Will Richardson and the Why 2 of Web 2.0

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You’ll excuse me if I get excited by the news that Will Richardson is going to be here in Australia later this year to share his professional wisdom with us all.

Thanks to Sybasigns, who run some excellent professional learning seminars for us here insyba.jpg Australia, Will will be presenting two seminars: Brisbane 7th May and Sydney 9th May.

For more information and to register visit The Why 2 of Web 2.0: How it transforms everything!

Join their online seminar Ning The Why 2 of Web 2.0!

If you like, grab a copy of the 4 page flyer The Why 2 of Web 2.0 right here!

Oh, and I am thrilled to be sharing both events with Will, by participating in the seminar along with my friend and colleague Westley Field from MLC school in Sydney. I’m also really looking forward to meeting and listening to Christine MacKenzie from Yarra Plenty Regional Library in Melbourne.

If you’re a blogger – you’ve got to come along to a seminar! One spare bed at my place for a Sydney visitor 🙂

  • Playing with text widgets in wordpress

    Sue Waters has been having fun getting ideas on widgets and helping bloggers using edublogs via the new blog The Edublogger.

    I have used WordPress.com as my preferred blogging platform, though I also use blogger from time to time. But for classroom use, I have always preferred to use edublogs.org (another wordpress system), because of its various options for use at schools for students, teachers, or for whole campus.

    I’ve provided all sorts of support to people with blogging over the last two years, and so have learnt a few tips and tricks along the way.

    Sue has asked us to share these with the edublogs community, via our own blogs. So here is one that I used for my super(woman) friend Danni Miller at her blog The Butterfly Effect – an inspiration to girls and women here in Australia. Danni’s blog was nominated for Best New Blog in 2007. I’ve been honoured to provide consultant support to this fabulous dynamo and advocate for girls and women!

    Danni particularly wanted to be able to promote her various ideas and resources to her readers. Of course Vodpod took care of her video recommendations. Library Thing was the ideal choice for her book recommendations.

    Here’s the code that I used to display a random selection of books from her Library Thing Book Collection as it appears on her blog The Butterfly Effect. This is placed into a text box in your widget tools and can be used in WordPress or Edublogs. I have substituted words in square brackets to indicate where you will need to insert your own links or LibraryThing profile name.

    <a href=”//www. [insert the rest of your LibraryThing URL (don’t put http:)]“><img src=”http://[for an image you would like to show permanently to promote your collection insert the rest of the image URL]“>
    <a href=”http://www.[insert the rest of your LibraryThingURL]“>
    <img src=”http://www.librarything.com/gwidget/widget.php?view=
    [the name of your LibraryThing profile]
    &&width=170&lheight=11;type=random&num=8&hbold=1&ac
    =ac8834&tc=000000&bc=EEEEFF&fsize=8″>
    </a>

    Clicking on either the image or the random selection of books being displayed will take your readers directly to your Library Thing account.

    Enjoy!

    Oh, and if you need consultant support in your organisation or school for introducing, establishing or using blogging I just might be able to help you out too! 🙂

    New Year Honour – OBE

    I’m excited at being able to congratulate my friend and colleague Kathy Lemaire for her outstanding achievement in earning one of the great awards in the UK which honours personal and professional contributions to society!

    Kathy Lemaire, the Chief Executive of the School Library Association in the UK has been awarded an OBE in the Queen’s New Year Honours List for services to education.

    Kathy has been at SLA since 1997, and was previously Principal Librarian for the Oxfordshire Schools Library Service.

    On hearing of the award Kathy said

    I consider this honour really to be an acknowledgement of the work of the SLA and the importance of school libraries rather than a purely personal one, so it is for all of those hardworking school librarians at the sharp end too!

    I have worked (and played) with Kathy as a member of the Executive of the International Association of School Librarianship. I also had the wonderful opportunity to meet many of the hard working and enthusiastic librarians in the UK when I attended and presented a session at their annual weekend conference held in Bath, UK : 23-25 June, 2006.

