Mobile technology…2020

To tempt you to investigate the Horizon Project, I am going to share this great video by Atif from the International School Dhaka, in Bangladesh. He’s done a great job creating this video to highlight the possible changes and uses of mobile technology in education in the future.

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Digital teaching and multi-tasking via Horizon

I know that many of us are doing it …..joining the digital natives…..but I have just had a really fun hour in the global digital domain doing the following:

  1. judging parts of the Horizon project wiki
  2. judging Horizon project manager videos
  3. listening to a GenTech podcast on copyright and fair use
  4. entering results in the Google docs spreadsheet – right there online for us to share (web 2.0 as platform – remember?)
  5. watching the results drop in from others around the globe
  6. chatting within the Google docs space – using the chat window to collaborate with  colleagues from Melbourne, Dhakka, and Shanghai.

This time, as part of my small role in the Horizon Project, I was specifically looking at the sections on Mobile phones and Massively Multiplayer Educational Gaming.

If you haven’t yet picked up on the tremendous work of the teachers and students involved in this year’s version of the Flat Classroom Project, then take a visit to the Horizon Project Wiki, and see how things are progressing.

ClaimID for OpenID

ClaimID is the free way manage your online identity with OpenID.

No, I haven’t used it, but Michael Habib has! Michael belongs to that wonderful group of new graduates who are going to change the shape of libraries, so it makes sense that he already has a ClaimID.

Michael says: I use ClaimID to manage my online identity. ClaimID is a tool for collecting and annotating links related to me. Mathias Fischer says: ClaimID allows me to present my profile on the net.

Thanks to DoubleSlash for providing a Slideshare that outlines the relationship between OpenID and ClaimID.  Perhaps you will lay your claim?

ClaimID and Open ID raises further issues beyond the last post on OpenID, in relation to   learning, identity, authorship and attribution. This is clearly a developing field – and one that I imagine will intersect (and converge) with copyright and creative commons managment of online materials.  One to watch for the future.

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OpenID – Web [3.0] connections

As we move towards the Semantic Web world of Web 3.0, the question of online identity takes on another dimension. This is the matter of ‘single sign-on’ – something that we are just getting instituted across the network of all our 80 schools. Nice when organisations finally get that sorted.

But what about the Web platform? A feature article from April online journal Ariadne covers OpenID and the ability for a person to have ‘single sign-on’ across multiple OpenID-enabled services.

OpenID: Decentralised Single Sign-on for the Web takes a brief look at OpenID and asks what relevance it has to e-learning.

Proponents of Learning 2.0 and Personal Learning Environments argue that we are going to see far greater use of ‘informal’ Web 2.0 services as part of the delivery of learning in our ‘formal’ learning institutions (schools, colleges, universities, etc.). If we accept this argument, then the use of OpenID is likely to become increasingly important to our learners.

Our learners are likely to want an online identity (or several online identities) that span the different phases of their education and that span the individual institutions within any particular phase.

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Sometimes you have to read to talk!

One of the things that keeps being said is that social networking improves communication, and facilitates ‘being comfortable’ for the millenials. Kids use social networking to help them settle into their teen world. Because of Myspace or Beebo, teenagers can walk into a party, or walk around school and know people beyond their immediate ‘sphere of influence’. Better than vertical streaming of pastoral care groups in schools (used to help students associate with each other by putting kids of different ages together) online social networking can broaden and enable friends and conversation seamlessly and effectively. Those who are reluctant to talk, or who rarely contribute in a classroom setting, find themselves more able to communicate in a digital environment.

Isn’t it interesting that these same effects are observed when learning takes place within a virtual setting, such as Second Life. Students at Suffern Middle School in Second Life are learning how to manage their avatars and how to use this environment as their classroom.

You have to read the discussion to see just how to focus learning in Second Life, and how millenials can successfully communicate in Second Life.

This is an unedited, unabridged log of the discussion held today by the student group who are reading Snow Crash: (Please remember these are 8th grade students!) The remarkable thing is that in a typical classroom setting these kids would never be able to get to the level of thought and focus as they do in SL!

Library Twitter

From Twitter this afternoon, via Stephen Cohen, from Jeff Scott, and on Library2.0. at Ning:::: too amazing for words!

I did it! I was able to take all of the library’s notifications and put them into twitter.

