Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

Community is Not Superficial…

November 5th, 2009
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Cooperation is working toward a common goal. Collaboration results in collateral material. However, community may or may not be present and/or result from either cooperative or collaborative efforts.

AND COMMUNITY IS THE GOAL!

Which is why teachers should be careful about assigning cooperative and collaborative work without a clear goal in mind of fostering community.

Community cannot exist without a sense of trust and belonging; a sense that each member’s contribution is valued and necessary; and the belief that what the community produces bears significant impact on MORE than the community itself.

I have pondered this phenomenon a great deal recently due to my position with iMMEDIA and have come up with our Mission statement as follows: Shaping communities of impact through professional development targeting technology integration.

My point is that unless we visionize our student groups with the why; then the “what” and the “how” remain irrelevant and dysfunction results. The assignment may get done but not community resulted and in my opinion, we have done nothing more than drive the herd to market. I find this distasteful to the uttermost.

If there is not impact, members feel like they are given busy work. If the only goal is self enlightenment, members grow tired of the monotony of self centered foci.

If we ask them to cooperate, there must be a bigger reason than the subject matter alone. If we ask them to collaborate, the resulting collateral material should impact a wider audience than the group/class itself. It may work for awhile. But eventually everyone will see through the gloss and look elsewhere to satisfy their innate need to pursue the greater good.

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eLearn 2009 Chock Full of Useful Tools & Ideas…

October 28th, 2009
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When hundreds of educators from all over the earth gather to share current research about the integration of technology in education, the results are bound to be exciting and eLearn 2009 in Vancouver, B.C. has been no exception.

Research about Web 2.0 tools, education trends, learning theory, instructional design, content development and MORE are explained and discussed in dozens of concurrent sessions held day by day during the week long gathering.

The experience confirms my own educational experience is up-to-date. The questions I bring to the table are the same questions being researched around the planet. There are no easy answers but many useful tips are shedding light on the path ahead. Here are just a few encouraging highlights…

1. The digital divide is not just about personal access to technology in a remote region. We learned of many organizations who use technology to raise support for charitable efforts. Those efforts, in turn, benefit people who may still not enjoy direct access to the technology but who receive aide from the organization nonetheless. This needs to be considered when we discuss the digital divide.

2. Gaming research is demonstrating unique possibilities for online textbook design that engages students who need to conquer levels (chapters) in order to move on. They can cooperate online and share tips with one another as they learn the game (material). The possibilities are limitless.

3. Outside forces such as economic stress, are forcing the creation of networked communities in order to accomplish mutual goals and fulfill mutual needs. The communities themselves are distilling various Web 2.0 tools in order to simplify to the lowest common denominator, a platform for collective information and action.

4. Open sourcing, open education, and open publishing are flattening access to scholarship.

5. Technology is the answer. What was the question? The question concerns Wider Access, Higher Quality, and Lower Cost. These are the drivers of current Web 2.0 applications.

Resource links:

http://aace.org/conf/elearn/

Free books: http://aupress.ca

http://publicationshare.com

http://communitiesofinquiry.com

Of course, the same questions many of us have been asking, remain. How do we motivate teachers to create network communities for professional development in light of the time barrier? Many researchers here are working on the creating of Bot Tutors to guide individuals according to the assessment of their aggregated work and present needs and future dreams. As computer processing speeds up, we will see the creation of computer generated simulations and suggestions customized to users based on such things. The future is now. We just need to get rid of the trees in order to see the forest. lol ;-)

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Social Bookmarking’s Ultimate Demise…

October 19th, 2009
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Social bookmarking began long ago and some of us who are old enough remember card catalogs. Libraries used this social bookmarking system to standardize a way of classifying books by author, title, or Dewey Decimal System.

Social Bookmarking on the web is a 2.0 platform created to allow groups to classify, store, and retrieve internet resources.

What is lacking is a standardized classification system like Mr. Dewey’s decimals. :-)

Hence, the cons already mentioned.

Another con not mentioned is when the link goes dead. Would be like a library book that gets removed. If the card remains in the catalog, many seekers may be led to a vacant shelf. And similarly with the web-based system.

GOOD NEWS though! The semantic web will cure this ailment of dying links. Rather than tying knots to link pages with bookmarks, Semantic Web will tie a pretty bow which can be removed, updated, and re-tied when necessary (or at least we hope so).

I suspect ‘favoriting’ pages will become more useful so that others can search my tagged favorites which will only contain those favorited items that still exist. Make sense?

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Will Teachers Ever Adopt Technology Wholesale?

October 16th, 2009
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No one educated the public to use the Internet to read news instead of subscribing to newspapers and no one told the public to use the Internet instead of looking up numbers in the Yellow Pages. These transformative changes took place at the grass roots level.

