: represents critical and transformatory thning – it involves risk, doubt, and questioning. The blue pill, will leave us as we are , in a life consisting of habit and secure in the safety of our beliefs.

So let’s ask ourselves

What is the truth and reality I want? Where is it that I want to go?

Personas of Practice (practicing teachers) Geetha’s description of the kind of characteristics she sees in educators:

Techno-skeptics
Nothing can or should change people – back to basics movement in education type of people. Sequential thinking. Perspective on culture is classical. Value technology as tool so long as it is in the right place – lab, specialist, computer studies teachers. They privilege the authority of the printed word. Promote drill and practice. Cannot trust internet information

Techno-evangelists
Come from a wide range of disciplines. World view is that a combination of speed and simultaneity and virtual simulation and distributed cognition will facilitate survival in 21st century world. Information is key and must proceed learning to deliver promise. Use research on brain, learning styles, constructivism etc to foster project-based inter-diciplinary approach to education. Technology must soak into the culture of the school. Endorse the inventive and innovative mind

Techno-mimetics
Settle for the latest fads and fashions in education. Interest in technology is short-lived and transient. Imitate skeptics and evangelist, with their style of verve. ‘state of the art’ is there logo. Brochures reflect rhetoric on technology learning. Education is like a shopping mall or theme park. No original position on culture. Engage in bricolage. Tinker. Preserving and innovating culture is not part of their brief. Such school can hire an event manager to deliver and promote.

Geetha refers to conventional thinking as having resulted in bricolage of learning with technology that preserves and perpetuates everyday schooling. It is a qualitative patter of thinking that has stabilized our current schooling.

ON the other hand, Geetha’s typology is very specific and vital to crafting a new approach to learning. She asks us to consider deeply what the impact of the technologicl revolution on society and education really is.

What I was particularly interested in and will pursue further were her key focus points and explanations of the following:

  • literacy as code
  • ways of world-making or sense-making
  • the impact of vulnerabilities or deprivations
  • the value of capabilities or substantive freedoms
  • the consideration of linkages, networks, and flows in our society
  • our status of “freefall” – culture of immediacy (Stuart Brand, Clock of the long Now)
  • fast knowledge
  • knowledge which is valued because it is measured.
  • The error of no distinction between information and knowledge
  • The need for the right information at right time
  • The fact that intangible knowledge is (unfortunately) considered irrelevant
  • That Content is considered as the only relevant source/formof learning
  • That the cultural impact of this view has been a negative and the professional knowledge of school teachers has been increasingly disconnected from their very valuable tacit knowledge base
  • The major problem of alienation or our tacit knowledge base

THE SLOW SCHOOL

My favourite learning…Geetha explained that deep and systemic change is representative of ‘punctuated’ evolutionary approach – one that is reverse engineering – moving education to a view that encourages slowness and wholeness to become living institutions.

Slowness as an idea. Frames of reference for today – one that centres the wellbeing of the individual, the community and environement.

Slowness is not just an antidote to fast knowledge, it is a reaction to it.
Slowness is a value that works at the level of knowelge, culture, and preserves culture and heritage.

Slow schools – move beyond unnecessary digital access and unnecessary access to digitized information. They truely embedd and use technology for slow learning – deep, critical, responsive, personalised learning.

GlobalSummit06 – Seymour Papert

Back to another day, and I am feeling inspired again, because the day started with a few key reflections of the events of yesterday. I felt the strong energy of the group, and the wonderful sense that attendees were genuinely reflecting, cutting and dicing – not just accepting words as received, but using them to further discussion and move in new directions.

Our online link to Dr Seymour Papert was also inspirational for the focus points that he provided us. [Dr. Papert is the inventor of the Logo computer language]

What a great thing to see this leading thinker up on the big screen, and to hear his thoughts flowing in response to questions being presented.

Seymour urged us to move our thinking from HOW to WHAT. Not how students learn and how to teach, but what children learn and what to teach. How can kids learn things in better ways?

