Archive for Web2.0

Posterous

I’ve never been one to only do one thing at a time or in moderation. Therefore it shouldn’t come as a surprise to note that I have a number of blogs (I’m not going to mention exactly how many!).

One of the things I’ve been doing with my iPhone is playing around with photo apps. There are a number I like but one that took my fancy is called Instagram – and it’s great because you can post your photo (suitably filtered) to a number of sites including Tumblr and Posterous – for me it’s been a way to ‘backup’ some of my images.

After reading a news  email from Posterous today I thought I’d check some different features out.

I’d already discovered the photo gallery – perfect if you have a bunch of photos you want to display on the same subject (this is an example: http://dragonsinger57.posterous.com/butterfly). Posterous has made it easy to do this by enabling you to email the photos as attachments – whatever you put as the subject line becomes the title (here’s an example of emailed gallery: http://dragonsinger57.posterous.com/disney-memories).

There are also a couple of iPhone apps – PicPosterous which allows you to upload pictures; and Posterous which allows you to upload text, pictures and video. I’ve tested both of these and they worked very well. One thing I’m always worried about is the quality of the speech but it seems to be just fine (see this video: http://dragonsinger57.posterous.com/testing-the-video-function).

The last thing that I’ve tested is the podcast function – this might be the thing that sells it for others. Very simple. I recorded a message using Voice Memo on the iPhone. Then I emailed it to Posterous. Within a minute it was up and ready to listen to – only a short recording – but I’m very impressed. (http://dragonsinger57.posterous.com/podcast-testing)

The sheer ease of this podcasting makes it ideal for a classroom setting. Last year my podcasting was cumbersome and I ended up not doing a lot of it. This year – with posterous – i think it will be a lot easier.

Another feature I haven’t tested but am interested in (Clair/Kirsten/Anyone?) is the group feature – from what I understand you can create a site that is a group site – and once again I think that could be handy for a classroom setting where you have teachers and classrooms wanting to collaborate.


2011

Like  typical teacher I’ve had my thoughts turned towards 2011, a new class and a new classroom as well as a new team & team leader at school.

2010 saw me teaching in an old library – bigger than a normal classroom and not a box shape. I loved it. I loved being able to let my kids work outside on the top steps or under the tree. We had nooks and crannies that were great to work with. However, with a change of team, the boss asked me if I’d change classrooms – yes he did actually ask!

I guess the question for me was did the classroom set the tone for my eLearning class or did I? And if it was I who set the tone then the physical classroom I work in shouldn’t make a difference.

So I said I’d change and am now in a smaller typical classroom!

Classroombase

I’ve started setting my classroom out and have decided to start with less desks than kids – a radical idea I know but it’s something I did in 2010 and worked really well. No student has an assigned desk. Their things are in their tote trays which are in a tote tray trolley. I have 4 desks in the classroom (not in the ‘mini-lab’ area) with a pod of 4 computers on them. I have another two desks for the two older PC laptops (that need to connect via ethernet) and I have a ‘charging station for my two Macs (iBook and MacBook) which can access the network/internet wirelessly from anywhere in the classroom. I’ve taken 6 desks completely out of the classroom and that leaves 18 desks for kids to work at. I’ve also got 2 coffee tables for kids to kneel around and work (or sit on cushions etc); a couch; 2 bean bags and various others places in and out of the classroom they can work at.

(In my classroom there is no “sit down and shut up” type of policy – that’s not how we as adults learn and it shouldn’t be for kids either.)

The Seven Spaces of Technology in School Environments from Ewan McIntosh on Vimeo.

I’ve been thinking about spaces too (a-la Ewan’s 7 spaces of technology) and I’m going to use an old dome tent that I have as a ‘secret/quiet’ space for kids to use – I envisage it being just outside the door in the learning street with a couple of kids reading or chatting quietly in it – or even working in it – there will be some privacy but I’ll still be able to stay in touch with them with both sets of flaps open.

How's this for a quiet reading space?

I’ve also been thinking about having maths, reading, writing & art spaces permanently active in the classroom – I want to encourage creativity in the classroom – not just at set times!

As for other things – I tend to read all about other people’s fantastic ideas and create a mash up that suits MY classroom.

More thoughts later …


Writing revolution

A revolution is some kind of change that takes place in a relatively short period of time. A writing revolution has happened in my classroom over the last few weeks.