The same will happen with tech integration. Cultures create tools to ease burdens. Tech innovation makes tech integration “easier” and therefore more accessible to the barrier-challenged, post-industrial, technophobic, and electro-mechanically challenged. ;-)

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Whrrl iPhone App for Classroom Use?

October 16th, 2009
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Powered by Whrrl
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Will Text Generation Forget How To Write?

October 5th, 2009
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I was asked this question recently, noting the many complaints coming from the education sector, regarding the havoc that SMS text messaging shortcut lingo is sure to wreak on writing skills, to which I replied in my best penmanship (bear in mind, I’m left-handed):

hw silE we cn be…

erly greeks considrd d intro of d b%k 2B an omen of certN peril 2 d recall abilities of d yung hu w%dnt nd 2 memorize sinC dey cUd l%k ^ evryting ina b%k.

d widespread uz of d telegraph cauzd concrn dat fucha genA8tns w%d Rplce flowery, adjectival spEch 4 dull, dry, diRct, humdrum, to-the-point monotony.

d pencl w%d reduce ritN acuracy sinC errs cUd B erased, “so Y? wori?”

No d txtGen’ers wl B relegated 2 spEch 1ly sinC dey won’t B abL 2 convey NEfin meaningful n ritN.

S dis nt meaningful?

(Transl8td @ http://www.lingo2word.com/translate.php)

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How can social networking support distributed learning?

September 20th, 2009
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According to Roy Pea’s “Distributed Intelligence” explication, learning does not simply occur cognitively inside our head. Learning includes social reasoning and intelligence. Learning occurs collectively, socially, when we are gathered and interactive (Pea, 1993).

Pea recommends four environments useful for augmenting our learning. Each of the four mentioned below, underscore the importance of social networking as a viable platform for learning.

1. Augmenting intelligence with computing – simulation.
2. Augmenting intelligence with guided participation – collaborative interpretation.
3. Augmenting intelligence with inscriptional systems – written symbols of language, math, science.
4. Augmenting intelligence with situated cognition – contextual application of knowledge.

We’ve come a long way in just the last three years. Blogging was the ultimate tool for teachers to encourage dialogue in the classroom. However, innovations like SMS and Twitter are changing the game-board on which we play and should be equally included in the lesson planning strategies. Facebook is only ONE social networking application receiving a lot of attention from the education world.

References

Pea, Roy (1993). Practices of distributed intelligence and designs for education. In G. Salomon (Ed.). Distributed cognitions. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 47-87.

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Mobile Learning Frees the Mind? Maybe. If…

September 19th, 2009
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I would venture to say most of us in the West do not know how to hunt a buffalo, skin it, prepare and store some of its meat for the winter, convert its hide to blankets and clothing, or make tools from its bones. I guess supermarkets have weakened our minds and we will never know the joy of the hunt or the satisfaction of a good feast after laboring for days. ;-)

My point is, » More: Mobile Learning Frees the Mind? Maybe. If…

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New E-textbooks Grade the Students…

September 9th, 2009
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Gotta love this headline! Traditional course management systems (CMS) have been fading with the advent of Web2.0 web-based tools. It is being thought among many that CMSs are only good for attendance and grading. But if the online textbook takes care of grading, isn’t a CMS a bit pricey for taking attendance? And is attendance worth measuring in a time-barrier free cyberworld?

New E-Textbooks Do More Than Inform: They Grade You
McGraw-Hill Higher Education is introducing e-textbooks that let students jump from a chapter to the relevant portion of a lecture and get their homework automatically graded.

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Connectivism Explained by George Siemens…

September 8th, 2009
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Recently I engaged in some blog posting with George Siemens and Dave Cormier (see related post) regarding connectivist theory of learning. George clarified his understanding this way…

“Knowledge is an emergent property of the manner in which we connect information.

What does this mean? Well, I have knowledge – a state of personal possession, there is no such thing as knowledge in a magazine or paper – based on how I’ve connected information. For example, when I place value on “social justice” and connect it as part of my conceptual framework and way of looking at the world, this new node influences and shapes what already exists. In a paper in 2004, I suggested that learning networks (I used the term connectivism) site at an intersection of chaos, complexity, self-organization, and network theory. Complex systems exhibit patterns based on the various ways in which its elements interact. And, when we add a learner, we amplify complexity. Knowledge connected (not constructed) will be influenced by the existing knowledge of the learner, her emotional state, experiences during the day, etc.

A person of liberal political orientation will assign value to different sources of information and draw different connections from someone with a conservative political orientation. The “what” (information) is connected (or not) based on the “who” (person) and “how” (medium and accessibility) and a myriad of other factors. We have, I think, much to learn from coming to a better understanding of complex systems.”

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