Here comes everybody!

The grand thing about Web 2.0 and social networking is the opportunities for both serendipity and synergy in the process of networking and collaboration.

Today I read with interest Beth Kanter’s (from Cambodia) notes about building your network strategically. Beth is writing an article and threw some thinking up on her Facebook notes. She starts by saying that

Doing “outreach” or adding new friends to your network is a critical part of the work flow. To reap the benefits a using a social networking, you need to build your network, although as some experts say it is a matter of quality, not quantity. You want to avoid random outreach, but remember since outreach can be open-ended and there are opportunities for distractions. Remember to know when to stop.

While Beth is looking at marketing in the non-profit sector her comments were of interest to educators – Vicki Davis (Southern Georgia, our coolcatteacher!) added a note saying

In school we tell everyone,”Never add a friend of a friend, only add people you know,” and many of us are building our network in this way. Aren’t kids who add friends of a friend learning valuable networking skills? It is important to remember this, but also that we are creating a vast disconnect between what we tell students and what is going to make them successful in the future!

So here we had just one of our many dilemmas in education being effectively highlighted and discussed, right in a social networking space, accessible only amongst ‘friends’.

It didn’t stop there. I also had a message from Ken Carroll (Shanghai & Dublin) about the launch of his new blog Ken Carroll on Learning. Here we have Ken, and astute businessman, doing exactly as Beth advises – using friends networks to reflect and share, manage and promote.

I am pleased that Ken shared his new blog link with me, because he has some highly relevant issues for consideration by educators. (Consider adding Ken Carroll on Learning to your RSS reader.)

His post Here Comes Everybody touches on so many issues related to learning – information sharing, communication, gathering, discussion, utilisation etc etc. Yes, Ken, we have all been learning more, faster than we could 5 years ago….that is, if we are immersed in Web 2.0 tools and communication opportunities. As he puts it

every individual now has a voice in the Big Conversation…. the participative web goes way beyond just high-speed access to information. It also enables us to form learning networks that include people, conversations, and information. This is a crucial development that we need to understand.

Like Ken, I also connect with people on my network through blogs, social networks, email, instant messaging and more.

This is what I want to share with my teachers. This is what I want to empower in the learning opportunities for my students. This is what future learning is all about.

Photo: Casa Batllo, My Social Network

CNN enters Second Life

Just as CNN asks its real-life audience to submit I-Reports — user-generated content submitted from cell phones, computers, cameras and other equipment for broadcast and online reports — the network is encouraging residents of Second Life to share their own “SL I-Reports” about events occurring within the virtual world.

CNN citizen journalism everywhere you turn! It is interesting to speculate how many teachers are abreast of citizen journalism trends, and the impact of these types of initiatives.

Read the report or watch this introductory video from CNN.

  • 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 — 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 — 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 of  news delivery for Darfur via Pageflakes.

     

    Photo: Wall Street beauty

    Wepaint wiki – will change the way you collaborate

    Wetpaint wikis have now added fully integrated discussion forums into their wikis – which is already a wonderful wiki product!

    Michael Arrington in a post at Techcrunch explains that they’ve put a lot of thought into the feature set around these message boards. Posts can be tagged, the view expanded/contracted, there are email notifications of new messages, and the search feature works well. Amazingly, any forum thread can also be turned into a wiki with a couple of clicks.

    While the debate continues as to which wiki will now have the share of the Web 2.0 market, when it comes to education use of wikis – this has to put Wetpaint at the front of the pack.

    Read the next post to make sure you grab the wiki loaded with benefits for education, or retro-engineer your current wiki to take advantage of the new offer.

    From iLibrarian.
  • Big juicy Twitter Guide

    Thanks to Caroline Middlebrook  for compiling this great guide.

    She’s included heaps of information and ideas – no excuse now for not understanding Twitter. Even if you don’t use Twitter, you have to stop and take notice of Twitter – because it’s where lots of good educators are sharing – ripping through the global information repository and picking the best just for you and me!

    Big Juicy Twitter Guide

    Ning Facebook face-off?

    You’ve got to love the pace of change…now it’s OpenSocial!

    For those of you who don’t eat, breathe, and sleep web standards, OpenSocial is a new open web API being spearheaded by Google. OpenSocial applications will be able to run easily and reliably inside social networks, and be able to be tailored by the user to create personalisation of their social space.

    Ning already has one-click integration with Facebook automatically on your social network using the Facebook proprietary platform approach.

    Now Ning has released OpenSocial across their now 115,000 social networks. This means that you can enable OpenSocial “Apps” or “Gadgets” on your social network on Ning today!

    So if you are a Network creator, you have the choice to add OpenSocial Gadgets to your network- it is entirely optional. If you don’t choose the OpenSocial Gadget option from the Features page, then your members will not have the option to add OpenSocialOpenSocial Gadgets to their profile page. It’s up to you. If you do decide to enable Gadgets on your network, your members can add any OpenSocial Gadget of their choice to their member profile page.

    Keep up to date with ongoing Ning changes and developments at the Ning Blog.

    I think there is a rumbling in the firmament again! Facebook – hang on!

    Here’s a quick screencast which describes how to get started with OpenSocial Gadgets on your social network right now.

    From Ning Blog. Photo: FaceOff

    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!  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!  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.

  • Make sure you grab the right wikispace or voicethread tool!

    Following on from my last post, I’m just going to pass on an ‘alert’, because I know from some recent workshops that some have missed out on these.

    wikispaces.jpgThinking of creating a wiki? Have you chosen to use Wikispaces? Then make sure that you join up using the K-12 Teacher option, which you will find at the bottom of the wikispace joining page in small print.

    Joining this way provides all the features and benefits that normally cost $50/year – for free. No fine print, no usage limits, no advertising, no catches.

    If you are thinking of using the rather excellent VoiceThread tool, then there is now a good education option here too. The features built into VoiceThread are pretty comprehensive, particularly with the latest version.

    At the bottom of the page, click on About, and then click on Pro on the About page. Here you will find all the pricing for the professional account, and a small line that explains that VoiceThread is offering a special account for K-12 classroom educators, click here for more info.gopro.jpg

    Open your VoiceThread account. Then go to upgrade the account – Go Pro! Be sure to look for K-12 Educators click here! because that will get you the free account.

    Not sure about VoiceThread, and how to use it? Let Chris Betcher explain!

  • More VoiceThread resources at http://del.icio.us/heyjude/voicethread