Towards the end of last term I signed my students up at kidblog.org and introduced them to the blog. It uses the same familiar wordpress environment that we see here at edublogs but with most of the bells and whistles removed. Between the time I introduced kidblogs and the end of the holidays 24 posts had been written.

Over the last 4 weeks 135 posts have been written and over 300 comments made on those posts. Some of the comments have come from other people of course – but most are from my students commenting on each others work.

Not only are my students blogging during the school day but they are also blogging ‘out of hours’ – after school, in the evenings, on the weekend.

They are writing voluntarily.

And that, my friends, is a writing revolution!


Ulearn10

I am home again after a fantastic 4 days in Christchurch participating in the 10th ULearn conference hosted by Core Ed. Over the next few weeks I’ll be processing the input from the keynotes and sessions I attended. Here’s my summary:

Tuesday

  • Unofficial Geocaching workshop – great to introduce newbies to the addiction
  • Pecha Kucha session in the Limes Room – I think this was filmed so will find the link for it
  • Twitter dinner

Wednesday

  • Keynote: Lee Crockett
  • Breakout One – this was my workshop <G>
  • Breakout Two – Inspiration, Ignition, Impact with Paula Jamieson
  • Keynote: Steve Wheeler (aka @timbuckteeth)

Thursday

  • Twitter breakfast
  • Keynote: Lane Clark
  • Breakout Three - Change, Creativity, Curriculum & Community: Succeeding in Spite of the System – Chris Betcher
  • Breakout Four – Apple sMacdown
  • Conference Dinner

Friday

  • Breakout Five – Trades Hall visit – had a quick mini-lesson on the Promethean board
  • Breakout Six – eCompetencies – Linking eQuality teaching directly to the Key Competencies with Kellie McRobert
  • Keynote: Stephen Heppell

Prizes

I won a couple of fantastic prizes and must thank the sponsors for those:

  • HP: My DP has already responded about the 42″ digital sign I won – we’ve just completed a new admin area and I know it will look fantastic there
  • Learning Media: I spent my 2 hours at the airport waiting for my flight reading the teachers manual for the Write Tools – can’t wait to get stuck in – and when Murray Gadd next visits I’ll do a show and tell with him :-)

And as for the other freebies:

  • Xirrus – while I know the t-shirts I got weren’t so much a prize as a giveaway I want to say thanks for them – they’ll fit right into my wardrobe!
  • DLink – best gadget ever – the screwdrivers – a must for all us geeks
  • Apple sMACdown – my new earbuds are very welcome – they’ll be residing at school – and will be very handy for my kids recording using the iTouch/iPhone

As always one of the huge bonuses is meeting up with my Twitter PLN – it’s great to see the international tweeps here with us kiwis. Thanks to all my PLN the personal input was amazing!


The Earth Moves & The Power of Social Networking

The Earth Moves

As many of you will now know there was a bit of a quake in Christchurch yesterday. (Non-kiwis need to understand that we understate things a lot – it was a 7.1 quake.)

While I actually felt the quake, the epicenter was quite some distance from home.

Screen shot 2010-09-05 at 11.00.08 AM

I felt it as a long smooth roll – something similar to what I’d feel if the cat jumped up on my bed in the middle of the night – except it kept on going which was what alerted my sleepy brain to an earthquake. However, it wasn’t enough for me to do anything more than turn over and go back to sleep. An hour later (5:30am) I was up taking my daughter to work and she mentioned the quake and damage but I still didn’t take in what she was talking about. It wasn’t till around 8:30am when I was woken again by several texts coming through on my phone. The first one was from Twitter – a DM from a friend in England asking if I was ok. My first thought was to wonder if it had been too long since I was on twitter and she was missing me. That thought vanished when I saw the second text – from my best friend in Montana – asking if me and the kids were ok. At this point I realised that there must have been some real damage happen with the earthquake and I turned the TV and computer on to check.

I lived in Christchurch for 13 years – all through my 20′s and early 30′s; both my kids were born there and I have very fond memories from that time. I’m also due to attend a conference there (as are many of my TwitterPLN) at the beginning of October. So I was glued to the pictures – there were places I knew well – destroyed some of them; others were fine – such random damage. I was also glued to twitter and facebook – there was so much information coming out via those two social media sites – I still haven’t heard from a couple of friends but everyone else posted via one of those two places that they were safe – shaken, stirred but safe.

