Real Wired Child

A while ago I had the opportunity to speak to the P&F at our largest high school. The topic was Myspace or Yours: Possibilities and Pitfalls.

Parents wanted to spend time talking about online safety, games, and hacking! Yes, it is true that for some of our students it is hard to provide them with the online and computer challenges that they crave.

I took with me a copy of Real Wired Child by Dr Michael Carr-Gregg. This is a wonderful guide for parents (unfamiliar with the online world) who want to know what their children are doing online, and what they can do to ensure their children’s wellbeing when they venture into cyberspace. Real Wired Child gives practical advice to parents on how they might manage their children’s online communications, social networking, web surfing, downloading and gaming. The truth is that we need to start teaching our students from a young age exactly how to learn, collaborate and share using blogs, wikis and more as part of everyday learning. I love the work of  Al Upton  and his young ‘mini-legends’ – proving that students are never to young to work in a global online world.

Michael Carr-Gregg urges parents to venture into the online world inhabited by their children and get in touch with their day-to-day lives. He explains what kids get up to, provides guidelines for family internet safety and advises how to minimise the risks without limiting your children’s freedom to learn, explore and communicate online. At $19.95 I consider this a bargain. Better still, buy some copies for the library, so parents can borrow a copy. More information available from Penguin.

I prepared a presentation for the evening, to stimulate discussion and thinking about the issues. Thanks to my (online) colleagues Graham Wegner and Sue Waters, whose earlier work provided a basis for this presentation.

Book hacks for the library crowd

This is one that I have been meaning to post about for absolutely ages….thank goodness I was not quick and efficient this time 🙂

Thanks to Paul Reid who took the trouble to email me the link to Hack Attack: 13 Book Hacks for the Library Crowd.

Covers all the obvious things like integrating your public library catalogue into your own computer; online booksellers; notifications for overdue books; building bibliographies; book downloads etc; as well as cheeky things like an ‘invisible bookshelf’!

So my delay in writing gives you the benefit of the additional information included in the comments. Perhaps you have other recommendations to add to the Book Hacks collation to keep this useful compilation alive.

Photo: FlickrCC
  • The whole audio thing…?

    I’m not to sure if I have a need for this, but VozMe beta is a bit of fun. I dropped a bit of “Library and Web2.0” text into VozMe text box – it converted the text to an mp3 audio file, which I could then download, and add to this post.

    You might think of a use for this.

    What I found fun was that I could just drop some text in and create this . I don’t know how long the text can be either. Also, the audio output is not a good as Voki ….. which, last I looked, I couldn’t embed on WordPress!

    The day will come when all of these tools will be more fluent in application. Just keep watching the developments and keep testing the beta tools.

  • The Connected Library – get one now!

    judysuzette.jpgEarlier this week, our network of teacher librarians were able to spend the day with one of Australia’s leading school library practitioners. Fabulous Suzette Boyd from Scotch College has been an inspiration to many of us during our careers, keeping us grounded on quality services, imaginative enterprises, exciting initiatives, and most important of all – customer focused!

    Yes, the kids are what it is all about, and Suzette certainly knows how to manage a school library to achieve the best.

    As Victor explained

    Suzette was indeed different. I would have liked to have spent an entire day listening to her recount many of the things which she has tried over the years – her ideas are innovative, creative and above all real-world.

    During the course of our day we looked at Suzette’s key points:

    • building connections and trust with students
    • communicating with and enlisting the support of all users
    • being positive, upbeat and enthusiastic
    • marketing and promoting the library through an extraordinary array of ideas and activities
    • influencing the Principal
    • becoming the cultural and educational hub of the school.

    The best news of all is that Suzette’s inspiration is no longer a secret. She is sharing her vision with us all through her book The Connected Library: A handbook for engaging users.

    John Marsden says

    The Connected Library is a flight manual for librarians

    Marita Thomson says

    Slim enough to be manageable in these days of information overload, I found this book affirmed many of my current practices but more importantly inspired me to reach a bit further. There are first all those things I always meant to do but didn’t quite get to and then the more difficult area of taking a few risks. I think what is obvious or correct or a risk will vary from one library to another, but Suzette’s book is an excellent place to find your next project.

    In recent times librarians in schools have come to be considered technology experts, curriculum leaders, literature gurus, web masters and providers of on-line information and professional development. They are also expected to be human dynamos, with energy to burn, to have a huge capacity to absorb new information, to have the imagination to deliver exciting new programs, whilst at the same time having the ability to maintain an efficient and relevant library service.

    Suzette Boyd believes this is probably still not enough and that the level of engagement with users is the real measure of success!

    This book is good reading and very manageable. Go on, order it today, or borrow a copy. Your local public library will probably buy it if you ask.

    E-Learning07 – Connected Keynote panel ‘in-world’ today!

