To learn about how I problem solve with Moodle, please view this video and trailfire! ;-) This is my first use of Trailfire.com ~ Have fun.
http://trailfire.com/hollyrae/trailview/47431
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Firing up my own little trail....
Posted by Unknown at 12:26 PM 0 comments
Labels: moodle, problem solving, trailfire
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
2.0 ToDo list with Todoist
I am a listmaking girl. Give me a task and it will appear on post its, digital lists, mental lists, iGoogle widgets, and in my Treo inside Palm ToDo. Yes, some day, it might actually get completed, but that's another story.
All I can say is, I have never, ever been so impressed as I am with Todoist. Found it on iGoogle homepage widgets and it integrates with my phone. In other words, I have it everywhere. It is so super smart and figures all kinds of things out for you. You must play. It's worth the 2.0 minutes it will take to set it up.
http://todoist.com/
Andele! Go!
Posted by Unknown at 4:40 PM 0 comments
Friday, October 12, 2007
Social Graph & Attention Economy
It's all the rage now to look at the bigger picture of social media and how all of these 'tiny' pieces fit together to inform a semantic web of human relationships. The concept seems to have gained ground in the past month, suddenly I'm seeing it in a lot of blogging on web 2.0 and hearing colleagues (a la Julz) talk about it's connection to education.
Take a start by reading this article from Read/Write web...
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/social_graph_concepts_and_issues.php
Of course what really cracked my thinking open was this reference to the Attention Economy -
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/attention_economy_overview.php
I think it's definitely related to the 'Fakebook' phenomenon...
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/06/opinion/06mathias.html?ex=1349409600&en=2da1c3f706197a55&ei=5124&partner=delicious&exprod=delicious
We want people to see our profiles...but we find it disconcerting to think that anyone knows which profiles we're actually looking at...Our attention, where we spend our time, what we read, what we look at...it's valuable marketing information and the basis of an economic force.
Another cool stream I got from this article is my newest fave feed...
http://www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/
Wow...now go play and check out these sites, they will really get you thinking!
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Thursday, October 04, 2007
Just the essentials
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We try to attend our webinar
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ITEA vs. ISTE Standards
Our next speaker, Dr. William Dugger, is going to present about technology standards. Wow, I'm so excited about this because I actually did a policy analysis on standards in 2006. Now things have changed but the fact that there is confusion about techology standards is not a surprise to me.
He brings to our attention the ITEA Gallup poll where Americans tell us that technology is COMPUTERS and INTERNET. Now that is correct but reflects a very narrow view of what technology is. The definition I always used with my 6th graders was 'technology is the study of machines and tools' - it's simple but it lacks the emphasis on process. To quote our speaker, "Technology solves problems but it also creates problems." It is not just our innovations of our technology but the impact and the design of the technology that is truly lacking in many of our technology in education efforts.
There are so many types of technology literacy - and they are not equivalent with technological competency. I think too often teachers are focusing on competency and missing the literacy component.
Btw, I am now going to have to attach my paper and powerpoint on that but I can't do so through mobile blog (note to self).
ITEA standards actually focus instruction on how technologies are engineered and how they affect and impact society and the environment.
So Julz and I sidebar about how this is achieved. Students don't just work within the network, they play a role in the construction and administration of the network. Students don't just use a tool, they evaluate the usability of the tool and the impact of said tool on themselves and their envirionment. Where does this 'student as programmer' role originate? In my mind, it's from Seymour Papert. But these constructionist roots came log ago, and for the large part are still missing in our classrooms. Aside from innovations such as ThinkQuest and SuperComputing Challenge (which only a few kids actually do) the student as programmer role is missing - ESPECIALLY as accessed by low-socio-economic categorized students.
If students are programmers, does that mean they all have to know programming languages? Not necessarily. I would argue that Web 2.0 is the perfect launchpad for this student as designer and programmer role.
So as Julz and I talk about our Standards project (incorporating the best of online teaching and learning standards) we must now devise the Pedagogies of Web 2.0 standards....and you can bet your bottom dollar we will focus our attention on the true technology literacies - the abilities of students to design, evaluate, and improve technologies for self-development and improvement of society. Our kids need to be prepared to evaluate the safeness of technology as they are sure to live in a time where change is certain....if they're not able to decide for themselves what is healthy and safe, who will decide for them?
Posted by Unknown at 9:15 AM 0 comments
NM TIE Keynote
He spoke of the challenge of the need to do what we want to do with such rapid changes in technology. We are falling behind on an international scale when it comes to percetage of people with advanced degrees - NM is 47th in the US and the US is far behind other advanced countries ! Clearly the system is not working very well. He asked us to help us answer the question - what can we do?
We need to make the roadmap & test the effect - not just try for the sake of trying. How can we help NM citizens get the education they need to have jobs in the 21st century?
Posted by Unknown at 8:39 AM 0 comments