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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

More Notes From David Warlick

Will Richardson recently asked this question: How do you keep track of the snippets of info and quotes you want to remember? This is one of the things I do with my blog. The last few posts I've been cataloging notes from David Warlick, and here is one more... As I watched his pre-conference keynote to the 2007 K12online conference I took a few notes: On his son's multimedia project: "he learned how to create it because he's part of a network... because he's connected." David also talks about his son's game world and how they collaborate inside that virtual world. On the skills necessary in the information economy, David says, "information must compete for attention... the nature of information has changed. Our notion of what it means to be literate must also change." And in speaking about the opportunities for publishing which the web now provides, David notes that, "from the publishing perspective, many of our students are more accomplished than their teachers!"

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Categories: edtech, k12online

Monday, October 29, 2007

Ethics & Integrity within Information Literacy

In another post, David mentions the importance of ethics/integrity as part of information literacy. He breaks it into four categories: Respect for intellectual property (copyright, etc.), Respect for intellectual integrity (respect truth), Respect for each other (cause no harm), Respect for the information infrastructure.

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Loving what you do

In another of David Warlick's blog posts, he quotes Steve Jobs, "The only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work, and the only way to do great work is to love what you do." This really resonated with me, because I've been trying to put my finger on what could make our tech department stronger.

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Less formal professional development

In a blog post about how to improve schools, David Warlick, writing about teachers' professional development proposes that for every hour of instructional time, that a teacher have an hour of prep time. Teachers need time to prerpare for instruction and to explore new tools. He also says that in his presentations when he asks an audience of teachers "to raise their hands if they could say that they learned at least half of what they do with technology by teaching themselves," that almost all the hands go up.

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Monday, October 08, 2007

School Change

Once again, Will Richardson has nobly articulated an idea which has been rumbling as an undercurrent through the educational technology blogging and professional development community. His blog post, "School as Node" discusses the future of School as becoming one "node" within an individual's approach to learning and education.This blog post is the closest thing I've read to outlining a concrete philsophical kernel for an evolutionary/revolutionary development of schools operating systems to adapt to the socio-cultural changes being enabled by information technology. Read it!

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Categories: edtech, pedagogy

Here Comes Interactive Video Streaming

Somebody, in analyzing how new technologies come to be used by the general public described the adoption process as a bell curve. The early adopters (5-10%) are on the left of the curve, the masses are in the middle, and there are some late adopters on the right. One of the reasons I like reading blogs, is because you can tap into the early adopters knowledge of new technologies without having to try everything yourself. I'd put myself at the end of the early adopters on the curve. This week I've heard about two new sites that support video-conferencing in different contexts. Will Richardson mentions UStream which is a site that allows you to stream your webcam and/or watch others doing this. Obviously not a new concept, but this site makes it easy enough that it is reaching a wide part of the bell curve. The implications for education and professional development have to do with the ease with which you could now stream yourself out there. Oovoo got mentioned at the School 2.0 ning site. It allows up to 6 simultaneos video streams to be shared for video conferencing and also includes a feature to send video emails. Pretty cool stuff.

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Categories: cooltools