Helping Colleagues Get Connected One by One

Other March 29th, 2008

It’s been a great week. Over the past few years, I have been working on getting connected with technology and the Web, building professional development networks, and doing lots of personal reflection about the art and mastery of teaching and learning. But, at the same time that I have been growing in these ways; I have also seen the technology gap growing between me and my colleagues. A gap which was widening even beyond the difference that I was already keenly aware of; that I am a predominant right-brainer. I was teaching about multiple intelligences and learning styles; yet my own differences seemed to be isolating me into a void space or vacuum of sorts. I guess some people will always be on the fringes exploring new things; it can be both lonely and exciting. But things are now changing. And, this past week is hard proof. One by one I have been helping colleagues get connected. And, the local feelings of isolation are starting to disappear.

This past week in Mexico City, I gave a presentation on connectivism and the networked teacher to teacher trainers, teachers, and administrators in the field of education, principally English as a Foreign Language. The group was made op of my university colleagues. One participant was the ex-president of the Mexico City MEXTESOL chapter (Mexico Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages), the largest professional society for English teacher in Mexico and sister organization to the USA TESOL organization.

The session was titled “Connectivism - Personal Learning Networks for 21st Century Teachers” and we covered basic Web 2.0 tools for getting connected, including:

  1. microblogging (twitter)
  2. social networks (META Web 2.0, Classroom 2.0, eflclassroom, etc.)
  3. RSS (Google Reader)
  4. blogging & wikis (edublogs.org, wikispaces, etc.)
  5. social bookmarking (del.icio.us)
  6. digital photo sharing (Flickr)

Alec Couros’ graphic, “The Networked Teacher” was indispensable in charting the differences between the typical teacher’s networks and those of a connected teacher using technology.

networked_teacher

The icing on the cake came later in the week, when I sat down and helped a local colleague, and coincidentally also a past president of the Morelia MEXTESOL to increase her connectivity. So let’s keep an eye on Ellenblog as she starts on her blogging voyage. Lots of goodies to come from Ellen, of that I am sure. Now she is also set up on Google Reader and del.icio.us. She is on her way to being connected, and all of us will benefit, as will she and those that she teaches. Ellen has asked me to sit down and guide her bit by bit to demystify Web 2.0 and getting connected in the most productive way. Perhaps you already know Ellen from her social networking at Mexico English Teachers’ Alliance :: Web 2.0 where she has been an active member since this past summer. Wow, my head is still spinning!

After reflecting a bit on my workshop and individual coaching session, I realized just how many “Ellens” there must be out there. Those educators that have a wealth of experience and offerings that aren’t yet widely connected (perhaps a forum here or forum there and some emailing). I now see just how important it is for those of us that are connected to help others get connected one by one. Like Vicki Davis has said, “The first step is getting connected yourself.”

With my Mexico City and local colleagues getting more connected, I don’t feel so isolated here in my region. And, it feels really good. So look for some new faces on twitter … cause here they come. There is no turning back!”

tHURSDAY tHUMOR

Humor March 27th, 2008

Will Edubloggers flock to Flock?

Tools March 21st, 2008

http://flock.com

Flock With its sleek interface and social Web features, Flock just may become the browser of choice for edubloggers and others. Why? Because Flock’s feature set focuses on the social aspects of Web 2.0. Edubloggers are also keen on the Web’s social offerings, professional learning networks, blogging, and getting connected. So, let’s take a closer look now that I have been testing the post-beta release, Flock 1.1, for a few days.

flock

Flock offers seamless integration with Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, Flickr, and more. In the screenshot above, I am microblogging with Twitter in the sidebar under the “People” tab, perusing my YouTube favorites in the media streams view strip at the top of the browser, and all that while managing my Flickr account at the same time. The integration between these components is fascinating and timesaving. I can, for example, post the current page URL into a Twitter message with just the click of a link. I can do the same with photos by dragging and dropping them on top of a twitter friend’s tweet. That is cool! Or perhaps I will decide to drop a Youtube video onto my Twitter sidebar to share a video that I just found that my twitterverse might enjoy, too. Flock is one big social frenzy that lets me share as I need to, quickly with no fuss! And, it is pretty to boot. While Firefox is a fantastic workhorse, I have never been fond of its visual layout and design.

At first I was a little disappointed that Flock doesn’t offer a Foxmarks-like equivalent for syncing my bookmarks between computers and for safekeeping should something go wrong. On further inspection, I discovered that Flock has native support for sharing bookmarked favorites with del.icio.us. Isn’t that better? Foxmarks isn’t all that social at all. I want to both safeguard my bookmarks and share them. Flock does this and quite well. Goodbye Foxmarks, one less thing to worry about. I like streamlining and working smarter. I am a very busy person. I can also say goodbye to twhirl, Snitter, TwitBin, TwitterFox, etc. All those extra gadgets, gone!

Bloggers get ready! Flock has a basic bare bones built in blog editor and publisher. In just a few clicks, my edublogs.org blog was linked to my browser. One more streamlining advancement. I am getting happier by the moment. Goodbye Windows Live Writer (well, I may keep WLW since I really like it .. but I don’t really need it now, guess just a matter of weaning).

flock sidebar

There are many many more features in Flock that allow me to connect and integrate faster and smarter with an increasingly social Web. Tools like a photo uploader, media bar, a drag and drop sidebar clipboard (links, text, images, etc.), feeds aggregator/reader with folder management, and more.

What could make this even better? Since Flock is built on Firefox architecture, most of the Firefox addons work with Flock, too. Simply navigate to the Firefox addon page and install as usual. P.S. The Foxmarks addon is not compatible, but as already noted, not really all that relative now.

As you can see in the people sidebar screenshot to the right, all my social sites’ activity appears in chronological order in the same timeline. No more bouncing around between Flickr, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook to keep tabs on what my friends are up to.

Ready to get Flocked? I did, and it feels nice!

Be a Flockstar

Related reading/viewing:
Flock Wins Web Award at SXSW Conference
Edit: My twitter pal Liz Davis’ Flock Introduction video (March 28, 2008)

Cover It Live blogging test: New Edublogs iframes feature

Other March 16th, 2008

This is a test of Cover It Live blogging tool and Edublogs new allowance for iframes.

tHURSDAY tHUMOR

Humor March 13th, 2008

Act Like a Professional

May 16th, International Day for Sharing Life Stories - Digital Storytelling

Events, Other March 11th, 2008

Been looking for that perfect moment to dive into digital storytelling? Here it is!

http://www.ausculti.org/stories

Great opportunity to start a digital storytelling project with your students.

The Center for Digital Storytelling is based in Berkeley, California. CDS is a non-profit training, project development, and research organization dedicated to assisting people in using digital media to tell meaningful stories from their lives. Our focus is on developing large-scale projects for community, educational, and business institutions, using the methods and principles of the Digital Storytelling Workshop. We also offer workshops for organizations and individuals and serve as an international clearinghouse of information and resources about storytelling and new media.

Other digital storytelling resources:

Digital Storytelling Links
Sample Lessons: Digital Storytelling
Educational Uses of Digital Storytelling
50 Web 2.0 Ways to Tell a Story
NAIS - Digital Storytelling Adventures
Terraminds Twitter Search: Digital Storytelling
del.icio.us Digital Storytelling tags
Google Blog Search: Digital Storytelling
The Connected Classroom Links
Digital Stories
Discovery Education Network streaming resource for Digital Storytelling
Engaging Digital Natives with Digital Storytelling
Digital Storytelling Carnival #3
Lisa Huff’s Wiki - Digital Storytelling (& more)

Please add more Digital Storytelling resource links in the comments area. Thanks!