While going through my blogs, I ran across Remonzer’s weblog where Classroom 2.0 is talked about highly. Remonzer gives good information in the blogs, and mentions some workshops, and I just thought I would post if anyone was interested—including myself
http://remonzer.wordpress.com/2008/04/23/cr20-resources-wiki/
Upcoming Workshops, Tentative Schedule
- We are looking for venue/location sponsors for each workshop. See click through to information about physical requirements, and contact Steve Hargadon if you think you can help.
- We are also looking for local coordinators to help organize for each city. Here is a list of the coordinator responsibilities. Contact Steve Hargadon if you would like to help.
Requests and initial sign-ups for Classroom 2.0 LIVE workshop in your area can be made here. If an organizing page has already been started for a specific workshop, there will be a link below.
- May 8 & 9, 2008: Phoenix, AZ Local Organizer: Cherie Stafford and/or Peggy George
- June 20, 2008: Houston, TX Local Organizer: Stephanie Sandifer
- June 28, 2008: San Antonio, TX (in conjunction with EduBloggerCon NECC) Local Organizer: Steve Hargadon
- July 14, 2008: **Boston, MA** (around BLC?) Local Organizer: Liz Davis
- July 17 & 18?: Chicago, IL Local Organizer: Lucy Gray
- July, 2008: New York Local Organizer:
- August 15 & 16: Salt Lake City, UT. Local Organizers: Rachel Murphyand Darren Draper
- September 19 & 20, 2008: Philadelphia and Harrisburg, PA Local Organizer: Cheryl Capozzoli
- Louisiana (Fall, pending Steve schedule) Local Organizer:
- Atlanta (pending Steve schedule) Local Organizer:
Also, if you think you have everything for your ethnography, Remonzer’s post-here –made me think of things to do that I haven’t done yet.
From her blog,
http://lisab.uniblogs.org/2008/04/27/high-tech-heretic-the-hidden-price-of-computers/
Lisa points out what Stoll says and gives her opinion.
“For the dirty little secret of educational technology is that computers waste teachers’ time, both in and out of the classroom.”
Wow! What a statement. This jumped out at me as I was reading. I am wondering what analysis has been done to back this statement up. I know there are times when I feel like I have wasted some time using computers in class, but I think overall, computers have added to class, not taken away. I guess this is the statement of a heretic.
I don’t think that computers waste time either. I mean I may spend too much time sometimes on one, but nothing to me is a waste–if I am learning. When I first started reading this book, I thought that Stoll had some valid points, but the more I read, the more it seems to me that he just goes on and on about why he can’t stand computers involved in education. I am not finished with the book yet, and only starting the chapter A Question for Balance, so I don;t know yet if there is going to be a balance in this next chapter or not.
baby steps to 21 Century Learning
April 30, 2008
I figured out just a few minutes ago that I am only taking baby steps with what I am learning right now, after visiting Traci Prater’s blog, located below.
http://tnprater1006.wordpress.com/
which includes links to her YouTube video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39Up1f0lmOA
…and her online classroom, and much more interesting things that I think represent a 21 Century Learner.
This stuff is cool.
I have only visited about 10 of my 90 something blogs today, so don’t be offended if I haven’t mentioned others yet. I am just pecking away at all this knowledge here in my reader.
Multimedia Comics and CRTs for Tots
April 30, 2008
Stoll compares the knowledge translated by computers, from webpages, to comic books that he read from his Classics Illustrated collection when he was a child. I don’t read comic books, but thinks that, like comic books, that multimedia writers….”task is to absorb and compress great gobs of information into small, easily digestible on-screen chunks.”
This man really is against multimedia and education, but I don’t think that when he wrote this that blogs existed as they do now, with educational content available on the Internet.
In the chapter CRTs for Tots, he mentions Seymour Papert’s vision on page 62, opposing Papert’s ideas, saying that computers and technology “…isolates us from each other,”
I do not think computers isolate us from each other at all. Maybe people spend too much time on the computer, or on the phone, or watching TV, and that this time could be spent reading a book instead. People can read books too. Homework assignments, and school assignments can incorporate reading as well as some technology. I don’t think it is one or the other. It is both.
Looney for laptops
April 30, 2008
In this chapter, Stoll presents computers and technology as something not good for education. He asserts that with technology that content learning will not happen, or he is just totally against it. On page 40 he says
” The technical needs of the computer of the computer create a new bureaucratic bumpf of technicians, computer coordinators, and information specialists. These people tend not to teach, but to fix machines, buff the school’s high-tech image, and promote high-tech pedagogy.”