And they’re still being shaken! Take a look at this screen grab of the McQueen’s Valley Quake Drum from this morning – it doesn’t have the big one on it but check out all the after shocks!

Screen shot 2010-09-05 at 9.18.32 AM

The Power of Social Networking

This earthquake and the response to it has been an amazing example of social networks in action. The first photos coming out were via twitter – in fact many of the photos shown via conventional media were from twitter. People were checking in via twitter and facebook – I guess check in once to FB means lots of people can be reassured in one go.

Hashtag power was at work too – want to check the latest – search using the #eqnz hashtag:

Google search
Twitter search

How about this screenshot of a headline for an online paper in Canada:

Screen shot 2010-09-05 at 11.27.25 AM

Check out also “The Twitter #eqnz Daily” with a mixture of links to videos, photos, blogs, twitter stream etc.

Wikipedia

Sometimes Wikipedia gets slammed as being not accurate enough or not reliable because ordinary people can edit and change the pages. I disagree – I think it’s powerful because ordinary people can edit and change the pages. I doubt very much that a group of paid professionals could/would have produced this page, with this amount of information, this quickly: 2010 Canterbury Earthquake.

This is the power of social networking at it’s best (if ordinary people can have a hand in editing it’s part of social networking IMHO).

This is history being written as it happens – via Twitter/Facebook/Wikipedia/Youtube/Blogs!


Magic Trackpad in the classroom

Q. How long does it take for kids to figure out how to use new hardware?

A. Just as long as it takes for the box to be opened, software update to take place and the teacher to connect the device.

This morning one of my parents arrived with a present for our class – an Apple Magic Trackpad! Not to borrow – to keep. This parent is a fellow machead and we often talk about how various devices might be used in the classroom but the gift was still unexpected.

R9Trackpad

Actually connecting it to my MacBook was easy but I had to do a software update in order to use all the functions (click the tap/click etc). That required a little more time (30 mins once I’d disconnected the data projector cable) but still not too long. Once I had it all connected I tested the distance I could go before losing the bluetooth connection – I didn’t actually find out what that was as it remained connected everywhere in the classroom and even out in the corridor!

Maths was the perfect time to test it out. I stood at the back of the students (who were sitting on the mat) and opened up our class wiki then our maths wiki and went to our probability page. From there I first went to Mr Anker’s Probability page and got the students to pass the mouse around the class as they answered the questions. Then I opened up the BBC Fish Tank activity, zoomed into the activity section and got the students to pass the mouse around again answering questions. This was a little harder as they had to figure out how to scoop the fish into the net and then release it – as expected they figured it out before I did.

Check out this video of it in action.

Next plan will be to test it out using the mimio and maybe some drawing programs.


Potpourri

It’s been a while since I posted so here’s a potpourri of thoughts from me.

Evernote
Evernote is one of my absolute favourite apps around. I have a desktop version and an iTouch version (and when I get around to buying a iPad I’ll have an iPad version too). I also have the paid version of Evernote. I thought I’d post some ways I use Evernote:

  • When I travel I keep copies of my travel docs in Evernote –  the new offline sync means that whatever is in a particular folder is automatically synced and available offline.
  • I keep confidential notes on Evernote – I have a link to them from my Google Docs planner – but only I can access them via the online/cloud copy of my Evernote account.
  • I save tweets to Evernote via the iTouch Seesmic app. They are automatically tagged with my twitter name as well as a number of other tags making them easy to find via Evernote Desktop.
  • I can do the same with documents/emails – basically anything that can be printed can be sent to Evernote (I think this is something I set up myself).
  • I take photos of all Travel-bugs that come my way – and note what happens to them (this is for Geocaching).
  • I take photos of things I don’t want to forget – for instance I took a photo of my printer ink cartridge and saved it – I’m forever forgetting what I should buy and now I don’t need to worry because it’s there in my Evernote.
  • And I can’t forget the simple web-clipping that is a standard for Evernote – I can save excerpts or whole pages or links to pages via Evernote’s Chrome extension (or Firefox).
  • I can also take notes, record a voice message, use my iSight to take and save a picture straight into Evernote; send a photo from my cell phone directly to Evernote; and even send a note to myself via evernote’s twitter account.

