Inspirational Teenager

Listening to Daniel Brusilovsky , just 14, is for sure a reality check for any teachers hesitating to adopt Web 2.0.  Daniel works in IT, and has his own blog and podcast show. I love that Daniel talks so favouribly about Twitter – because I picked up the information about this podcast right from a post by Scobleizer on Twitter! Good one Daniel!

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Bebo helps student bloggers!

liz.jpgWorking with Elizabeth and Year 6 students at Good Shepherd Primary, I spent the day helping with the configuration of a Student Edublog for each of her students. We did this in small groups, and asked students to do their Procedural Writing as we went through the process. As a result of their writing, these Year 6 students will be able to ‘teach’ Year 6 students in another class how to do these same steps.

This is just the beginning of the adventure for these students – and later in the year we hope to see good critical reflection and ongoing engagement with personal learning. Elizabeth said “It was fantastic to see that every student could actively participate in this new learning project, and no-one was left behind”. Some of the girls were very excited. Some were quiet and concentrated hard on this new learning experience. The boys were somewhere in-between.

What was particularly interesting to us was the numbers of students who are already active users of Bebo! and who are able to bring their social networking experiences into this new learning environment.

These students have been approached to run a workshop with the Principal, AP, and the School Councillor, to teach them how to ‘get into blogging’! Fantastic work kids 🙂

Thanks very much Elizabeth for the opportunity to learn right alongside you and your students. What we are doing will help many others in our schools.

I think bloggers don’t read….Cult of the Amateur

From the Guardian Unlimited comes a write-up by Tim Dowling about Andrew Keen, the man who says the internet is populated by second-rate amateurs – and that it is swiftly destroying our culture.

Denizens of the cyberswamp? A million monkeys at a million typewriters? Misplaced faith in the integrity of the amateur – the citizen journalist, the self-published author, the mash-up musician?

To my mind Wikipedia is not wise,” says Keen. “It’s dumb. Not necessarily because all its contributors are dumb, but because if you don’t have an editor in charge, and you don’t have singular voices, then the intellectual quality of what the crowd produces is very low.

Dowling says that Keen’s argument strikes a chord with certain professions, particularly librarians, editors and educators  (oh, that’s my group!). Keen’s critics, on the other hand, see him as defending a largely abandoned redoubt: old media, with its outmoded “gatekeepers” and structural hierarchies.

Read the article and catch up with the criticism.

The Book: The Cult of the Amateur, with the no-messing-about subtitle “How Today’s Internet is Killing Our Culture and Assaulting Our Economy”.

A blogging journey

With the tremendous growth in blogging and social networking in 2007 it is always great to acknowledge the quiet achievers – bloggers who have followed the “clarion call” to 21st century-style knowledge sharing long before newbies like myself started blogging.

So I was happy to see A Blogging Journey, written by Marita, as part of her presentation to her new network of Teacher Librarians. Marita has left my system of schools, to join another group in the northern part of Sydney. Our loss, their gain!

Maybe it’s time for more people to share their journey – not the famous ones, but the ones who always make a different where it counts – right there in their own school! Thanks very much Marita. 🙂

Facebook – friend or foe?

Facebook has announced that it has hit 30 million active users. Unlike MySpace, Facebook doesn’t pad its numbers with dead accounts: these people log in at least once a month. As you can see by extending the graph below, the number of active users has doubled since the start of the year.

We also have a battle of the DIY networks – for example, Richard McManus tells us that Ning is one that has a higher profile than others described – and this network tool is one that is very popular with teachers.

My problem right now is that I have too many networks! Is this part of why Facebook is taking off? …….. the fact that there are more and more applications that can be plugged into Facebook saving me from acting like a jumping bean?

I’m not yet sold on Facebook – but on the other hand I am pretty tired of skipping from one NIng network to another – and overwhelmed by the fact that I could actually be writing what amounts to a blog on each of my networks. Chills the spine.

I think that Ning is better exploited on specific projects with specific groups and not as a worldwide collaboration platform. But Ning is evolving and fantastic things keep being added. Will we find a Ning IN Facebook eventually, or is there another [r]evolution around the corner? driven by API and widget developments.