I think this may be true in some cases now, but probably was more so true when he wrote this book. I think that technology education can be implemented into a curriculum, while still maintaining learning the content, and that the field of education technology nowadays strives to do so more often than in 2000.
Diigo
April 29, 2008
Clay Burell writes in his Beyond School located here the following:
Three weeks after the Diigo stampede, I’ve been concerned that the new trend of putting Diigo annotations on postsinstead of leaving comments in the thread was a negative thing. Only Diigo users would see the conversation, and the post’s comment thread would be left poorer for that.
But after a wild four-hour storm of 74-and-counting comments on my Muhammed Ali post about privileging writing over other communication strands when we grade, it occurs to me that Diigo might come in handy here. There are so many incredibly insightful comments there, and the issue is so relevant to the futures of our students, that I fear the sheer bulk of comments might dissuade new readers from discovering the gold shining here and there.
I visited the Diigo site briefly to see what was up, with the highlighting on the web, etc., and thought I would post here for you tech savvy bloggers, which I am not.
There is a demo from the Diigo site here which could help figure out how to use it—if you want to use it.
Teaching with fruit loops
April 29, 2008
I was checking blogs today, and ran across this one where she describes a science lesson where fruit loops can be used.
http://successfulteaching.blogspot.com/2008/04/making-molecules-out-of-froot-loops.html
Seems like something very doable –and fun, while the content can be learned with this hands-on activity.
associative property
April 29, 2008
From Phaedrus and his reference to this blog, where the following was stated:
For example, they studied different approaches at teaching the basic mathematical property of commutativity — that you can switch up the order of elements and still get the same answer, as in 3 + 2 or 2 + 3 equals 5.
Some students learned the concepts using generic symbols. Others were taught with concrete examples such as pictures of measuring cups filled with liquid, or slices of pizza or tennis balls in a container.
I thought about an example that an instructor gave at a training I went to once about the associative property, and I repeated this, with my own little changes, to see if a student would understand, and this particular student did, which was exciting.
For addition and the associative property, one can tell a story, to pretend that there are three friends a,b, and c—and a can represent Alice, or whatever name one wants to put in for the scenario, and that b represents Bobby, and c could stand for Cathy. Well, it could be that all three are friends and that they like to hand around together, but sometimes Alice walks to lunch with Bobby, while Cathy walks behind them because the hallway is so narrow, which would be (a+b) + c, or sometimes Alice walks behind while Bobby and Cathy walk up front together, which would be a + (b+c)—but they all go to lunch together, and the answer will always be the same–a,b,and c–for addition.
Response to duh
April 29, 2008
In response to the blog below
http://durandus.com/phaedrus/2008/04/25/duh/
where IDEA and Ratemyprofessor.com are compared at this blog, I have to agree with Cathy Bechtel’s comment because spend some time filling out these forms also.
From the IDEA website, the following was listed as criteria of their test, shown below.
Scores Adjusted for Extraneous Influences
A number of factors have been found to influence student ratings but are beyond the instructor’s control. Adjusted scores provide a mechanism to “level the playing field” for purposes of administrative decisions. We constantly focus our research efforts at refining the process for adjusting scores (Technical Report 12, Research Report 6). At this time, the Diagnostic Form adjusts for five factors
- Student motivation to take the class regardless of who taught it
- Student work habits
- Class size
- Student effort not attributable to the instructor
- Course difficulty not attributable to the instructor
The Short Form adjusts for three factors
- Student motivation to take the class regardless of who taught it
- Student work habits
- Class size
I don’t see anything about students motivation to take a class because of who taught it, because I have actually decided between two instructors before, in the event that I had to choose 1 class- because I already had one of the instructors already.
MySpace Update
April 27, 2008
Well, as far as my MySpace, I need to put the blogs that are here into a category, and link this blog to that space–or the other way around—somehow. I will figure it out.
I have 12 friends, 4 of whom are in my EDUC 628 class, and most of the others are my daughter, and her friends—her circle. I will have to say that her group of friends spend a lot of time on the site. The update it daily with pictures, comments, their TOP friends, bulletins, their mood, and anything else that has to with letting others in their group know how they are feeling, what they like, etc. As far as the pictures, on of Paige’s friends went to Maysville one night to take pictures of George Clooney because he premiered his movie Leatherheads there, and she had pictures of him posted that night on her MySpace. I thought that was pretty neat.
As far as me spending time there, I plan to do a final project for my other class at the beginning of next week, and then spend the rest of the remaining time during this semester on this clas, blogging, reading High -Tech Heretic, and being on–and writing about the values that I am finding out about MySpace.