Differentiated Instruction/Learning
I’ve seen a number of blog posts around from educators talking about differentiated learning. Not quite sure why all the fuss because that’s the norm for NZ education and educators. (Well – it’s supposed to be the norm!)  In my class I cater for students with a range of abilities – it’s been part of my teaching since I first started teaching. Maybe it’s not such a big deal for us here because it is a norm and is something taught as part of teacher training.

During one of my trips to the USA I visited some junior classes in a school and was told about their reading programme they were running where students were mixed around different classes so that each teacher was teaching students at the same level – “…because it was too difficult to cater for a large range of reading levels in one class…”.  Reading levels are a little subjective depending on the type of levels that you’re using but if I were to look solely at students reading at their chronological age then you’d find many classrooms where the reading age range could be as little as 2-3 years or as much as 7-8 years (I once had a class where my lowest reader was reading at a 5 yo level and my highest reader was reading at a 13 yo level). The expectation is that we will manage these students – hopefully providing the lower readers extra help depending on funding and resources – and that all readers will show improvement at the end of the school year.

(I’ve used reading as an example because it’s often the one area that is pivotal to all other learning – my higher ability readers tend to also be the ones who are able to do independent research and who learn new skills more rapidly.)

National Standards
NZ educators have been heading into an abyss aka National Standards. It’s been written into law and so schools/teachers are now supposed to be reporting to parents in plain language (huh – what’s going on here – my reports have always been written in plain language and parents have always been able to understand them!) and assessing their students against some (mythical) National Standards. I am very thankful I’m NOT a principal having to steer a school through the piranha infested rapids that is National Standards. The media reports of bully tactics on the part of the Minister of Education (and the first hand reports that I’ve heard from principals) are not doing us any favours either. I’m yet to see any sign of professional development from the MOE – I mean – come on – NCEA teachers had years of PD – how about some real PD for us! And how come the draft Ngā Whanaketanga Rumaki Māori (Ngā Whanaketanga) was developed by Māori-medium leaders in te reo matatini (literacy) and pāngarau (numeracy)? And is being trialled!! IF National Standards are to remain then:

  • National Standards need to be developed in consultation with teachers (just like the NZ Curriculum was)
  • National Standards needs to be trialled (just like Ngā Whanaketanga)
  • PD needs to be provided for the implementation of National Standards (just like the PD for NCEA was)

eLearning
I’ve had a rough week – which actually began the week before with me getting a cold that went to my chest & started affecting my voice. I took Monday off and went back to school on Tuesday – didn’t have too much time in the classroom which was very good as my voice was getting worse; went to school on Wednesday and again on Thursday but just couldn’t make Friday. However on top of my not being well our power at school and our school network were also not well! AND to top it off I had a visiting teacher in my room on Thursday who was there to see how I manage my eLearning classroom – something that becomes a little difficult when the power comes back but not the network!!

Which made me think. eLearning classrooms, while they usually involve high use of technology, must also be able to run when there is no tech available!

What was supposed to be happening in literacy time was:

  • 3 pairs of students editing stories from St Clairs School in Dunedin in Google Docs
  • 3 students editing their own stories in Google Docs
  • Others working on some other stories for a competition in their draft books
  • 2 students working on an online questionnaire about the book we’re reading as a class
  • (the last three rotating during the lesson)
  • Other general activities like spelling

What actually happened was:

  • 3 pairs of students editing stories on paper (I’d had the forethought of printing out a copy of the stories)
  • Others working on their competition stories
  • Spelling

Surprisingly we were actually doing some what we should have been doing – but not all. Because I had printed and photocopied the stories for editing we could have done this even with no power (as had happened the previous day). (Things weren’t helped by me not having a voice either!)

I’m thinking of submitting a preso for Ulearn10 about eLearning – but not just a show and tell – also looking at how to choose what you do; what some of the choices are; and what to do when things don’t work type of thing.

Potpourri
I guess that’s the end of my potpourri of thoughts. Feel free to comment on any or all of the subjects.


Peace

I discovered something this weekend. Sometimes we try new things that work. Other times we try new things and they don’t work, or at least they don’t work for us.

At the beginning of the year I bought myself an ITC Innovative Teacher Planner. It’s quite neat. Every second double set of pages throughout the book has thinking strategies and examples. There’s lots of space in the planner and it’s spiral bound and stays together very nicely.

BUT …

A paper based planner isn’t me. It just doesn’t sit well with me. I’ve persevered with it all through Term One and the first few weeks of Term Two but no more.

