Saturday, November 21, 2009
Sunday, November 15, 2009
BP15_2009113_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 6- Comments on Colleen's's Blog
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2009
1 comments:
- McKinley_Megan said...
This site sounds awesome and I will definitely look into "blogster", although I am loving the Blogger we are using for this assignment. My only suggestions with your video is that you have a great backdrop and picture, but I really think this would be effective if it then panned to you actually speaking about "blogster", so it really shows how passionate you are about this particular Web 2.0 tool. I love the music notes coming out of the play box and I would love to learn how you did an animated backdrop. I will definitely check out "blogster" and see if it is something I can use in my classes. Great job!
- November 15, 2009 4:09 PM
BP14_2009113_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 5- Comments on Hardy's Blog
- ETC - Orr_Toni_Blog said...
Hardy, Great video and sounds like a great site. Will have to check it out. Tried to post from the link you set and it would not let me. I can post only if I go on Blogger through Safari not Firefox. Any clue?
- November 15, 2009 2:31 PM
- McKinley_Megan said...
Hardy, this video is awesome! Someday you will have to teach me how to do all of this really cool things that you do with iMovie. This site sounded awesome and your delivery of it was awesome. My only suggestions were that it was hard to catch the name of the site because you were whispering and your mouth was cut off for a lot of the video. Other than that I loved it!!!! Such an inventive way to get people excited about your web 2.0 tool. I am definitely going to check out this site and I love that it also has links to other great sites, like rubistar, which is already a favorite of mine. Good job!
- November 15, 2009 4:00 PM
sunday, november 15, 2009
2 comments:
BP13_2009113_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 5- Comments on Hardy Blog
sunday, november 15, 2009
2 comments:
- ETC - Orr_Toni_Blog said...
Hardy, Great video and sounds like a great site. Will have to check it out. Tried to post from the link you set and it would not let me. I can post only if I go on Blogger through Safari not Firefox. Any clue?
- November 15, 2009 2:31 PM
- McKinley_Megan said...
Hardy, this video is awesome! Someday you will have to teach me how to do all of this really cool things that you do with iMovie. This site sounded awesome and your delivery of it was awesome. My only suggestions were that it was hard to catch the name of the site because you were whispering and your mouth was cut off for a lot of the video. Other than that I loved it!!!! Such an inventive way to get people excited about your web 2.0 tool. I am definitely going to check out this site and I love that it also has links to other great sites, like rubistar, which is already a favorite of mine. Good job!
- November 15, 2009 4:00 PM
BP12_2009113_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools_Pixton
This week I have been researching Comic Creator websites because I want create a comic with my class, but our school does not have Macs, so I couldn't use Comic Life. I finally found this great site called Pixton, which is free and very easy to use to create comics.
I think this is an amazing Web 2.0 tool because students can either use pre-made comics that they just fill in or they can create their own comics from scratch. Even the customizable comics are super easy to use and you can still choose from hundreds of characters, backgrounds, props, colors etc to really help create your own, professional looking comic. What is also really cool is that if your school likes this site, they can subscribe to it and then your students can share their comics with each other and then comment on each other’s comics.
I am planning on using this site for a project my students are doing on King Arthur. I am going to give them each one literary device and one component from the King Arthur Unit we have been discussing, and then the students must create their version of the legend, including both of their assigned elements. So for example, one student might get “similes” and “jousting”, so somewhere in their comic they must have a simile and an example of jousting. I think this is a great way to update the King Arthur Unit they were doing last year, where all they did was research their elements online and they create a journal where they discussed their elements. I am in love with Pixton and have been playing with it all weekend. I hate to say it, but Comic Life might have some serious competition. It is funny, I have been previewing Pixton with the librarian at our school, and she said she was worried because the comics can take so long to make and she was worried the students would want to do that much work. So, I agreed that it took a long time to sort of figure Pixton out, but that I had so much fun doing it, and she said “Ya, it was so fun, I didn’t even care it took me hours to finish!” This is the exact response I am hoping I will get from my students.
References
Pixton Comic Inc. (2008-2009). Pixton: No drawing necessary. Retrieved on November 15, 2009 from http://pixton.com/
Sunday, November 8, 2009
BP11_2009112_Social Bookmarking
Social Bookmarking
One of the first interesting articles I found on how to use Social Bookmarking as an educator was on how one library choose to use Social Bookmarking to organize their whole online resource systems. “By using Web 2.0 social bookmarking sites, libraries can more easily manage subject guides and other lists of Web resources. Social bookmarking services such as Delicious provide a one-click method to bookmark a Web site, allowing librarians to describe and categorize Web sites” (Corrado, 2008). This made a huge amount of sense because often I send students to our library to do a research project, but they will come back with projects that use things like “Wikipedia” as a reference. In order to guide their research I will often pre-research for them and then give them a list of acceptable URLs for them to use for their assignment. This method does not really fix the overall problem though because I am not teaching my students to how to research appropriate sites online and how to decipher “good” sites from “bad” ones. If our library was to use a Social Bookmarking site, like “Delicious”, and tag good websites by categories, students good just go in and search through the tags to find the websites they need for their project. Students could also tag sites they think are appropriate and then share them with me to make sure they have found reliable sites to use for their research projects. In this same idea, students could then share their tagged sites with other students to help collaborate in their research and find the best sites possible.
