Archive for the education Category

Only five days left for nominations for The Edublog Awards. There is certainly no shortage of individuals and groups with positive contributions in the area of education. I’m going to nominate a couple of my favourites, and I’m trying to focus on new voices or those who have been around for a while but are deserving of more attention. I encourage you to do the same. I wrote last year about my concerns about using awards to single out specific writers/netcasters, but I think that the edublog awards can be a great forum for generating some publicity for those who aren’t getting as much as they deserve.

So - whatcha waiting for. Get out there and nominate!!

Rick, Alec, Heather and I were sitting around a table at the SACE conference, and I had a recording device. Here’s the post at the EdTech Posse blog (I apologize in advance for the noise):

EdTech Posse Podcast 2.2 - SACE conference conversation

I’m sitting at my kitchen table doing some marking (mid semester marks are due in 2 weeks), and I’m listening to and watching David Warlick in his keynote address to the K12Online Conference (thanks to Dean for the link). I like a lot of what David says, and I respect his thoughtfulness in the field of educational technology. Something is bugging me, however, about the keynote so far. Its not something that David specifically is responsible for instigating, although he and many others (perhaps even me) are guilty of perpetuating - the myth of the digital native.

Perhaps I’m just feeling like a cranky old man because “the big four-oh” is looming in front of me at the end of the month. Perhaps I’m just needing to get this off my chest. I don’t know exactly where this myth came from - I think that Don Tapscott or Mark Prensky may have initiated and incubated it. In his widely cited article Digital Natives Digital Immigrants Prensky describes digital natives thus:

Lest this perspective appear radical, rather than just descriptive, let me highlight some of the issues. Digital Natives are used to receiving information really fast. They like to parallel process and multi-task. They prefer their graphics before their text rather than the opposite. They prefer random access (like hypertext). They function best when networked. They thrive on instant gratification and frequent rewards. They prefer games to “serious” work. (Does any of this sound familiar?)

It sounds very familiar to me - it is a particularly accurate description of children. I have a couple of them (and some would say my wife has three, but she is far too polite to say such a thing out loud), so I feel qualified to comment on this.

When I watch students working with computers, I don’t see any evidence of digital natives. Their ability to use a computer to create a product - graph, spreadsheet, movie, etc. - is no greater or less that adults. There are undoubtedly some students who are very sophisticated computer users, but as a percentage of the population I would judge that they are equally well represented in the adult population (although I tend to hang out with a particularly geeky crowd given the opportunity). Most students and most adults are quite naive users - they learn simple tasks easily enough, but more complex tasks take more time (although somewhat less with students) and at the end they accomplish these complex tasks by following a series of memorized steps. Quite often the steps they follow are not the most efficient ways of getting the job done, but it does the work. A colleague of mine observed that students don’t really understand the technology any better than most adults, they are just less afraid of making mistakes. They may figure things out on a computer faster, but they are just as likely to be mistaken as an adult.

My concern with the use of this convenient but, I believe, incorrect paradigm of digital natives and digital immigrants. If we project certain qualities and attributes onto our students, instead of learning what they really can do and what they really need to learn, we do them a great disservice by not providing the education (that is, formalized school learning) that they need. We also show great disrespect to them by attributing traits to them instead of coming to know them all as unique and valuable human beings.

Towards the end of his keynote, David suggests that we are learning in new, 21st century ways. I have to disagree and suggest that David (and others) seriously consider these sorts of statements. People are learning in the same way that we always have - mostly from each other, but in some cases we learn in formalized learning institutions. The elements that make for sound instruction, whether formal learning with a teacher teaching a math class to grade nines or informal learning with an apprentice welder learning the trade from a journeyman, have not changed. Indeed they cannot change since they are so deeply dependent on the way our brains work. While it is true that the scope of the communities from which we learn has greatly expanded, the way we communicate (that is, the genres of communication) has not changed although the tools used for communicating (that is, the media of communication) have changed. We write personal essays and journals as people did hundreds of years ago, but we publish them online and call them weblogs. Michel de Montaigne was undoubtedly the first a-list blogger. We send e-mail and messages back and forth to each other, but does this represent a qualitative change from written correspondence? Wikis, with their collaborative writing affordances, have always reminded me of the notes scribbled in margins of books which I personally experienced in university - some of the marginalia were actually quite thoughtful and well written. Our audience may now be world wide and the capability to publish may now be open to anyone, but we are still following genres that are well established and predate any so-called digital natives or their digital immigrant parents.

After a long and rejuvenating summer break, the EdTech Posse is back with some new podcasts. In our first podcast of the new season, Rick and I talk with brand new Posse deputy Heather Ross about open source in education.

EdTech Posse 2.1 - Open Source in Education

Graham Atwell has published a screencast of his presentation Personal Learning Environments - Live at Edinburgh.

There’s just so much I like about his presentation, but two main ideas stand out in my mind:

  • A personalized learning environment is not an application. It is a suite of services which could be, I suppose, web based or locally run on a PC. Most important, Graham points out that the suite of services is made up of small tools, loosely connected. This is a theme I’ve written about before. I love hearing other people talk about it - it means I’m less likely to be raving or demented, at least about this particular topic.
  • Learning, especially informal learning is not something that can be commoditized, monetized or discussed in the context of free markets. Learning, and education, is a public good - the more people in a society that are learners, the better off that society will be.

I keep meaning to write more on this last topic, but my life seems to drag me away from writing and blogging as much as I’d like to. Ah well, someday I’ll get back to being a more dedicated blogger. I estimate that day will come in 2011 when my son starts Kindergarten. Until then, we’ll have to make due with what I can fit into my schedule.

