So I read about Mofuse on Mashable and had to try it out. A bit of a bug in the Mowser plugin but the support crew fixed it almost immediately after receiving the email I sent. My goal was to make a marvelous Mobile Home Page for Moi. Tre cutiemust!
http://hollyrae.mofuse.mobi
Thursday, February 28, 2008
My Mobile Home...Page
Posted by Unknown at 1:10 PM 0 comments
Labels: mobile, mobile sites, mofuse, palm centro
Upcoming Show me the Moodle Sessions
Hi Everyone ~ Happy Leap Year to all from RETA Moodle!
I have some information I'd like for you to know. Feel free to share this with friends. In addition to the wonderful RETA Webinars coming up in the next couple of months, I have scheduled some 'Show me the Moodle' webclass sessions on specific topics. These topics are designed to help you with specific parts of Moodle course design. You will find more information at the Moodlebot Wiki - http://moodlebots.pbwiki.com/Synchronous+Learning+Events
Show me the Moodle - Blocks - March 6 - 5 pm MST [register here]
How do you add RSS feeds to the sidebar of your course? What if you want an interactive calendar for students? These are only a couple of the Blocks available in Moodle. In this one hour session, we will demonstrate implementation of these popular blocks and show you how you can add Widgets to incorporate other dynamic content into your course.
Show me the Moodle - Adding Resources - March 13 - 5 pm MST[register here]
Adding content to your course is a breeze with Moodle. Find out how to add websites, HTML, PowerPoints and other types of files in this one hour on Moodle Resources.
Show me the Moodle - Assignments - March 16 - 11 am MST[register here]
Show me the Moodle - Choice and Journal Activities - April 6 - 11 am MST [register here]
Moodle Administration Professional Learning Community [register here]
March 11 - 4:30 pm MST and April 8 - 4:30 pm MST
Posted by Unknown at 11:01 AM 0 comments
Labels: blocks, choices, journals, moodle, online learning, professional development, resources, RETA, webclass
Friday, February 22, 2008
Moodle@Picacho: Transforming Teaching with Interactive Online Course Management Tools
I dig action research. I was very lucky in my graduate experience to be invited to the Center for Teaching Excellence Action Research conference in Taos in 2006 to present my study on a strategy I used in my classroom.
During the 2006-2007 school year, I lead an action research study using CTE grant funding with a wonderful team of teachers at my site. We studied Moodle in our own professional learning and we used it with our students - collecting data and reflecting on our work along the way.
The result is the lengthy Action Research Report that I will post today. It's been in Google Docs for a long time now and it's time to put it on record. This report will be included in the CTE Action Research report which will come out in June at this year's conference.
The report is located here: http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dg2jjhbv_45dndxn5
As Moodle has changed, so has the relevance of the technical discussion of Moodle within the report. The highlights, however, reveal that customized professional development and access to a professional learning community supports teachers in their adoption and implementation of Moodle. By working together, educators mediate the challenges of implementing new tools with students. There is also some interesting data on the attitudes of the students who participated.
Almost a year out from the busy time when I wrote this final report, I view it more as a comprehensive snapshot of what we worked on and what we learned, rather than something which informs other educators from a research standpoint. Don't get me wrong~ It could very much be useful, but I am learning every day how the little things about technology change rapidly and the conversation is more about reflective practice than analysis of the tool.
I look forward to future writings on my work with educators and Moodle, now that I can see the study from different angles. I would enjoy engaging in a discussion about the report and the question of how it could inform what teachers are doing today with online tools.
Posted by Unknown at 4:38 AM 0 comments
Labels: action research, collaboration, data. students, distance learning, education, moodle, online learning, participation, professional development, teachers, team
Wednesday, February 06, 2008
Theme of the Day: Help people learn more in better ways!
I received some excellent news updates today on the topic of differentiation and assistive technology. What it all boils down to is that the edtech leaders and evangelists among us have much to do with special education and assistive technnology, or rather all of us, in all of those fields, have work to do, together.
Then TechCrunch served up this story about Howcast. What a perfect opportunity to break down a task analysis in the spirit of Dr. Poel at NMSU.
Here's an example of the helpfulness and straight up 'how to ness' of Howcast. How do we get these clever ex-Googlers to work for the Force? Of course, by force I mean, the good side....aren't all of us ed-vangelists on that side?
Posted by Unknown at 10:10 AM 0 comments
Labels: asssistive technology, differentiation, distance learning, educators, howcast, leadership, learners, online learning, special education, task analysis, techcrunch, virtual schooling