I set up our twitter account at http://twitter.com/cglibrary

Then I dumped all of the library’s rss feeds into http://www.rss2twitter.com

Now everytime the library has an update, a library event, a new book or video, or new newsletter, it goes automatically to twitter. If the content is too long for the message, it automatically creates a tiny url.

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Changing scope of social networking

I can’t begin to keep up with the range of social networking options that are available to me – and you! There is no doubt that the scenario put forward by those two canny journalists, Robin and Matt, back in 2005 with EPIC 2014, and EPIC 2015 is just happening and happening…….

I’ve been catching up on Twitter (should you or shouldn’t you?), playing around with Ning! (which needs a good focus to make it work well …. gosh, I belong to too many networks, and so for my money Ning is now too cumbersome for quick networking. However, I believe that a focused activity in Ning is very good for professional networking and project work).

But to go back to EPIC 2015 for a moment…..then take a look at NingVisualisation, and at Twittervision.

This morning Twitter gave me this; showed me Tumblr in action; and got me to explore Picnik. I got a peep into the lives of my professional colleagues who so readily shared their moments of insight with their friends. I am wondering where this is fitting into the learning needs of our students. The Horizon Project might help us work some of this out.

This cartoon catches bit of what is happening now in social networking 🙂

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Book Reviews: Revish has arrived!

Revish is a book review community site which is to be launched on Friday 30th March 2007.

If you love reading and sharing your reading experiences you’re in the right place!

Revish lets you:

  • Write reviews of any books you read
  • Maintain a reading list and share it with friends
  • Keep a reading journal – look back and see what you were reading at any time
  • Read reviews by other Revish members
  • Create and participate in groups, to discuss books, reading or anything else
  • Use our API and widgets to include your Revish content on your blog or website
  • Receive books with Revish Connect (coming soon)

For more information, listen to Dan Champion founder of Revish in the Talking with Talis podcast about Revish, and how Revish differs from other book sites such as Shelfari and LibraryThing .

Listen Now | Download MP3 [17 mins, 4 Mb]

During the conversation, they refer to the following resources:

[Dan Champion talks with Talis about Revish]

TeacherTube – video in education

Check out TeacherTube. If you want to find out what’s going on in the TeacherTube community, then jump straight across to the TeacherTube blog launched in March. TeacherTube is the YouTube of educators, and recently it launched a channel for student-created videos. You can find loads of resources that have been uploaded by teachers from around the world. techtips.jpg

For instance, the TechTips ScreenCast Episode 5: Collaborative Research provides information on how Del.icio.us social bookmarking has been used for a student research project. The result is a website aggregating the research results of the very best websites on Mesopotamia that students had found, with descriptive phrases added to each bookmarked site.

From Jodie at TeacherTube:

Thanks go out to TeacherTube community member Anne Bubnic (http://abubnic.blogspot.com/) for pointing us to the current research. The following article references are posted on the The California Technology Assistance Project (CTAP) Region IV math project site:

Scientific Research Indicates that Using Video in the Classroom Improves Learning http://www.libraryvideo.com/articles/article18.asp

Using Video in the Classroom – There is substantial research promoting the use of video in the classroom as a dynamic resource for supporting curricula. http://www.libraryvideo.com/articles/article13.asp

Video Goes to School – a 3-part series at http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStory.cfm?ArticleID=5597

KQED – using video effectively – http://www.kqed.org/topics/education/educators/videoclassroom/effective.jsp

Why It Works – a series of papers & research studies from United Streaming. http://www.unitedstreaming.com/home/why.cfm?id=3

The research confirms the power of video in teaching and learning. But TeacherTube users, we want to hear specific examples of how you are using video. Please share your success stories!

Why the world isn’t flat…..isn’t it?

A few hectic weeks…..and a few frustrations later, I can’t help but reflect on the value of our global dialogue in helping us to ‘push’ our thinking in education. As I have mentioned before, the challenges of bringing an aging teacher workforce into 21st century thinking is sometimes overwhelming. Then good things happen, and I know that we are ‘going to make it’.

I have had quite a number of emails from colleagues who attended the presentation at the State Library on ‘2020 vision’. All have been to indicate how excited they were at what they heard, and what each person has been doing to get some Web 2.0 projects underway. I don’t always get an email – but I see activity in my wordpress hits; I see new delicious accounts setup; and I find new blogs linking to HeyJude.