I just read about this via Dean:

K12 Online 2006 Conference…

Announcing the first annual “K12 Online 2006? convention for teachers, administrators and educators around the world interested in the use of Web 2.0 tools in classrooms and professional practice. This year’s conference is scheduled to be held over two weeks, Oct. 23-27 and Oct. 30- Nov. 3 with the theme “Unleashing the Potential.”

Holy cool idea, Batman! There are so many conferences that I’ve had to miss because of scheduling or being too far away, but this, as Dean points out, could be good. I’d even say this could be great! Big salute to Will, Darren and Sheryl for organizing this.

The organization of this conference is brilliant in its simplicity:

There will be four “conference strands”– two each week. Two presentations will be published in each strand each day, Monday - Friday, so four new presentations will be available each day over the course of the two-weeks. Each presentation will be given in podcast or screencast format and released via the conference blog (URL: TBA) and archived for posterity.

I think that limiting the length of time of the conference and selecting the presenters will help to limit the cognitive load on conference attendees and prevent repetitive presentations. How many conferences have you been to where two (or more) presenters are talking about the same thing? There are some terrific affordances that become apparent when a conference gets changed from a physical, synchronous event to a virtual, asynchronous one!

If you are interested in presenting, and who wouldn’t be, you can get further information at Will’s blog post about K12online 2006. I’d love to contribute something - anyone want to co-present? How about an EdTech Posse presentation? Anyone else interesting in co-operating to put something together? I am pumped!

This is just a quickie braindump post so I have some notes on a bit of tweaking I just did on the school’s installation of Scuttle, an open-source social bookmarking tool similar to del.icio.us.

The problem we were running into was a lack of administrative control to get rid of undesirable (spam) links in the bookmark collection. Looking through the code, I saw that Scuttle does have a stub admin function included, but it isn’t currently implemented.  In a disgustingly quick and dirty hack, I rewrote the code for the admin function so that anyone whose user ID number in the MySQL database is automagically the administrator (and that happen’s to be me in this installation). Nicely enough, once I did that I had edit and delete power over other user’s links - the author of Scuttle has obviously been planning to include some administration tools, and started building a bit of code to do the job.

Samples of code available upon request - if you leave a comment asking for it, I’ll post it up.

I meant to mention this earlier, but it seems like Stephen is back somewhat from his hiatus. Given the hysteria around web based e-mail accounts, MySpace and other threats to the educational orthodoxy, the timing couldn’t be better.

Its good to have you back, Stephen. We need all the help we can get, now more than ever.

I just saw this via Darren Cannell - District blocks e-mail sites

In an effort to promote achievement, which students say does the exact opposite, the school district shut off access this week to Web sites that offer free e-mail service, like Yahoo, Gmail and Hotmail. The crackdown was sparked by concern that some students were wasting their academic potential by spending class time writing e-mails to friends, officials said Friday. All the district’s 8,000 to 9,000 computers, including those used by administrators, have been affected, said Ralph Barca, district technology director.

It is so incredibly frustrating and disappointing to read about this. I’ve spent the past two days at the TLT 2006 conference, talking with some brilliant people about how using web resources and moving towards a more blended model of teaching and learning can improve educational opportunities and outcomes for learners. Then as I’m checking up on my blog reading only to be confronted once again by the real world.

I absolutely agree that students shouldn’t be checking personal e-mail in classes. But what about students who might be using their e-mail for academic reasons:

“For me, it’s not fine,” said Human, who said she doesn’t have a printer at home, nor does she have disks or a CD for recording her science lab reports. E-mailing herself the assignment so she can retrieve it at school is the only option, she said.

But do we want schools to discourage students from reading and writing? Even if it is personal e-mail, they are reading and writing for goodness sake!! I might be a bit radical in my ideas, but I actually consider it a sign of success when students pursue these two activities in my class.

Grrr - I had actually planned to do a little more blogging about the conference, but now I’m too irritated to focus on it. Hopefully I will manage to write some stuff out before I forget it all!

Jay Wilson is talking about using iMovie/iChat. Some key points

  • Ugly is good. Don’t worry about making it beautiful - capturing good content is more important than competing with Spielberg. A lot of educational video is not played back under optimum conditions - low bandwidth, old equipment, etc. so spending a lot of extra time on gloss is not important. (Wildcat video)
  • file formats: for streaming video, Jay’s experience has been that Real Player gives the best performance.
  • FireWire (a.k.a. IEEE1394 a.k.a. iLink) is the most universal way of getting video from a camera to the computer. You can use the camera to shoot and the computer to record when they are hooked up. To record straight onto the computer, an iSight camera works well (autofocus, good microphone, adjusts well to various lighting situations)

Jay demoed iMovie. As always, iMovie is pretty easy to use and almost anybody can start using it right away.

(BTW - Heather Ross is sitting right across from me, and is blogging this right now. Well - I think she’s blogging this. I just checked - she is blogging about the conference in general. Cool. I wonder if she’ll mention me).

Back to demo. Jay has loaded clips from a video camera. Showing how to add clips to the product. After the movie is created, it can be exported (”shared” in MacSpeak) to e-mail, DVD, back to the video camera, etc.

Jay says the most practical way of archiving old tapes from the video camera with stock footage is to keep them on the tapes, and store the tapes in a cool, dry place.

Final Message - in relatively little time, we can assemble some video together that looks well packaged.