Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Saturday, January 29, 2011

"It's not a digital footprint, it's a digital tattoo."

EduBloggerCon - Networking/Web 3.0

What is digital citizenship?
I have noticed a shift from simply teaching online safety to teaching digital citizenship. What is the difference? I think digital citizenship is more all-encompassing. It includes online safety (what I think of as the "stranger danger" aspect of digital citizenship), but is a more well-rounded and complete view of what it means to "be online". It addresses safe searching, filters, security, and protecting personal information as well as appropriate content, cyber-bullying, copyright, ethics, social skills, collaboration, affiliation, authorship, and accountability. It is not just acceptable use, but responsible use. Yes, parents and educators need to keep children safe on the Internet, but we need to teach them etiquette and behavior expectations as well, just like we do in the "real world". The virtual world should not be that different from the real world. It's the same people conducting the same business and social interactions, just in a new way.

What is Web 3.0?
At the Networking/Web3.0 session I attended at EduBloggerCon in June, we discussed the idea of "Web 3.0". This discussion focused on the following progression: from The World Wide Web, to Web 2.0, and on to Web 3.0. The World Wide Web was an amazing connection of hypertext and linked documents. Web 2.0 shifted to being of the people, by the people -- interactive and open-source. Web 3.0 has shifted to more than just talk -- we share information and help each other manage and find meaning in the information that is out there.

What does Web 3.0 mean for students, parents, and educators?
Parents and educators have a responsibility to help students understand that there are real people with real feelings behind all the tweets, posts, and avatars.  Every person is a citizen online, just like in the real world. We are all expected to follow rules, laws, and appropriate social behavior in life, so we must do the same online.
What does this mean for school work?
On school networks, no person should ever be anonymous. We should be asking our students to put their name on everything. Being anonymous is like wearing a mask. People behave differently. They feel that because nobody knows who they are, they can do things they would never do normally. They disconnect from their actions and therefore take no responsibility for them. Students should be taught to be responsible for everything they put out there -- every post, tweet, and comment they make. Teaching them to put their name on their work encourages them to take ownership and responsibility for it.

In addition, keeping things anonymous does not allow authorship. It does not allow students to take credit for the great work they are doing. Instead of encouraging anonymity, we should encourage authorship by finding people to comment and share with our students so they can experience the benefits of taking ownership of their work. How? We can use hashtags like #comments4kids on Twitter to get other educators to comment on student blog posts. We can let students know who has viewed their blogs. We can try to get student work published outside of the school -- linked to a local paper or on a public site. (For example, talk to an historian and create a site for the local museum, newspaper, historical society, or library.) We can get outside businesses and associations interested in what our students are doing. (This is mutually beneficial. The students gain an understanding of their potential influence, and businesses gain interest from the "under-30 crowd".) We should be helping students see how far-reaching their online influence can be.
    The Eisenhower school safety project expands on this concept. Check out their blog titled "Generation YES Blog -- Thoughts About Empowering Students with Technology".

    How should educators handle social network sites like Facebook?
    I think that although we do need to be responsible online citizens, we do not want to create fear of social networking and sharing online. We want students to be able to reap the benefits of world wide access to incredible educational resources and social networks. Facebook is the "pizza parlor" or "shopping mall" of today, as the video below says. That means Facebook is also a great way to get announcements, news, educational content, and information out to students and the community. How? Teachers can create Facebook groups or fanpages for their classes instead of friending students. While we do need to be wise and thoughtful about the use of and access to social networks, we should not completely shy away from using them as resources.

    How do we bring the family along for the learning?
    Parents need to be involved in the online lives of their children. They need to help their children learn appropriate online behavior, just as they help them learn appropriate real-world behavior. We as educators can help parents. How? We can start by helping them become educated about digital citizenship. We can help parents understand the Acceptable Use Policy and Information Release Forms they are asked to sign. We can make them aware of available digital citizenship and network literacy resources. For example, UEN has created NetSafeUtah - a collection of movies about Internet safety and citizenship. I watched one NetSafe movie recently that focuses on parent involvement in the online activity of their children:


    Educators should help parents understand what schools are doing with technology, particularly with Internet resources, so they can support our efforts. How? Schools can hold parent openhouse nights to encourage family involvement. They can hold family tech nights at the start of each school year and then again throughout the year on specific technology tools and topics. They can hold classes at various times and in various places for short periods of time to make it easier for busy parents to attend. Some schools even allow parents who do not have computers or Internet at home to have some access to computers and Internet at the school.