We’re told that a major development in the history of widgets occured just this week; the W3C published a draft of the first widget specification. The goal of this effort is to standardize how widgets are scripted, digitally signed, secured, packaged and deployed in a way that is device independent, follows W3C principles, and is as inter-operable as possible with existing market-leading user agents on which widgets are run.

The rise of widgets was caused by several factors including the adoption of RSS, the expansion of the blogosphere, growth of social networks, fashion of self-expression and the democratization of the web at large. I think that “Widgets-R-Us”!!

Read more on the topic at the Evolution of Web Widgets.

Virtual communities as a canvas of Educational Reform

Some recent online reads have prompted me to write about learning within our ‘shape-shifting’ technologically driven world. If you are new to blogs and online tools, let me tell you that there is a lot happening – but don’t let that put you off getting involved.

There are many different perspectives to put on online social networking and it is important to know where one is coming from when talking about social networking and youth. The perspective(s) one has will be very different whether one is a parent with a teenage daughter on MySpace, a marketing executive interested in the target group “14 to 20,” a journalist looking for the next big news story on young people and new media, a youngster using a social networking site as part of everyday life or a researcher investigating how young people are using social networking sites.

35Perspectives on Online Social Networking provides a different (broader) exposition of online networking. Here we have an excellent overview that helps me to see the matrix of inter-relationships between sectors or groups. That, after all, is what our real world is – and online virtual interactions are no different. Don’t let me forget that.

So that was what WOW2 was a bit about – educators in one countryexploring education ‘downunder’. I have to thank the WOW2 team for the fabulous opportunity to take part in the WOW2 EdTechTalk recently. It was pretty cool chatting to my aussie mates Graham Wegner and Jo McLeay. But I also ‘met’ Jason Hando, who (rather surprisingly) is in Sydney, doing great things as well. No excuses for us not keeping in touch are there?

Actually I think that what Sheryl wrote in Virtual Communities as a Canvas of Educational Reform is a ‘must read’ for school leadership teams working on capacity building and educational reform. She says:

The way I see it, social networking tools have the potential to bring enormous leverage to teachers at relatively little cost — intellectual leverage, social leverage, media leverage, and most important, political leverage. And while most of us reading this post can name educators across the globe that are using these tools as windows from their classrooms to share ideas and develop their own personal learning environments, the sad truth is that most aren’t. The burning question in most of our minds is how can we accelerate the adoption and full integration of 21st Century teaching and learning strategies in schools today?

Creating virtual communities that function effectively within and beyond our schools IS a significant challenge.

Our system of schools has been actively exploring these options in 2007 (fabulous!) – and we are definitely learning from the experience. We began the year by formally launching a blogging strategy. Unfortunately we didn’t address some of the important questions that Sheryll raised, and as a result our first effort at system-wide blogging ‘came a cropper’. Well, not totally, but it was no surprise really as some of the vital ingredients of social collaboration were missed starting with the first important point – who is blogging and why?

The best blogs are social – and we missed that point – and are platforms where discussion blooms. Blogs in this context of collaboration can’t be the stuff of soapbox but must be the stuff of open-ended conversation – and that means writing as well as commenting.

I like the fact that we continue to try to figure out what sort of virtual communities will work for us. We’re game for the challenge, and won’t let disappointment stop us from pursuing educational innovation and reform.

Now we have a new strategy to experiment with. The start of Term 3 saw the official launch of the ‘Learning Common’ blog – open to all teachers to write, comment, collaborate, and share the ups and downs of teaching life. We have merged a number of blogs into one, and opened up the option to be a writer to anyone in any school. Will this work?

Richard McManus covers some important things about blogging within the context of virtual communities asking Is Blogging Dead? Gosh, we are just starting with blogging, so I don’t think our teachers will be abandoning our new blog for something else. But, Richard says

It’s hard to get discussions going on a blog, but the blogs that at least attempt it and actually write for their readers — these blogs are the most compelling in my view.

I agree that this is at the heart of the matter. Let’s hope we can make the blog compelling reading – a place that people really want to be to share their ideas. So let’s see what happens. We’re pretty keen on blogging, and many of us blog!!!

We just haven’t cracked the whole virtual community thing yet, but I think we’ll get there.