    Kathy has always been a gentle, kind, and professionally strong quiet achiever, putting the interests of school libraries and her association first in all her endeavours. A wonderful acknowledgement of her career. Congratulations Kathy.

    So work and play combine in the picture below – a glorious evening cruise in Lisbon, Portugal, as part of the IASL annual conference in 2006. On the left is Kathy Lemaire, and on the right is Karen Bonnano, an Australian from Brisbane (and another generous and strong library professional) who manages the IASL Secretariat.

  • Delightful diversions – end of the summer holidays

    My last day of school holidays, so it’s time to enjoy delightful diversions!

    From me:

    A trip back to my home town, Albury, dead set on the border between New South Wales and Victoria and on the great Murray River. Visiting dad, who is turning 95 in February 🙂 Enjoying the bush environment of this city of 42,500 souls. We spent time just relaxing at the local park, on the banks of the Murray. Very Australian! (Wish the drought was over)

    From Julie Lindsay:

    Oh my, what a wonderful diversion from Julie and definitely something completely different. A great aussie in Qatar made me chuckle! Thanks for sharing the vegetable orchestra Julie 🙂

  • Flickr project to host Library of Congress photos

    Here’s a really interesting opportunity for some visual literacy and historical analysis work with your history students!

    Hot update: PhotosNormandi thanks to a quick comment to this post from Patrick Peccatte. This is another stunning collection for history students.

    The Library of Congress and photosharing site Flickr today announced a partnership that will put photos from the LoC’s collection online. These are public-domain, copyright-free photos from the Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information and The George Grantham Bain Collection, for which no known copyright exists. The collections will be housed on the LoC’s Flickr page.

    Interesting project – and they are relying on ‘us’ to provide tags for the images!

    So Flickr has launched a new tagging initiative called The Commons – “your opportunity to contribute to describing the world’s public photo collections.”

    The Commons – our chance to tag or comment on images!

    The photos, which are already available on the Library’s photo and prints page (along with over 1 million others), may not be on Flickr permanently. The length of the pilot program will be determined by the amount of interest and activity shown by Flickr users, according to the LoC.

    Read more at ReadWrite Web, WebWare, Alan Poon’s Blog.

    Photo: Mrs Loew (LOC)
  • Google Maps for mobile with My Location (beta)

    Doing a bit of a collection roundup for my vodpod video collection – so I added some videos about Google products. Check out my video collection for a few others as well, including the Australian Doodle4Google school competition last year, and What’s your Gmail story!

    Of course, it’s just as easy to subscribe to the Google Channel where you can pick up all the Google videos, and stay up-to-date.

  • Tell the teachers they have to ‘get it’!

    Now that our online newspapers also include social networking tools, it is clearly too late for any teachers to hide in the classroom and pretend that Web 2.0 isn’t here to stay.

    I was thrilled to see a while back that the Australian Herald Sun (widest circulation in Australia) added some tag tools.

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    Now our own Sydney Morning Herald also shows it’s style!

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    BUT you’ve got to love The Australian!

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    So teachers – add some new tricks to your toolkit and get the kids involved with networked media services. Teacher Librarians – it’s also time for you  to make sure that you harness the power of these tools to aggregate useful topical information too 🙂


    Quantifying the impact of social media

    Kerrie Smith asked some discerning questions about my last post Google Generation and Virtual Libraries, making the link to the debate that’s going on over on the Economist.com about whether social networks do/can/will have a positive impact on education.

    I do believe that blogs can provide solid, authoritative “knowledge” – but as these bloggers are doing the research (leg work) to investigate topics, doing the critical analysis and synthesis of what they have found – they are few and far between. That is not to say that other bloggers are any less valuable – just that they are fitting a different social network niche. Bloggers that more easily fit this category of comprehensive reflective research and analysis are Stephen Downes, Will RichardsonChristopher Sessums, Dough Johnson, and Ewan McIntosh as examples. Many blogs are reflective conversations, others are disseminators of information or providers of tips and tricks in ‘how to’ do things – and are part of that personal learning environment at each of us is building around ourselves to help us in our networked world.

