Nov 22 2009
Google In Two Minutes
A History of a very well known company. I let it flow over the edges of the usual writing space to give you an envelope view proportion. Enjoy!
Nov 22 2009
A History of a very well known company. I let it flow over the edges of the usual writing space to give you an envelope view proportion. Enjoy!
Nov 12 2009
David Kapuler spends a good deal of his time discovering folks on the Web who are talented and generous. One of the recent additions to his interviewees is Naomi Harm. This her list of tools. It is far-reaching, and easy to the eye. I would advise you to take a look:
Sep 22 2009
I have so much to say and so little time to say it!
Let me push the rock up the hill with this little note about my new work at Pioneer Valley Regional School.We have our new Middle School Lab – my classroom – fully operational. We installed the SMARTboard last week. We have only to add an in-room printer and it will be complete.
When we assembled the table we set the height at 28 inches, which is working very well. We have a carpeted floor so we all have swivel chairs. We also have room for work tables in the center of the room, and plenty of closet space for all sorts of supplies and equipment.
We have four host computers and sixteen clients. We are running N-Computing for our environment. The only drawback is we don’t have a USB in the clients.
All in all, it’s a great space. I hope great things will happen here!
Dec 21 2008
The winners of the 2008 Eddies are….
7. Best librarian / library blog
8. Best educational tech support blog
9. Best elearning / corporate education blog
10. Best educational use of audio
11. Best educational use of video / visual
13. Best educational use of a social networking service
14. Best educational use of a virtual world
Discovery Education Second Life
15. Best class blog
Dec 14 2008
I love to read! I wanted to press on with distance learning, but I needed a pause to mention three of the books I read this past two weeks. Two are by Cory Doctorow: Overclocked and Little Brother. One is by Neil Gaiman: The Graveyard Book.
Overclocked: Stories of the Future Present
Publisher: Perseus Publishing
ISBN-13: 9781560259817
This is a collection of short stories that was really challenging and enjoyable. Two of the stories “Anda’s Game” and “When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth” were moving in cyberspace context. The former is an expose of cyber sweatshops where third world denizens labor to win prizes and make money for people who want status in a given game, but would rather pay then paly themselves-the exploitive element is wrenching. The latter chronicles the effort of the system administrators left alive after an apocalyptic bio-terror attack to maintain the World Wide Web. It is moving, quite moving. One other story that bears mentioning is “After the Siege”. This story is based on the reminiscences of the horrors that Doctorow’s grandmother lived through in the Siege of Leningrad in WWII. It has all of the ‘magic’ to make it scifi, but the gritty details are universal in the human suffering and loss that is the core of war.
Little Brother
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
ISBN-13: 9780765319852
The title is a pun on the ‘villain’ of 1984, Big Brother. The protagonist, Marcus, a seventeen year old from San Francisico, uses ‘w1n5t0n’ for his handle on line, making the connection with Winston Smith in 1984.
Mary Quattlebaum notes in the Washington Post: “His whole world changes when he and his friends find themselves caught in the aftermath of a major terrorist attack on San Francisco. In the wrong place at the wrong time, Marcus and his crew are apprehended by the Department of Homeland Security and whisked away to a secret prison where they’re mercilessly interrogated for days.” Marcus is radicalized by the experience and dedicates himself to bringing the Department of Homeland Security.
I Think Doctorow has done an excellent job in rendering the life we have been facing since 9/11 and the issues concerning personal freedom by overstating, exaggerating what would happen if wholesale carnage again occured in the United States.
The Graveyard Book
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
ISBN-13: 9780060530921
This is a middle-grade novel with illustrations by none other than Dave McKean. This ‘team’ is so good and gets better and better. Nobody Owens, Bod, is the protagonist of this book. He is the only living resident of a graveyard in England. He came to live there under unusual and tragic circumstances. His guardian is Silas, a vampire, who ‘lives’ there, as well.
The novel is terrifying at times and an endearing coming of age story at other instances. There are wonderful ghouls, spirits, and humans. I think anyone will enjoy the book who enjoys Neil Gaiman or J.K. Rowling.
