Friday, December 31, 2010

Sunday, December 26, 2010

vimeo video school

recently received email:
Vimeo Video School

We launched a school! Vimeo Video School is a new section of Vimeo where anyone, from any skill level, can learn how to make better videos. For free.

We've crafted a series of fun, original videos to teach you about the basics of making better videos in an entertaining way. We've also written a variety of lessons that gather tutorial videos from across the site and help break down the details into bite-sized nuggets of wisdom. If that's not enough, we organized almost a thousand tutorial videos made by other Vimeo members covering almost every topic you can imagine.

Want to make a sweet time lapse video? Want to learn tips about editing in iMovie? Video School has lessons and tutorials about all sorts of cool stuff. Check it out frequently for new lessons and show your friends who might be interested. There's something for everyone.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

doing good.social media


via NCL: 75+ Ways to Do Good With Social Media

overly simple? useful vehicles?
discuss

hmm: the one compelling application, One Day's Wages, is no longer available. boo

http://mashable.com/2010/07/12/non-profit-iphone-apps/


also: this comment seems to rub at the nub of the issue:
eric1000 5 months ago
So not impressed. These are prime examples of the shallowness of most smart phone ap's. Great to waste some time playing a game, no so great for real, meaningful engagement with the world.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

and this


also, via twitter





all sorts of ways to consider using this data, integrating into teaching, professional development, discussions about data, about counting, census, voice, representation...

another useful thing about social media




this, this morning, via Mary Kim Arnold

Sunday, December 12, 2010

something useful about social media

Facebook first came to me, or I to it, three or four years ago when a student group at Brown told me they were posting photos from an event on line. As their supervisor, it felt important to be able to see those photos, but In order to see them I had to join facebook. Fast forward, facebook (for me) has gone from sort of interesting time chewer, to occasional way to find people I want to 'see' or know about, to largely providing opportunities to read about and share information of an often (but not always) political nature.

Case in point: came acrocss this article this morning: How Do Successful School Systems Treat Teachers?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sabrina-stevens-shupe/successful-schools-treat-teachers_b_793559.htm; saw the article because of this group, Not Waiting for Superman, which also lives on facebook,

So there's that.

Interesting piece about PD, teacher education and 'success.'

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

stay in school


form, content
(click on the image to enlarge)










via http://ilovecharts.tumblr.com/post/2145776470/stay-in-school-kids

online networking tools

my last post may have inadvertently served as a segue from consideration of multimodal tools to this week's theme of tools for online networking. Certainly twitter, facebook, tumblr, myspace, livejournal - all platforms that I use - have great potential for use by adult learners in different ways. While similar in many ways, each also serves a particular, sometimes only slightly different, sort of function.

For our purposes, twitter and facebook are the more obvious choices for use with people new to social networking - they're relatively easy to use (relatively), are fairly clear visually and, once one has poked around, fairly intuitive. (fairly).

Security issues need to be addressed, of course. But what about a scavenger hunt on facebook, for example, to get folks started? What if clues to the scavenger hunt were posted via twitter?

Am I actually suggesting this?

purpose, tool. purpose, tool.

Monday, December 6, 2010

just one more















way more on the social media side of the house than the education side, but taken from world-shaker's site:

http://www.carriecstern.com/post/1730498155/twitter-facebook-comic

irritatingly true

i love charts


and, a blog i actually do follow

http://ilovecharts.tumblr.com/

who wouldn't love a site that can deliver this?

(I now learn, via here. attribution is almost everything)










well someone, probably.

inevitably

world-shaker

tumblr was down today.
it's back online now, but its absence made me think about the fragility of the internet, at least as I understand it.

14 months of my life are documented there, for myself, mostly, and for some of my invisible friends.

nothing I want to share here.
(aside from this random thought about the nature of invisible friends and social networks.

meanwhile, this site - maybe of interest. looking at educational resources outside the usual places, beyond the usual suspects.

World-Shaker, Exploring tech and social media in education

have a look

Sunday, December 5, 2010

another blog














because I have a couple of blogs on blogger.com, and because I tend to follow a number of other people (some related to education work, many not), I find myself trying to catch up, saving/bookmarking sites - with and without success.

Sometimes I do get back to something I've bookmarked, other times not.

This one site is something that might be of use or interest to others in the NE online group and in the TEAL cohort.

http://kalinago.blogspot.com/2010/12/complicated-vocabulary-make-cartoons.html

Saturday, December 4, 2010

integrating technology

Larry Cuban writes about clickers and other technology; integration of technologies, tools for the purposes, and student-centered learning.

Colleagues at the RI AE PDC have used clickers - in large group meetings, in STAR trainings - in ways that make sense, in ways that enable them to get information from participants so that participants can see a range of answers/responses at once.

Common sense with batteries, some may argue, but likely a bit more intentional than that.

Friday, December 3, 2010

linked in groups






another source of information via online communication - groups organized through linked in.

these conversations are particularly germane to our current conversations