    Can blogs be authoritative resources? I thinks so – sometimes. At other times they are informative or trivial, relevant or off-beat, extroverted or muted – but whatever form they take they will have relevance to someone somewhere.

    Technobabble 2.0 provides a white paper outlining the thoughts and views of several key stakeholders who met late last year to discuss the issue of measuring online influence.

    Download: “Distributed influence: quantifying the impact of social media” (PDF)

    The catalyst behind this document was the publication of Edelman’s Social Media Index in July 2007 with David Brain. This attempted to propose a new way of calculating an individuals online influence beyond the ‘traditional’ method of analysing a blog’s inbound links to incorporate other social media tools such as Twitter and Facebook.

    The issue of influence is an important dimension of the creation of authority – particularly in the field of blogging and social networks. This is a concept we need to think about, and understand in the creation of knowledge networks.

    Read the paper. I look forward to Stephen’s analysis of the white paper 🙂

    From my point of view it raises some critical issues in relation to data mining and information manipulation that takes place in such arenas as marketing or monetizing of information.

    What do I think of ‘authority’ when this sort of activity is common. For example, its fascinating to follow Caroline Middlebrook, who has shared all her work extensively, and in the process allowed educators like myself to gain a little insight into the strategies adopted by those who wish to earn a living by disseminating information – pure and simple.

    I started with a single article which I re-wrote four times and then mashed up manually using the article mashup method I have blogged about to stretch that to 16 articles.

    I guess my answer would be that the material being produced would not fit into my understanding of ‘authority’. At what point then does blogging and other social networking activities become more noise (staff room/coffee shop babble) rather than activities in the pursuit of learning. I don’t know. Who am I to judge anyway?

    Photo: I make stuff up.

    Google generation and virtual libraries

    pin.jpgPeople have very different information needs at different points in their lives. People also search for information very differently depending on the knowledge they have of search techniques or the nature of the interface that is being interrogated.

    A new report Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future provides a comprehensive analysis of information behaviours, google gen and social networking behaviour, and the implications of this for the information environment and libraries – and includes the challenges we face.

    Is the Google Generation a myth? This new report, which was commissioned by JISC and the British Library, counters the common assumption that the ‘Google Generation’ – young people born or brought up in the Internet age – is the most adept at using the web.

    Lets face it – there is a world of difference between social networking conversations and in-depth information requirements, knowledge building and development. It is in this area that the report explains

    that people are having great difficulties navigating and profiting from the virtual scholarly environment.

    The report provides a strong message for library services, and significantly it also raises the issue of the semantic web – a topic of conversation on Twitter a few days ago.

    The world wide web as we have seen and experienced it so far could be completely revolutionised by the advent of the `semantic web’. A system where, currently, humans express simple searches in everyday language, to order groceries, reserve a library book or look up a railway timetable, could be superseded by a system in which computers become capable of analysing all the data on the web.

    Good Information Architecture will become more and more critical if the semantic web is to deliver information effectively.

    Twitter conversation:

    @heyjudeonline Web design juxtaposed against information design – now there’s a pretty challenge yet basic building blocks for semantic web.

    @Tuna XML mainly as RDF is just lacking in practical application in real world schema (dodges flames)

    @Heyjudeonline real world schema is the real issue isn’t it. Structured approaches and metadata were the first line of attack in web

    @Tuna correct.. the break out of the meta information flow is critical to the webs development beyond a search farm. We can direct and translate and ensure like goes with like or people have the chance to join their like with like

    @heyjudeonline exactly! We know that single data domains with simple keyword tools are rapidly obsolete. Move beyond RDF resource primer

    OpenOffice online with Ulteo

    Run OpenOffice.org 2.3 within your web browser with the Ulteo Online Desktop, manage your office documents online, share your OpenOffice.org sessions in realtime, share your prints and get PDFs……

    A fabulous addition to the web toolkit – particularly for all those who are already OpenOffice users.

    The open source environment has given us great alternatives to Microsoft Office. Will Ulteo’s connection with OpenOffice give us another strong alternative to the ever encroaching Google hegimony for desktop and web collaboration?