Apr 26 2008

ISTE Books

ISTE 

What do you think of the books that are published by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)? Bearing in mind that I am an unpublished author (I’m bearing it in mind, so you needn’t.), I will keep my snootiness to a minimum - those who can’t write publish reviews instead.

BOOKS

On the whole, and I have a shelf of them, I am pleased that I have bought the books. Some have pleased more than others. The newest book - English Language Arts Units for Grades 9–12 by Dr. Christopher Shamburg is actually, I trust, in the mail. But I have some thoughts about three of the most recent ones that I would like to share. 

Web 2.0: New Tools, New Schools  by Gwen Solomon and Lynne Schrum is a book that one would imagine would be great if it were serialized, because of the speed at which the WWW evolves. I have been planning a one semester intro to Web design and I am going to use the Appendices to expand the concept of a Web presence and associated tools for these high school students. The tenth chapter has twelve wonderful tutorials for educators. The first nine chapters discuss the tools of the moment and some really rich discussion about the Web and education. Chapter 6, ‘Leadership and New Tools’ is worth the price of the book, as far as I’m concerned. Many of us have had something to say about the tyranny of top down management. What we say probably differs by where we are in the Great Chain of Being. The authors espouse, quite convincingly, that school and district administrators are the difference-makers in the 21st century paradigm.

John Hendron’s book, RSS for Educators, caught me off guard. The title is so pedestrian that I sighed when I ordered it. It is, however, a wonderful book, written by a person with the soul of an artist. After a wonderful introduction, he breaks his considerations into three sections:

  • School applications: blogs, wikis, podcasts, and VoIP and synchronous communication;
  • Core software applications: Audacity, GarageBand, blogging, news aggregators;
  • Classroom Apps: blogging, wikis, podcasts, newsfeeds, advnaced RSS.

He has two excellent appendices - resources and a glossary. 

Since Michigan made passing an online class a graduation requirements and statewide online schools are sprouting like mushrooms after a rainy week, public school administrators and teachers need to considering the importance and efficacy of partivipating in online education. Cathy Cavanaugh and Robert Blomeyer have edited What Works in K-12 Online Learning. Susan Patrick, President and CEO of NACOL writes the forward. The book has eleven chapters from educational philosophy to online phs ed. I am so pleased that ISTE brought this out in a timely manner.


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4 Responses to “ISTE Books”

  1.   software » Blog Archive » ISTE Bookson 26 Apr 2008 at 12:20 pm

    [...] Gil wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptCathy Cavanaugh and Robert Blomeyer have edited What Works in K-12 Online Learning. Susan Patrick, President and CEO of NACOL writes the forward. The book has eleven chapters from educational philosophy to online phs ed. … [...]

  2.   skipzon 29 Apr 2008 at 1:14 pm

    Thanks, Gil.

  3.   nstoneiton 04 May 2008 at 3:53 pm

    I’ll put the RSS book you recommended me on my to do list! I’ve got one other I need to get through first. Thanks
    http://nstoneit.com/?p=14#comment-6

  4.   Kellie80on 21 May 2008 at 12:08 pm

    I really appreciate this post. It can be very disappointing to purchase a book, only to find it a complete waste of time. Having read none of the above, I am thrilled to have someone do a review to help me choose! So many books, so little time . . .

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