Nov 23 2008
On the face of it, there are two more issues that need to be set in place to complete the foundation of this discussion:
1. Online learning for professional development;
2. The applicablility of online learning for the community-at-large.
After these issues are reflected upon, we can begin to build our ’school for lifelong learners’.
Nov 16 2008
Should we enrol our students in schools like Virtual High School (VHS) – http://www.govhs.org ?
I have been both a teacher and student in online learning milieus. I have launched experiences, as teacher, individually online in Moodle (on a 3rd party site) and other ventures, as well. I am today going to focus on VHS.
Virtual High School is well into its second decade of existence. They offer well over 300 courses and have been exceeding over four thousand students per semester for the last two years. I think it is an ideal addition to almost any school, but especially for smaller schools. If you have fifty seats per year it is well within the realm of possibility that your student s will take fifty DIFFERENT courses in the course of a school year-Think of how that broadens horizons.
The school has four membership options, as copied from the VHS site as follows:
There are several considerations that should taken into account:
In the best of all possible circumstances, in my opinion, a school or district would have the same person be the Site Coordinator and teacher. VHS would be a regularly scheduled class, with independent study allowed on a case-by-case basis.
The teacher would develop an additional curriculum component or use the services of VHS to extend the class for the full school semester. VHS offers class fifteen consecutive weeks with NO BREAKS, so the students are at loose ends if nothing else follows the completion of that course.
This is the matrix for a small school in Washington state, except that the teacher teaches two online classes that provide the students with a hundred seats in VHS per year in any course in which they may enrol. This is a full-time position – two classes a day for the students in her school, two periods a day for her to teach her online students and one period for her coordinator and admin work.
On the other hand, if the Site Coordinator’s duties and teacher’s responsibility can be a part of the school day by reducing the face-to-face responsibilities, that ongoing cost would be negligible.
Nov 16 2008
Should successful completion of an online course be a graduation requirement?
This is a difficult call to make.
I feel it should be a requirement for a high school diploma and for an associate’s and bachelor’s degrees for students in our country. And, just as firmly, I believe that there should be suspensions or modifications allowed to the requirement, as well.
I have taught online for more than five years, completed a master’s online, and have continued to take courses on a pay-as-I-go basis ever since. I have explored adding moodle to my face-to-face courses. I have looked at several other options including commercial options (of which I have taken advantage).
Obviously, my skillset and learning styles make online learning something that is workable, desirable even, for me. We are really in the first few seconds, metaphorically speaking, of the Digital Age. If we can manage to survive the current economic and environmental crises intact, we will continue to rocket into this the Digital Age that has only two other events in history of comparable impact. If we are going to become a community of life-long learners; If we’re going to leave no child behind; We are going to do it by embracing the tools, and the lives we fashion with these tools.
Online learning is one of these tools.
Nov 16 2008
Is online learning worthwhile? Why? Why not?
Since teaching is my third career, I’m a rather a newbie at this. The first time I had heard the phrase ‘life-long learner’ in context was six years ago. It sound so bright and exciting and I could understand the lack of enthusiasm on the part of my colleagues who had been teachers for a while.
It wasn’t long until I realized that every district or school mission statement I came across contained that phrase. For my colleagues it had become a cliche. Worse, it was an empty cliche – No one ever explored or discussed what this meant and how it would be facilitated.
One of the paths that can be provided for people to be life-long learners is through online learning: Joining classes on the World Wide Web.
There are several places a prospective online learner can go to read enumerations and discussions of the pros and cons of online learning including:
http://www.edu-center.org/distance-learning-pros-cons.htm
http://www.learn-source.com/schools/pro_con_online.html
http://www.elearners.com/resources/elearning-faq5.asp
If you are out of school-either high school or college-online learning should be an option in continuing your own personal growtth and development.
Sep 14 2008
I have a new organism for Professional Development – my Personal Learning Network. Based in in Plurk.com and, on balance, in Twitter.com and in Google Reader, it is more rewarding and as demanding as any experience I have in memory. I have decided that I need to reckon my time and reckon whether the attention that’s required is sustainable for me. I can compare it to either the time that teaching a course demands or the time required daily and weekly in the online Master’s I completed lately. Does this seem reasonable?
I fear that if I don’t strike a balance, all my living, learning, and teaching will end up being dust in the wind.