Cyber safety – Aussie tools and resources

The Austalian Federal Government’s NetAlert website and telephone hotline, where families can download free internet filters and obtain net safety advice, was updated today with some new services.

The hotline, which can be reached at 1800 880 176, started taking calls from 8am.

The provision of content filters is an interesting initiative, but will it work? There is a comparison table of the content filters, so let’s wait to hear the feedback as to how good (or useless) the free internet filters really are. Teachers should be able to provide very good feedback, as we have been grappling with safety issues in schools – for what now seems like ‘forever’.

In the meantime, there are some good online Education programs that can be used by primary or secondary teachers – anywhere in the world really.

CyberNetrix

CyberQuoll

WiseuptoIT

Netty’s World

Blogging across the curriculum

Not to be outdone, students in Year 5 were busy today setting up their various group blogs ….. lots of giggles, ohhhs and demands to get started NOW!

Kate is taking a different approach with her students, setting up a shared blog space for groups working on different topics, such as: Visual Ventures (electricity); Safety First (issues for different scenarios); New Concepts (cool maths problems to try and solve); Riddles & Poems; Religion (World Youth Day – the latest on the cross, and living the message of Jesus).

goodkate.jpg

I wish I could share the looks of wonder and excitement that I saw on these faces in every group. The focus and interest in getting further involved with blogging is interesting to see.

Five Green Specials and all the students blogs are just getting underway, though it will take a few weeks to get these properly underway – as a new teacher is taking over from Kate soon who will be at home with her new baby!

However, the kids in Riddles and more for English already have a couple of podcasts on their blog! Great work kids! I have a feeling that we will see (hear, watch?) beaut things happening on these blogs as the year goes on.

But seriously, we have been able to explore quite a few different dimensions of blogging with Kate’s and Elizabeth’s class. It is great to be able to set up learnerblogs safely using gmail accounts that are an alias of the main account the teacher has set up to manage her classes blogs.

It’s been very rewarding working with Elizabeth and Kate on establishing and expanding blogging ideas for their school – thanks for letting me share in the learning fun πŸ™‚

If you want to set up learnerblogs, and don’t want to let students loose on this using their own email addresses, then simply create an account e.g. myaccount@gmail.com. Then you are ready to create learner blogs with email alias accounts by using the plus (+) sign and name e.g. myaccount+student1@gmail.com; myaccount+student2@gmail.com. All the authorization and management matters related to your students blogs will come to the gmail account that you have set up.

Read Doug Belshaw’s post about 8 things I like about Edublogs (and learnerblogs) to get some ideas if you are new to this. Doug also has a nice way to enter his teacher and student spaces at Mr Belshaw.co.uk– explore further to build your own ideas.

Procedure packs a punch! Cool Year 1!

Language learning is the most critical component of young students learning experiences. Jamie, Co-ordinator of the Literacy and Web 2.0 project, teaches Year 1, and decided to bring Writing Procedures to life!

Jamie

Enter ‘cooking’ and loads of fruit, bread, juice, butter, cinnamon and more! Yikes – so much preparation, and all essential for embedding good understanding of writing procedures.

So today’s work was about using technology tools to enhance literacy learning, and was the culmination of a very busy week. Jamie showed them the steps, carefully engaging the students, so they understood the steps. Then each child was able to navigate the computer, and do their own sequencing and recording. Photos, narration and publishing made Year 1 very happy little people – and this was just their first time!

All the teachers are sharing their digital resources in a number of different ways – wikispaces, podcasting, and videosharing on Teacher Tube, which allows teachers to create their own groups space, and share videos about the topics that the student is working on. The ongoing blend of Web 2.0 tools are important – and these teachers will continue their exploration of many different Web 2.0 tools.

