Giveaway of the day

Thanks to the Edublog awards and the worldwide ‘cross-posting’ about this event, I have discovered a great new-to-me blog and a great new-to-me blog-based advertising initiative – with benefits for us all.

Reid Kerr College Library ….is much more than just books… online journals, ebooks, websites…video, sound, did I mention e-books? …..doing the searching so you don’t have to!!! A great site making use of Joomla (I will have to look into this!) and lots of social-networking tools. I’m always on the look-out for exciting libraries like this one! Many tools in action – blogging, wiki, delicious, LibraryThing and more. Check out their NewsBlast provided via Pageflakes.

I love the audacity of the e-mission for NewsBlast information services:

All I am trying to do here is draw together many strands of what should be interesting information (we are educationalists, after all) in one easily accessible website which consists of a mere 4 pages. If you don’t think this is useful, fair enough! Build your own.
It’s called Current Awareness. Try it sometime.

See what I mean? Great work from Reid Kerr College Library!

I discovered them via their blog arKIve where they ‘ain’t too proud to blog’.

I discovered one of their new-to-me resources, Giveaway of the Day. What a great way for software publishers to distribute great software in a new, and what’s also important, legal way! New software featured each day – and available for download for 24 hours – I have downloaded the current offering!

Now and then you will find great things to use for your yourself, your school or your library!

For now I have added a widget to the sidebar here because it highlights the current Giveaway of the Day. You can also add this service to your RSS feeds, and be ready to grab a bargain whenever you spot one that’s interesting for yourself.

  • International Edublog Awards 2007 Finalists

    This year we see another fabulous line-up in the annual Edublog Awards.

    I am genuinely amazed and proud to find this blog nominated for Best Librarian blog – special thanks to those who considered Heyjude worthwhile for the honour!!

    The wonderful thing about the annual Edublog Awards is the opportunity to share our finds, celebrate our work, and discover the wonderful new people who have joined us in the world of blogs and wikis.

    As my super online friend (and multiple nominee) Sue Waters said

    While it is really nice to be nominated we need to remember the best aspects of the awards is it creates a fabulous resource for educators to use for ideas on how social software is used in different contexts, with a range of different learners; which means we are introduced to new sites that we might not have found if not for the awards process.

    Please take the time to visit the web sites of the Edublogs Award Finalists, explore the resources, do some voting, and perhaps add some excellent educational blogs to your feed reader.

    It’s great to see Best Library/Librarian listed amongst the award categories. In schools we work hard to promote the role that Teacher Librarians/Librarians/Media Specialists have to play in 21st century learning. Our work is vital (critical even!) yet not always acknowledged for being central in each of our student’s lives.

    I’m a teacher and I’m a librarian. That’s special – and what makes Heyjude special for me is that I know that the audience is strongly drawn from teachers and librarians alike – all interested in 21st century learning issues. Teacher Librarians are very special people πŸ™‚ and we all have to work hard together to makes sure that we keep good school libraries in our Australian schools.

    If you are keen to help the promotion efforts, take a visit to The Hub – the campaign blog for quality school libraries in Australia!

    The best Award innovation this year?

    The winners will be announced at the Award ceremony which will be held in Second Life on Saturday December 8. Cool!

    Congratulations to all the nominees !!!!! It’s a stunning lineup of great people.

    Happy voting – and thanks to all the work by James Farmer and Josie Fraser behind the scenes. πŸ™‚

    Photo: Special
  • The 21st century educator …. and professional practice

    This is a really nice thought-provoking presentation from Kim Cofino called The 21st Century Educator: Embracing Web 2.0 in your Professional Practice.
    I think this presentation is worth highlighting on it’s own.

    I won’t be at the conference – but I can almost hear what Kim will be saying about personal learning networks πŸ™‚ Thanks for sharing Kim!

  • News or knowledge curator?

    I’ve been reading a bit about how news organizations are having to define the role of editor in the 21st century, i.e. Editor 2.0.