We learn from each other – with a global reach. Just this morning I ‘skyped’ Carol from Fielding Graduate University…and I thank Web 2.0 tools for making this kind of professional exchange possible. I recommend taking a look at her Learning is Chaotic links. Carol has been doing some interesting research, so why not drop by and provide some feedback. I am hoping to link up with Carol and Fielding later in the year.

I am able to learn so much from classroom practitioners in my schools, in Australia, and around the world (I have some favourites in my Heyjude Blogrolls, and others are at Bibliosphere News; and new blogs are appearing everwhere, my most recent discovery being Principal Laffan’s blog Laffan Out Loud) – but right now I am fascinated by the work that Tom Barret is doing at ICT in my Classroom, and really enjoying watching how our students are Making the Most of Web 2.0 with his help. Tom says:

Our ability to connect has obviously greatly improved since the advent of this 2nd evolutionary web. The walls of all our classrooms have begun to tumble and we look further outward, the earth as they say has become flat.

We have had a ‘shakey’ start to the venture – but it is also part of the learning for our teachers. The enthusiasm is more than tangible – I can vouch for the teacher enthusiasm and commitment as I have skyped with Jamie weekends and up to midnight some nights!! (IM on skype is a great way of working into the wee hours, without disturbing family, plus it allows ‘next-gen’ multitasking, as we worked together to solve technical problems!).

What’s equally interesting is the number of times that Heyjude blog has been included as part of an academic program of study – universities here in Australia, Canada, and USA. I see this as exciting because it shows how the world of education IS flattening out – and even if I feel a bit like a ‘travelling roadshow’ at times, I know that I have to keep going.

Mind you, Web 2.0 is not what is important – what is important is the changing understanding of the learning landscape of our students, as well as our own opportunities for professional learning. I know this because my blog tells me that it is not only subscribers from English-speaking countries who are part of the dialogue.

So during the last week I discovered Adam Paszternak’s FIKSZ blog, and his post  Tíz technológia-alapú áramlatról könyvtárosokna which turned out to be Michael Stephen’s Ten Tech trends for Librarians. Here’s Michael’s take on the translation.

I’ve exchanged some Hungarian and English messages with Adam, and joined his Delicious links, and got some fun feedback on some of my shared links 😉 I am particularly enjoying seeing Web 2.0 developments through another language and culture, and seeing how innovation presents the same challenges and opportunities regardless of where we are.

Finally, this small reflection is really a response to a post from John Connell on Why the World isn’t flat. John points to an article by Pankaj Ghemawat, professor of global strategy at IESE Business School, entitled, Why The World Isn’t Flat, and asks for response.

I don’t claim to even begin to understand global economics – but I do claim to understand that I can’t be an effective educator without globalisation of my education work. Geographical boundaries, cultures and economies clearly do impact on what in happening in a locality – but is the global perspective that is driving the philosophical changes education. It is important to realise that we are in the middle of significant change – and just because of this, it can be to easy to say ‘well that won’t happen’. I don’t agree with Pankay Ghemawat, just because I think he is taking a short view of things. He says:

Of course, given that sentiments in these respects have shifted in the past 10 years or so, there is a fair chance that they may shift yet again in the next decade. The point is, it’s not only possible to turn back the clock on globalization-friendly policies, it’s relatively easy to imagine it happening.

For me he presents a narrow view when translated to education – a view locked to economic dialogue, without recognition of the cultural changes that are also affected, and which also create change (what happened to the cold war?).

The Australian Good Weekend Magazine ran an article on Shi Shengrong, an unassuming Chinese/Australian citizen known as ‘the sun king’ of solar energy fame – who is the richest man in China, and director of SunTech in Wuxi, China. It is the intersection of business with social responsibility that interest him most. He is determined to retain his focus on solar power and help solve the world’s polution problems. When asked about the goal of economic development he responds:

Few people answer that it’s about eating poisonous foods and breathing acidic air. But that’s what will happen unless we change course. We need to ask ourselves these questions. That is the real bottom line.

Yep! The world is flat – it’s just a matter of how we look at the matter, what period of time we look at, and the questions we ask that gives us the real bottom line.

In my presentations I talk about the profound changes that have taken place in learning in my lifetime. Now it is my responsibility to help ensure that the changes taking place for our students, at a much faster rate, will be fantastic.