    Come join some of the worlds best for “Cooking up a Storm in Education” the e-Learning07 Connected Keynote Panel – ‘in world’. Barbara Dieu will be leading the panel discussion at this Sydney conference, Friday November 2.

    The menu?

    Appetizers – Food for Thought: Challenges and opportunities social tools bring to learners and educators, our cultural and social heritage, exposure and access, local and international communities of practice, formal and informal learning, knowledge building and transmission.

    Main dish – Meat and a Hot Potato: Traditional classroom delivery and e-learning/institutional barriers and educators’ resistance.

    Dessert – To Make Your Mouth Water: Creativity, openness, interaction and sustainable partnerships.

    Come along, join in some fascinating discussions with the cream of the crop guests :
    Josie Fraser, Alan Levine, Nancy White, Dave Pollard.

    To join us, simply Teleport to the Island of jokaydia.

    The Connected Keynote Session will be held from 12:00pm – 2:30pm AEST Time. Click here to check your local time.

    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 on  Blogging the and now – student and teacher two years ago, and today!  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

    Dispatches from Downunder – catching up with Alan

    Saturday has an exciting edge to it for me. Alan Levine has finally made it back to Sydney on his travelling tour Australia, which he has been documenting in his flipped version of his blog at CogDogRoo!

    Alan is an inspiration to many of us, so if you haven’t added his blog to your RSS feeds, then you’d better catch up now! CogDogBlog is Alan’s place to bark about cool technology, web X.0 hype, weird web sites, photography, and other targets big and small.

    This is my chance to say thanks Alan! Thanks mate!

    Alan is a pretty important guy really 🙂 as Director, Technology Resources and Member Services of the New Media Consortium (NMC) as well as the Vice President Community and CTO with an international group of colleagues. In Second Life everyone knows he’s a dog (CDB Barkley)!

    I met Alan recently ‘in world’ during a NSW Learnscope seminar being hosted on Jokaydia Island (where I have the good fortune to regularly meet educators from Australia to talk the good talk). In fact we had a good gathering at HeyJude Hall last night (that’s my place in Jokaydia and I’m Heyjude Jenns ‘in world’). Thanks to Sue Waters (Ruby Imako) for managing all the introductions! Phew!).

    I was so excited by the whole ‘in world’ seminar that I didn’t stop to talk or ask questions. Today its different. A bunch of us are meeting up with Alan for shopping, movie and dinner – somehow I think we’ll all be barking furiously for a piece of the action.

  • Later: From left to right – Angela, Judy, Alan, Westley and Lynnette.
  • YouTube Australia

    Lots of partying, lots of stupid stuff, lots of weird videos about the launch . but hey! the future just keeps rolling on…’cause we now have YouTube Australia, launched on October 23.

    For locally generated and shared videos, this is claimed to help us with our viewing speed – because we won’t have to channel back through the small pipe to the US.

    True? I don’t know. It will be interesting to see how this goes. I just wish we didn’t have such poor bandwith in Australia.

    How will they connect the countries together – like eBay? Yes, you can choose from the dropdown menu to choose the country to search. And yes, you can do a global search too.

    How much stuff is there being stored on all those video servers – can you believe it? Just in time to fill our ipods with more stuff…..

    Photo: iPod 3rd Generation

    “Know How” focus on Flickr

    Don’t usually do this, but I would like to draw your attention to an article in the November issue of Netguide (Australia), which has an excellent ‘how to’ article “Share photos online with Flickr“.

    Very comprehensive, very user friendly guide – great for teachers new to the tool who will easily see the educational connection after reading this clear article.

    Links Flickr to blogging, which is an extra bonus compared to the usual ‘do this and then do that’ kind of guide.

    By the way, Netguide is quite inexpensive to subscribe to – a good recommended read if you are not a ‘techie’ but want to stay in touch with technology!

    More information on Flickr at:

    http://del.icio.us/heyjude/flickr

    http://judyoconnell.wordpress.com/tools/ 

    Digital kids – learning their own way

    Michael Furdyk hit the mark, during the last morning keynote presentation at the ACEL/ASCD conference.

    Here we had (at last!) a clear articulation of the new expectations that are driving the learning characteristics of our students: multiprocessing; multimedia literacy; discovery-based learning; bias towards action; staying connected; zero tolerance for delays; consumer/creator blurring; social networking.

    Michael was supported by his own school to take time off during his school schedule to work on his own company! Would you do this?

    The opportunity for creativity and innovation was central to Michael’s life, starting right there at school. We need to allow students to grab opportunities, connect them with organisations in all fields that will support their keen need to explore and learn – it’s about a positive supportive learning community!

    Michael’s company was instrumental in creating ‘social networking for social good’ at Taking iTGlobal- Inspire, Involve, Inform, providing a window into another world. Using the familiarity of social networking, this site helps students develop an awareness and understanding of global issues and ‘take action’ through projects and collaboration. Explore this – it’s brilliant!

    Photo: Window into another world