    This is a significant shift – one that we in education need to take note of! It’s important because it goes beyond plugging in some web 2.0 tools, like blogging. If the world is awash with information, is being filled with blogs and other media that help keep people informed, and is being enveloped by online social networking as the community ‘glue’ that binds people together (admitedly we are now not talking about the average educator) then newspapers needed to do more than just go online (which all significant papers have done) , and then add some widgets and gadgets.

    Having worked as a ‘subbie’ for the Medical Journal of Australia many moons ago, I can only begin to gasp at the changes taking place in media reporting. Imagine being a ‘search’ or ‘tag’ editor!

    Scott Harp gives a good run-down of The Editor as Curator of ALL the news on the web. But one of the most radical shifts taking place is that editors are now being asked to curate OTHER news organization’s content in addition to their own.

    Scott explains further that Media is now about distributing the BEST content β€” and the New York Times has embraced this new reality with the launch of its new technology section, which incorporates third-party headlines surfaced by Blogrunner (which the Times acquired very quietly last year β€” and which uses a TechMeme-like algorithm based on link patterns) and then selected with input from Times editors.

    Now all of this is amazing, the more so when I think about how teachers in schools normally undertake ‘media studies‘ with students. The idea of blended aggregation sitting beside what is now ‘traditional’ reporting is (I’m tipping) a very new concept and not included in mainstream/core curriculum.

    So really, we teachers need to pick up the pace somewhat – so that we can operate rather like the Times editors, if we are to be knowledge AND news curators for our students.

    We need to read, gather, create, and deliver news and information far more creatively, as well as to teach the students to recognize what changes are happening in media reporting.

    To help you think about it, drop on over to Will Richardson’s nice example of what a teacher (or student) can do, in his nice example ofΒ  news delivery for Darfur via Pageflakes.

     

    Photo: Wall Street beauty

    Tumblr – new features are ready!

    Since I last wrote about Tumblr Write your thoughts….or stream that news! there has been a new version released.

    A write-up of the new features of Tumblr 3.0 at Read/Write web explains that it includes over 400 new features, fixes, and improvements. Beyond fixes, the features seem to cluster around four important themes for this release:

    • Supporting Audio Posts
    • Upgrades to Video Posting
    • Private Communication: Channels
    • Easier Integration Points (APIs)

    Looking good!

  • Understanding why we Twitter

    This may be the first research study of Twitter – the Microblogging phenomenon…

    Why We Twitter: Understanding Microblogging Usage and Communities is part of the Proceedings of the Joint 9th WEBKDD and 1st SNA-KDD Workshop 2007 and available for download.

    Conclusions?

    The Popularity of Micro-blogging (i.e.Twitter) is due to the combined benefits of
    –Light-weight blogging
    –and the ability to share information in the social network.

    The Main user-intentions for using Twitter are
    –Information sharing
    –Information seeking
    –Friendship
    –Users generated content includes:Status updates, daily chatter, sharing links/News, etc.

    Posting Frequency vs. Number of Followers

  • x

    Edublog Awards

    Welcome to the Eddies!Β  The “Eddie” awards are in their fourth year, and they are now accepting nominations for 2007 in a variety of educational blog and related categories–including social networking! So this is a good time to nominate someone (or yourself!) in a category.

    Nominations are open until the 21st of November, and then there will be a voting period. The Edublog Awards 2006 Winners were a good bunch. Now it’s time to see how things go in 2007!Β  Voting is part of the fun each year of celebrating just how far we have come together in the Blogosphere.

    The nomination site is http://edublogawards.com/2007/2007-nominations.

    Steve Hargadon has also started a forum thread in Classroom 2.0 for those who want to talk about their favorite sites while all of this is going on.

    Go on, give it a go! Subscribe to the news feed or email notification to stay in touch.

  • Let me tell you about Ning! and the new bonus!

    The big news from Ning! is that it is offering Ad-free student networks. This is a real boon.

    I like Ning very much for the robust social networking it provides – it’s excellent for good discussion and group sharing, ideal for new users to social networking, and especially good for specific global projects like the Flat Classroom project, or for your own school-based projects or staff space.

    But I have been avoiding ‘marketing’ it in my schools because of the advertisments.

    No longer!