This weekend I sat down and used my old Google Docs based blank planner to set up weeks 4-11 of this term and then to plan this week in more detail. I feel happy. I’ve got my hyperlinks where I want them (cut and pasted into my plan) – I’ve linked to my maths weekly intro Google Preso – and I even have some YouTube video links.

Having my planning in this format means that my kids see what I’ve got planned (well – they do this anyway via the class wiki) but that’s ok – there’s no secrets to my planning. If I need to make confidential notes I do them in another place (another online secure tool – Evernote). The beauty of this type of planning is being able to add/cut/copy/paste etc as you go. Why plan my literacy & Maths for Tuesday-Friday until I’ve seen how much actually gets accomplished on Monday? (And actually I set up a weeks work for my kids and they choose the order they work in during the week – all that I set in ‘stone’ is reading groups.)

And you know what? I feel at peace with myself. This week I’m happy with my planning – not anxious at all.

This is what’s been missing from my teaching life for the last term.

(If you’re a paper planner type person then check out these planners ‘cos they’re very cool!)

(And for those wondering about access to my plans – I embed them into a daily planner section on my own wiki – that way any of my senior teachers can check them whenever they want/need to.)


Philosophy

I don’t often post this sort of thing – and this is a familiar collection to anyone with email – but I had to chuckle my way through these:

1. Never, under any circumstances, take a sleeping pill and a laxative on the same night.

2. Going to church doesn’t make you a Christian anymore than standing in a garage makes you a car.

3. Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.

4. If you must choose between two evils, pick the one you’ve never tried before.

5. My idea of housework is to sweep the room with a glance.

6. Not one shred of evidence supports the notion that life is serious.

7. It is easier to get forgiveness than permission.

8. For every action, there is an equal and opposite government program.

9. If you look like your passport picture, you probably need the trip.

10. A conscience is what hurts when all of your other parts feel so good.

11. Men are from earth. Women are from earth. Deal with it.

12. No man has ever been shot while doing the dishes.

13. Middle age is when broadness of the mind and narrowness of the waist change places.

14. Opportunities always look bigger going than coming.

15. Junk is something you’ve kept for years and throw away three weeks before you need it.

16. There is always one more imbecile than you counted on.

17. Experience is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognise a mistake when you make it again.

18. By the time you can make ends meet, they move the ends.

19. Thou shalt not weigh more than thy fridge.

20. It’s not the jeans that make your bum look fat.

21. If you had to identify, in 1 word, the reason why the human race has not achieved, & never will achieve, its full potential, that word would be “meetings”.

22. There is a very fine line between “hobby ” and “mental illness”.

23. People who want to share their religious views with you never want you to share yours with them.

24. You should not confuse your career with your life.

25. Nobody cares if you can’t dance well. Just get up and dance.

26. Never lick a steak knife.

27. You should never say anything to a woman that even remotely suggests that you think she’s pregnant unless you can see an actual baby emerging from her at that moment.

28. The one thing that unites all human beings, regardless of age, gender, religion, economic status or ethnic background, is that, deep down inside, we ALL believe that we are above average drivers and have a sense of humour

29. Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic.


Lessons I learned from my mother

On this ANZAC day I’m thinking a lot about my parents. My dad died 23 years ago from what we’d now called delayed PTSD – ultimately he died because of war. My mum died 4 years ago and was a huge influence on who I am today.

My personal tribute to ANZAC Day

I was browsing through some blog entries tagged “mum” on my old livejournal blog and came across a post entitled “Lessons I learned from my mother” so I thought I’d repost them here.

  • You’re never too old to do something new
  • Always try to do the thing or things you’re passionate about
  • Don’t give up just because things seem impossible
  • You don’t have to be young or a male to influence other people
  • People aren’t important because of possessions or money, they’re important because they’re people
  • Music is a universal language – you don’t have to understand the words to feel the emotion
  • You don’t have to stop working just because the government says it’s time for you to stop
  • Even if you can’t travel you don’t have to remain ignorant of other peoples and cultures
  • You can’t judge something you have no experience of
  • Rules made by men are not necessarily the same as what God would say
  • You’re never too old to be a rebel

I am the product of two people who shared their passions with their children. There’s so much that is “me” that I can trace back to my parents. The sci-fi geek me comes from dad; the passionate reader me comes from mum and dad; the music loving me comes from mum and dad; the passion for teaching comes from mum. I would not be the person I am today without the influence of my parents.

Thanks.