    Educators can hold classes for parents where they actually participate in the same types of assignments, projects, and experiences that their children are participating in so they understand what is happening and what the value is. Experiencing what their kids experience can also help parents understand how to help their children with technology issues that arise at home (ie. what to do when you have trouble uploading a file). Have parents comment on each other's posts and projects so they can understand how it feels to interact and receive that kind of feedback. Try sharing class blogs from previous years so parents to see examples of what blogs are for and what can be accomplished with them.

    What about kids who do not have access to technology at home?
    Many educators are finding that it is difficult to press forward with technology use in education when so many of our students do not have the same technology tools and resources at home that they have at school. In public education we cannot require students to use tools unless we provide them. Even if districts can purchase equipment for students, it doesn't help much if they don't have Internet access at home. Here are some ideas our EduBloggerCon discussion group brainstormed to help families access technology and Internet resources at home:

    • Set up a rent-to-own program through the district, just like many districts have set up for purchasing band instruments.
    • Use the free/reduced lunch format to achieve one-to-one access.
    • Buy technology instead of textbooks.
    • Purchase mobile devices that do not require a home Internet provider.

    What are we afraid of?
    There are a lot of questions to be answered and ideas to ponder when it comes to managing and using technology in education, particularly Internet resources. There are many things we need to be wise and thoughtful about. But, it is clear to me that we cannot be afraid of the opportunities presented by the digital world. We should be excited about them! We should be providing our students the training and access they need to succeed and make a difference as digital citizens. The world of technology is their world. We are tasked with the responsibility to prepare them for it. I think I'm about the break into song... "I believe the children are our future. Teach them well, and let them lead the way..." You said it, Whitney.

      Monday, October 5, 2009

      Basic Blogs

      Camille and I have created two presentations to help beginner bloggers. I have previously posted our first presentation, titled Using Blogs to Teach and Learn. (Click here to view it.)
      Following is our second presentation, titled Basic Blogs. We hope they are helpful!




      A few more things:
      • To add more to your blog later, remember to log in at www.blogspot.com using your email address and the password you selected.
      • To direct others to view your blog, tell them to go to your url, which would be http://www.(whatever you chose).blogspot.com
      • Once you log in on blogger, you are taken to the "Dashboard" page. You can change the email address you use to log in, by selecting "Edit Profile" on the left hand column.
      • If you would like to edit the email address where comment or post notifications are sent, click on the "Settings" tab. (See the above slide show for more details.)

      Thursday, July 16, 2009

      Chris Lehman

      Notes from the Canyons School District Ed Tech Retreat:
      A Conversation With Chris Lehman

      Principal at the Science Leadership Academy in Philadelphia
      1 to 1 laptop school

      We don't do a blog project or a wiki project. We do a project about a subject and choose the tools that will work best.

      Twitter - used naturally

      Acceptable Use
      A vision statement about whether what we are doing with the technology is for an academic use.
      Teach them to be good digital citizens.
      There are less "Thou shalt not"s and more vision statements.

      Project-oriented school
      What if high school wasn't preparation for real life? What if high school was real life?
      Have the students work on projects that really matter.

      Core values of the school:
      • Research
      • Collaborate
      • Create
      • Present
      • Network
      • Reflect
      (Similar to our Big 6)

      Amazing projects!
      Every teacher shares the same core values and goals, so the language is the same in every class no matter what the subject is.
      An incredible amount of scaffolding must take place each year and from year to year.

      Words of wisdom:
      Do it for a reason!
      Don't use something just because it's a new tool, use it for a reason.
      Don't put the tools first. Put the pedagogy first.

      Wednesday, July 15, 2009

      Sue Waters

      Notes from the Canyons School District Ed Tech Retreat:
      A Conversation With Sue Waters

      Network Learning
      • More ideas
      • People all over the world to learn with
      • You don't have to be an expert at everything because you're connected to other experts
      Blogging
      • Write about what you want to write about, not what others want to read.
      • Ownership is key to keeping up a blog.
      • If I don't know something, others probably don't either, so it might be worth blogging about.
      • Blogging isn't just about writing posts, it's a conversation. Comment on other people's posts so people will check out your posts and comment.

      http://suewaters.wikispaces.com/
      http://theedublogger.edublogs.org/

      Tuesday, July 14, 2009

      David Warlick

      Notes from the Canyons School District Ed Tech Retreat:
      A conversation with David Warlick

      Technology integration -- Not!
      It's not about the technology, it's about the information.
      Networking has allowed us to get information directly from the author instead of through a publisher.
      We get overwhelmed by all the information that is available to us.