    Steve Hargadon writes about the new look Ning! – and how current education users can request to have advertising removed. As a member of the FlatClassroom Project, Classroom 2.0, The Global Education Collaborative, Library 2.0, NextGen Teachers, School 2.0, Stop Cyberbullying, Edublogger World, and lots more. I’m not active really, just drop by sometimes – unless the group is project-based such as The Horizon Project and the Flat Classroom Project.classroom-20.jpg

    I especially like the way we can use Ning! to introduce groups of new teachers to the world of robust social networking – sharing information, ideas, videos, movies etc, as well as having a personal space to run a bit of a blog (for those who haven’t got time to ‘go it alone’), a way to discuss and ask questions through the forum….and more!

    Now it’s time for more people to have a go! Go on, start by joining a group – I have found another that needs my attention – Ning in Education! Time for me to schedule a workshop!

    What I would like is a better way of integrating all my groups FaceBook style! API anyone?

  • Open or closed learning for our teachers

    You know, it is interesting to see how online social networking and use of tools has developed this year in education. Somehow we seem to be reaching a kind of critical mass (at least in my schools) where Web 2.0 tools are not new in concept, even if they are new in practice.

    Sue waters writes a good reflection on ownership and online communities. You may like to add your comments to the debate over there.

    It’s what the game is all about in schools – getting ownership from teachers! That is the hardest part of all, and the game plan for increasing ownership is not necessarily clear given the continued emergence of new tools online. It’s in the doing that we discover what is possible – no amount of talking will explain social networking and web 2.0 learning.

    What I am amazed at is that I am actually getting calls from school principals asking that I provide some Web 2.0 training to their teachers. What I also know is that this is just an entry point – and that 2 hours of training in blogging will only launch 2 out of 10 people on the journey. But you have to start, and the reality is that some teachers need to have assistance every step of the way because they are digital immigrants, and there is nothing intuitive about web 2.0 for many of them. This is not bad, it is just how it is. Others, of course, need no training – they are the gems in our schools and their praises should be sung far and wide.

    I am particularly pleased to see universities introducing e-learning in all its Web 2.0 forms for trainee teachers. I’ve watched some interesting developments this year as students from all sorts of places have ‘studied’ HeyJude. In fact, right now, I’m getting blog hits for ‘the essay’ in one of the courses.

    But there is one BIG concern I have about all this, whether in schools, or in degree courses training future teachers.

    There is a particular depth to Web 2.0 that takes time, and thought – and training for many – that we are not acknowledging, or providing sufficient support for. Those fantastic educators in my blogroll (especially the teachers) are great examples of those who have ‘done it alone’. Those Principals who blog, and who encourage their teachers to reach out to Web 2.0 as platform are (for me) the real innovators in our schools.

    Because we are working with digital natives, the whole idea that we can ask them to show us what to do is also incorrect – peer networking and social networking is not the same thing as learning in a social online environment. That’s our job to figure out!

    I would like to see a concerted level of support for my teachers. I would like to see more than experimentation in the training of new teachers. Too much of what we do ‘entry level’ and as such is NOT meeting the needs of our learners. The pace is quickening – for sure. Just because Web 2.0 is “out there” doesn’t mean for a minute that it will move easily and transparently into our classrooms.

    If you are not convinced that teachers and students are on a learning journey with Web 2.0, then check out the reflection from Jo McLeay onΒ  Blogging the and now – student and teacher two years ago, and today!Β  Heck, when Jo was doing this first time around, I hardly even knew that blogs existed. Embarrassing 😦

    Check out what Dean has to say about his students who HAVE been blogging. (Dean is a great model and mentor for his students working with current and cutting edge technology) These boy’s blogs helped them to win an IT traineeship amongst fierce competition. Well done fellas!

    What we need is a transparent, inspirational, and open strategy…to embed Web 2.0 transformation into learning.

    Photos: Open, Closed

    Hitting the lists again!

    This is cool! ….. while it lasts πŸ™‚

    My friend Kathryn Greenhill makes the Top 50 Australian Women’s Blogs list too with her blog Librarians Matter.

    There are others that are missing – get in touch and make an impact with education and library blogs!