As to our how our technology future is looking? Seymour offered four key points:

  1. Every kid must have a computer! It is ridiculous to waste further time to debating this. Every knowledge worker (with the exception of our students) finds that technology is the proper medium for thinking work. If knowledge workers have computers, then why don’t kids!
  2. Shift from HOW to WHAT to learn.
  3. Recognise that it is global forces that drive change in education. Look to the forces in the global scene, rather than relentless educational debate to find the focus for future learning initiatives.
  4. Stop talking to the computer industry, and do not accept their economic agenda to spend more in order to buy bigger and better. We should be setting the pace and saying what we need. The $100 laptop project shows the clout that we can have if we wish to really make a difference.

Through all this Seymour urges us to focus on the fundamentals (not ‘back to basics’) . Now more than ever we need to return to the fundamentals of HARD THINKING – the real issues that are below the surface.

It was great to hear these important concepts articulated by a global leader. Literacy, mathematical thinking, digital thinking ……….. or we could say that literacy remains an enabling mechanism for effective Cognitive and Metacognitive engagement …… hard thinking…… real learning.

People laughed at Seymour Papert in the sixties when he talked about students using computers as intruments for learning and for enhancing creativity. Not any longer!

The rhetoric of change

Back from a delightful harbour cruise, I find that I am distracted and disturbed by the overall discussions in the Global Summit.

I have been reading the posts by John Connell and am heartened by two things – namely the indepth reflection of the sessions and succinct summary that John is able to provide so quickly and in such a timely fashion as he goes about his business. On the other hand, I am aware that many of our ‘thought leaders’ and other leaders in education are attending, but focussing on ‘networking’ [playing politics?] without sharing any public reflection of what is happening or what they are thinking as a result of the sessions.

I find this disturbing and frustrating all in one.

I enjoyed George Seimens presentation, but found nothing new to what is already discussed with vigour in the blogosphere. Yet for many delegates his thoughts were challenging, new and exciting. What this tells me is that there should have been a bigger grass-roots representation at the Global Summit – that our educator leaders should have encouraged their practitioners to attend.

What this also tells me is that there are already two levels of global discourse: First, the discourse between the grassroots workers, the doers who are testing and challenging the pedagogy of learning, the ones who will really make the changes happen, and who can be found in the blogosphere in growing numbers. Second the discourse of ‘leaders’ who are in danger of’ talking about’ rather than doing. All the best turn of phrase will not equate to knowing how to create change and how to work with kids, because in not ‘doing’, in not discussing, and not sharing, the leaders are in danger of repeating the errors of their predecessors whom they now reflect upon harshly.

Doug Brown also presented well, but revealed nothing new overall.

It was Leigh Blackall who was young enough to express vehement loathing for education as it stands and as it seems to be still going despite all the best rhetoric. Sometimes it takes challenging statements to confront – though the politics of life will often mean that opinions expressed this way will be be counter-productive.

Doug Brown told us that

  • Learning is personal
  • Connected learners collaborate, create and innovate
  • Successful learners achieve

As learners I hope that the outcomes of this Summit will show that we have achieved something, and the potential possibilities created by this Education.au initiative are great. I have certainly heard many conference delegates declare that this is the best professional event that they have attended in a very long time.

I would agree, but I remain disheartened. I hope we actually look at what this change looks like ‘on the ground’ tomorrow.

Wouldn’t it have been nice to meet and talk with all the thought leaders – it would certainly be a quick way of finding out if the ideas for the manisons of the future are built of stone or straw!

Media change – from cigarettes to the future

From the past to the future…at the Internet Archive. (Early advertising film from the Edison Manufacturing Co.
In his presentation at the Global Summit Leigh Blackall referred to this early media in his eclectic presentation at the Global Summitt. Through images and talk he asked us ‘how can we possibly think that internet isn’t essential to our lives?”.

I’ve used this to show how far we have come in our use of communications technology!

Leigh hammered the ‘cencorship’ filters of the Department of education – or similar approaches. In talking about networked learning – and what we have lost in our teacher training programs – what was most highlighted for Leigh in relation to his teaching experience was the lack of reference to key thinkers such as Ivan Illich in his training program – but known by all ‘baby boomers’. Baby boomers are now in charge, but who talks about Ivan Illich?

Full text of Deschooling Society by Ivan Illich