      Book: Redefining Literacy
      Literacy is no longer only being able to access text, it is now being able to determine what is true and valuable from the abundance that is available.
      Students need to learn how to communicate with images, sound, etc. as well as in text.

      Questions to ask teachers: What are students learning about finding information?
      For the first time in history we are preparing our children for a future we cannot clearly describe. So, we need to teach students to teach themselves. In the industrial age it made sense for us to teach kids how to learn, but today we need to teach them how to teach themselves. Talking, defending, deciding. Ask them the question, "How do you know that's true?" Defending how and where you got your information.

      Students should be publishing for a real audience. - Blogging - Their learning and thinking becomes a conversation. It's not just about writing for grades, it's about sharing and conversing. For example, use tag clouds to analyze plays, books, speeches. 21st Century teaching is all about conversations. And conversations in new ways.

      This is hard because it's asking teachers to redefine what it means to be a teacher. A teacher needs to be a master learner. This gives you permission to say:
      • "I don't know."
      • "How did you do that?"
      • "How would you figure out how to do that?"
      • "Let me find out and get back to you."
      If a teacher brings in information from the Internet, they can model how to be a master researcher. This is done as a conversation in the classroom everyday, not necessarily the kids sitting in front of a computer doing a project.

      The teacher is a curator. Help the students be information artisans. Take information and shape it. Mold it. Make it beautiful. Show it off.

      David Jakes

      Notes from the Canyons School District Ed Tech Retreat:
      A Conversation With David Jakes

      It's not about technology, it's about people.
      Be patient.
      Be aware that everyone sees things through different lenses. Try to see things through a variety of perspectives.

      Fallings Rocks

      How will you model continuous learning and professional development? How will you help that person you're working with to grow?

      Read blogs, share websites and resources.

      Find David Jakes on delicious.
      jakesonline.org
      jakes.editme.com
      jakes.editme.com/dls

      Monday, July 13, 2009

      Chris Craft

      Notes from the Canyons School District Ed Tech Retreat:
      A Conversation With Chris Craft

      Don't blindly believe everything people tell you in blogging, twitter, etc. There is a lot of misinformation out there. Don't agree with everything everyone says about using technology tools, networks, etc. Think it through as an educator. What is really in the best interest of kids? If a tool doesn't improve your educational practice, then why use it?

      teachjeffspanish.com
      spantube.org

      Monday, June 1, 2009

      Educational Technology Specialist Essay

      Question #2
      I have always considered myself a right-brained person. I love music, dance, art, and literature. Growing up, science, math, and computers were for other people. I was capable of using computers and I enjoyed them, but I preferred to go to a musical rather than sit in front of a computer. It wasn't until college that I realized how wrong I was and the potential technology has for enriching my life and the lives of students.
      E-mail and the internet were the first "wonders" of technology that I became aware of as I attended college as an undergraduate. As I have progressed in my education and teaching, my awareness and love of technology as a learning tool has greatly increased. In graduate school I definitely moved beyond simple emails to creating websites, blogging, and online college courses. With the advent of more creative and interactive computer programs and technology tools, education has been greatly enriched.
      I am someone who learns by hands-on experience. I need to move, create, discuss, and try in order to understand. I have found that most of my students are active and interactive learners too. Technology is able to create new learning environments. It can bring experiences to you -- whether it be a YouTube video that takes students on a tour of Mars or a blog that allows students from around the globe to discuss topics. Contrary to what I once believed, technology is about creativity. It is about collaboration, interaction, and experiencing life. I want to present students with learning opportunities that stretch them, engage them, and excite them. I have used technology to accomplish this with my students.
      Technology is for everyone, from the computer programmer to the kindergarten student. When learners engage in meaningful, real-life projects that integrate curriculum and a variety of learning tools and styles, the needs of every learner can be met. Technology in education can provide this kind of opportunity.