The great thing about the project so far is the diversity of tools, both Mac and PC, that are being used for the first time, and in a co-ordinated fashion across the school. While the students are experiencing different learning opportunities – so are the teachers! Just you keep ‘packing a punch’ Jamie as you keep working with your fabulous team πŸ™‚

You smoke! You die!….for literacy.

year-6.jpg Literacy is still the focus for our project work at Good Shepherd this week – today it was Year 6 using Photostory to consolidate their learning about ‘smoking’.

After doing their research from the Cancer Council about the dangers of smoking, Megan asked the students to create a poster representing a key aspect of these dangers for an anti-smoking advertisment campaign. Students created a storyboard for their work, and were then able to record a supporting statement for each poster. Put these together – and bingo! a podcast of their own about the dangers of smoking. This was all ‘first time’ for these students – and the integration of visual, text and audio literacy skills were the bonus learning experience. Love your work Megan πŸ™‚


That literacy beat really rocks!

We knew it was easy – but our students proved it to us today! It was Matt’s turn to share his class with me as we explored another learning experience with the kids. mattblogpic.jpgYear 4 is working on poetry ….. enjoying poetry now after inspiration from “Matt the Muso”!

Just a couple of weeks ago Matt was introduced to MacBooks, and the musician turned teacher discovered that there really is great scope for (garageband inspired) musical influences in his classroom.

Today his students “met” MacBooks and GarageBand for the first time, and armed with a poem they were ready to take up this muso’s challenge. The students very quickly chose a drum beat for their backing track, recorded their audio track (matching the poem to the beat), and then chose sound effects.

This was just the beginning of their creative experience, and will lead to podcasting and sharing of media files with parents. Great learning …. and what a buzz! Thanks very much Matt πŸ™‚

Here is just one sample to enjoy –

Dolphins


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 πŸ™‚

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.

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 β€œ14 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 β€” 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!

Sydney twitter meetup – be there!

twitter.jpg

For all you twitter fans or “would-be” twitterati! based in Sydney – you need to know that we have a
Sydney Twitter Meetup on Wednesday 25 July at 6.00 pm.

Pier 26 Bar
Pier 26, Aquarium Wharf, Wheat Rd, Darling Harbour
Sydney, New South Wales

More details at Upcoming.

Twitter has created quite a buzz for itself in the first quarter of this year- managing to combine the ease of Instant Messaging and SMS with the reach and scope of social networking services. So what’s all the buzz about?

Twitter: A beginners guide will give you all the information you need, and fill you in on this social networking phenomenon. I don’t think everyone is ready for Twitter – but I have found it a real boon for keeping in touch.

I don’t have a public profile – as I only really want to twitter with people involved with education. All up I have 65 friends – leading educators from around the world as well as in Australia – more than I could hope to keep in touch with using ‘traditional’ methods of communication like email!

“heyjudeonline” (me) is not online all the time – but when I link in I can quickly catch up. I also have the option of sending messages directly to my ‘friends’. I like the zany personal touch that twittering allows. It might be a passing fad – but twittering is part of the evolving shape of online communication – so for now I tweet! I do this online at twitter, or within FaceBook.Β  There is a Sydney Twitter Meetup in Facebook!Β  I’ll have to get myself invited πŸ™‚

I don’t use my mobile to tweet – but I will certainly turn it on for the Sydney twitter meetup!

Why don’t you come and join me?

Australia’s Library Newspaper Archive Project Begins

The National Library of Australia is ready to begin a major undertaking of newspaper digitization. Within the next five years, Australian newspapers printed before 1954 will be available online for free. According to NLA director-general Jan Fullerton, β€œWithin this project, we are planning to digitise one newspaper from each of the capital cities and the territories from the beginning of their time until 1954 which is the copyright cut off.” [Reported in The Age]

[From iLibrarian ]

Graham’s Gatekeepers!

Really…..!!

If you aren’t reading Graham Wegner’s Teaching Generation Z blog – then let me temp you with this cartoon πŸ™‚ posted as GateKeeper’s Inc. Graham’s reflections on learning and teaching are good value reading.