It’s all about spheres of influence. This graphic says a lot, and is easily adapted to provide us the guidelines for successful blogging – that builds capacity as part of our educational reform!

Yet another widget – It’s my news.

Thanks to Media Cafe Polska for alerting me to a neat New Widget Its My News – that thinking laterally, could be an interesting addition to various school blogs, media studies units, literacy units etc.

You can easily select from among 50,000 media sources – newspapers, magazines, blogs, TV and radio, and more – and build your ItsMyNews page, which updates automatically for you, all day, every day. We’ve collected news from all the popular topics in every format: text, photo, sound, and video.

Krzysztof has a good set from ItsMyNews on display at his post on the topic, and has inserted some in the sidebar of his blog. He was also online in Twitter as I was writing this post – BUT I can’t read polish. What a pity!

nyt.jpg

You’ll find me as heyjudeonline in Twitter or Judy O’Connell

in Facebook.

Bloglines – it’s not just the image wall that sucks!

The blogosphere before your eyes?

Bloglines Image Wall is considered by some to be pretty interesting.

Here’s the deal. Bloglines indexes zillions of pages every hour — and just as many images. The Bloglines Image Wall picks up these images as they come in and places them into a constantly updated grid.

You’ll never see the Wall the same way twice – in fact, it changes right before your eyes. Curious, funny, challenging, good, bad, and ugly – it’s all there. The variety alone is fascinating.

Much has been written about this since the release, and adjustments have been made by Bloglines in response to concerns from educators and librarians. Yes, we can now block the image wall URL.

But here’s the rub – that’s not all there is to worry about!

One of the factors in social networking is being able to share! Somehow this was touted as a fair reason to have an Image Wall.  There are some things I never want to share – and the complaints to Bloglines makes it clear that I am not alone in this.

Bloglines, as you know, allows you to have a public profile – others can see what you have in your RSS feeds. As an educator I thought this yet another good example of professional collaboration. In fact, at times I have checked other’s feeds to see what I have missed and what I should subscribe too – a function that Bloglines allows you to do easily.

Here I was happily checking out everything in a subscriber’s folders – his school, his lovel family, concerts, professional readings etc – and then I struck the smut – big time! Should an educator have this stuff in a public place where teachers and students can access it. NEVER. (Fortunately I have been able to block this subscriber from view in my public bloglines account).

What concerned me was that I had a subscriber with that sort of content – porn is considered inappropriate to be housed in the folders of a teacher’s computer – shouldn’t the same guidelines apply online?

So in relation to management strategies in school with Image Wall, Barry Schwartz said is already:

To be fair, you have to agree before entering to “The Image Wall is comprised of dynamically generated images from user feeds and may contain material of an explicit sexual nature or other adult content.” And you must say you are over 18. OK, now what elementary or high school student using bloglines won’t click the agree button?

Like everyone else, I will have to think of moving soon.

In the meantime, please, if you are an educator who’s also into porn, DO NOT make your bloglines subscription public.

Blogging 2.0

My name is Ian Delaney. I’m a journalist based in London. I’m the editor of NMK, a site about making the most of the Internet. I used to be the editor of a magazine called ICT for Education. And then before that I used to edit What Laptop, and before that I was a teacher.

I think that’s why I was interested to read Ian’s take on Blogging 2.0! Not a post about pedagogy, but a post that summarises a few trends and ideas, and helps me connect my educational work with the blogging world at large.

Gaming for learning – and the young

Anshul Samar is a 13-year old founder and CEO of Elementeo, a company operating in the field of education.

Enter the chemical battlefield with Elementeo, a game of chemistry. Two strong wills fighting against each other in a midst of an epic chemical battle, constantly trying to reduce their opponent’s IQ to ZERO. Armed with their arsenal of elements, compounds, and nuclear reactions, these chemists strive to create, combat, and conquer the world!

Teemu Arina says

Isn’t that exiting. One more young CEO who thinks the educational system is not doing an adequate job and decides to fix things himself. Reminds of myself when I was 16 but Anshul beats me by 3 years.

I recommend a read of Tarina, Teemu’s blog. He is partner and CEO at Dicole Oy, a company focusing on understanding the role of social technologies in knowledge work and networked learning in organizations.

Who are you teaching today that is really a CEO in school uniform?