      Monday, April 27, 2009

      Engaged Classroom Goals for 2009-2010

      I definitely plan to increase and improve my technology use in my teaching in 2009-2010. This year was just the beginning - an introduction - of all that I would like to do.
      Now that I have my document camera and projections unit and screen, I will never go back to overhead projectors. (Let's face it -- I hardly ever used an overhead anyway.) It is such a great tool for demonstration and instruction.
      One of my biggest goals is to become more adept at using the clickers. The students enjoy using the student response system so much, and their being engaged in lessons is the key to them learning. I want to use them on a more regular basis.
      I have loved having a class wiki. I typically use My UEN, and I have not yet decided if I prefer that or wikispaces, but one way or another I plan to further advertise my class wiki to parents and students. It is a great resource and an efficient form of communication.
      I have been a blogger for a little while now, but have just barely gotten my students into it. They are so excited about writing because of our blog. The potential for improving their communication skills and for teaching the Six Traits if writing via blogging is exciting to me. Next year I plan to be more organized with my class blog and really get my students participating with it.
      I have used various forms of digital story-telling for many year in my classroom, and I plan to continue to do so. I hope to have a great student news broadcast running at our school next year. I would like to increase my students' use of digital cameras and PhotoBooth.
      I have also been building a collection of technology-based lesson plans and activities to share with others. I plan to expand my website (http://www.30minutelablessons.com) to help teachers incorporate technology tools into their teaching of the core curriculum.

      Tuesday, March 31, 2009

      EC Sharing Session II

      Trainer Observations
      Must be scheduled by April 30th
      3 Things Turned In:
      Summary
      Check Sheet
      Planning Questions

      Time Cards & Assignment Sheets
      Due on or before April 30th, 5 pm
      NO EXCEPTIONS
      Attach Trainee Assignment sheet to the time card.

      Lesson Plan
      Email to Bonnie by April 30th

      Tonight's Agenda
      ProScope
      Frosted Mini Wheat
      Brown Sugar
      Chair
      Dried Apricot
      Ring

      iTunes U
      Lectures from various universities recorded and posted online ("Universities")
      Podcasts by or for kids ("K-12" -> "Utah Electronic High School" -> "Jordan School District")
      -UCET Sessions
      -Student Podcasts
      -TEDTalks by Arthur Benjamin
      -University of South Florida -> College of Education -> Lit to Go

      Favorite Podcasts:
      NPR
      -Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me!
      National Geographic

      Sharing
      • boinx.com - mouseposé
      • quicksilver
      • microscope adapters to attach ProScope
      • google docs
      • Use a Wiimote as a SmartBoard - Download Wiimote Whiteboard software
      • slide show of technology assignments played at parent conferences
      • use uTips in conjunction with clickers
      • student music videos - songs on GarageBand, then movie
      • weekly student reports on GoogleDocs to share with team
      • planner on the computer projected for the kids to copy & follow along with
      • biographies in ComicLife - kids dress up as the person & take a photo, then add info.
      • still photo movies - use cameras, use PhotoBooth, etc.
      • still photo movies about heat, light, & sound concepts drawn on whiteboards

      Wikis:
      • embed a google calendar
      • assignment list with links to documents or powerpoints
      • embed surveys
      • student pages
      • photos
      • slide shows

      Blogs:
      • student entries
      • parent notes
      • class journal
      • assignments

      Tuesday, December 9, 2008

      EC Sharing Session

      Ideas from other teachers about what they are doing with technology:

      ComicLife
      • Animal Reports - Heredity and Survival - 5th grade
      • Animal Reports - Predator/Prey - multiple pages - 9th grade
      • Demonstrate patterns created with pattern blocks - work displayed on a ComicLife page - this was used as the consequence for his students fighting at recess - they had to learn to work together to create the patterns
      • Class Newspaper - produced monthly

      Movies
      • Moon Movies - kids took photos of moon phases, then put them together into a movie - 6th grade
      • Claymation Movies - students take still photos and put them together into a movie
      Podcasts
      • Non Fiction Book Reports - audio & still photos - created on GarageBand - 6th grade

      Blogs
      • Club Blog - for groups and clubs at the school
      • Teacher Blog - teacher posts assignments and worksheets on the blog - links to google docs - so if the students lose their copy they have to go online and print themselves a new one - they could even submit online
      Office
      • Use Excel to create graphs - to avoid problems with different versions of Excel, SaveAs the older version
      Wikis
      • Posting assignments online
      My UEN
      • Notes to parents about what is going on at school and in the class
      • Links
      • Calendar
      Ideas From Bonnie
      Picnik
      Jing Project
      ScreenCast
      Wee World
      PhotoFlex
      Screen Capture - Shift Apple 4
      Lulu
      Plasq
      Skitch
      Digital Teaching Tools
      Export entire albums from iPhoto to Picasa
      Create a Podcast using the document camera - See Kelly's Podcast to learn how:
      Create a movie using the document camera
      • Plug in a USB port from the document camera to your computer
      • The AVerVision screen will pop up
      • Click the record (the movie reel)
      By the way, there is an anti-glare screen for the document camera!