The second interesting article I found on the use of Social Bookmarking as an educator was on a study that tried to find the most popular news cites as a means to draw conclusions on what type of news media people use most frequently. “This study examined the selection and sharing of news stories from Delicious, a popular social bookmarking site, in order to identify the most frequently consulted news information sources and news topics”(Chung and Yi, 2009). I found this study to be fascinating because as a Journalism teacher I am teaching my students to create Newspapers, but according to this study it showed that most people are turning to blogs and other online news sources for their daily news updates. This trend could suggest that Newspapers and even TV News Broadcasting could become a thing of the past. “Social media sources, primarily blogs, are growing as a major news source… What online news audiences consider to be news is becoming increasingly broad and complex with unclassified sources dominating tagged stories”(Chung and Yi, 2009). It would be really interesting to have my Journalism students recreate this study by using “Delicious” for one month and bookmarking any online “News” site that they use in that time. We could even do a poll of our students to see what news sources they use. We could then compile all of that information by having students share their “delicious” news tags and then (ironically) write an article about the types of news trends we are seeing at our school and whether print media is soon to be a thing of the past.
The third article I found pertained to using Social Bookmarking as a means to further Art education specifically. “…this article details potential uses of delicious, flickr, blogs, podcasts, and wiki. Through these technologies, students may collaboratively build knowledge, develop a deeper understanding of their own artworks and those of other artists, and interact with artworks in new ways” (Buffinton, 2008). The idea was that Art students could use Social networks to share their pieces of art online, but also use Social Bookmarking sites to share inspirational Art sites they had found during research. This would be especially helpful in an Art History class where students would need to look at a lot of different artists in a short period of time. You could have each student research a specific artists and then use “Delicious” to bookmark all the helpful websites they found on their specific author. Then before a test all the students could share their artist tags with all of their fellow students and it would be like one big study guide that the students created themselves. All in all, I found that most of the research about Social Bookmarking was extremely positive and the possibilities of using it in an educational environment seem endless.
References
Chung, D and Kwan Yi. (2009, July). Distribution of news information through social bookmaking: an examination of shared stories in the Delicious website. Information Research. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://informationr.net/ir/index.html
Corrado, E. (2008). Delicious Subject Guides: Maintaining Subject Guides Using a Social Bookmaking Site. Partnership: The Canadian Journal of Library & Information practice & Research. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://www.apla.ca/ejournal.cfm
Buffington, M. (2008). Creating and Consuming Web 2.0 in Art Education. Computers in the Schools. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://www.haworthpress.com/journals/dds.asp
BP10_2009112_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 4- Comments on Toni's Blog
Toni Orr's Blog:
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2009
BL4_2009111_ResearchingandbloggingaboutWeb2.0tools
Found another cool looking site that seemed to be a great classroom site called "EkoLoko" http://play.ekoloko.com/ekoloko/index.html. This was an Ecological Virtual tour of the Environment for Kids as well as being interactive about friendship, nature and the world "at risk". It really had great ideas to help the students with critical thinking skills and to help the world around us but the characters in the "environment" were smoking pipes or cigarettes and blowing smoke!! Turns out this site is from Israel and it must be acceptable to smoke in front of the students. Sad they had to ruin a great site.
Another great site that I found was PB works, formerly PB wiki. The new site is https://my.pb.works.com. Before we knew about all of the iGoogle products my colleague created a wiki site to collaborate with at http://fullsailjuly09.pbworks.com/. This is also one that our school district has been working with for us to use in the classroom that is gated. The teacher would have control of it. You could get students to collaborate on projects together, put videos on it for tutorials so they could view at home, etc. Another great thing to implement for your students. Mine from last year was http://mumlttcadreorr.pbworks.com/ You can add video, images, links, etc. while you are monitor.
The next item I thought to use to teach my students was a skill they need to know since so many of them are into video taping and photography was about sizing and resizing images. Students many times want to email or use images for different reasons but do not understand that different cameras and media devices save images in many different sizes. Most students do not realize that when they are unable to upload a picture to the email it is because of the large size and how much memory it can use. I found a site called "Re-sizer" that will take a large image (3264 X 2448 - 960 KB) and size it in usable form to 200 X 150 but putting through the re-sizer. The site is http://resizr.lord-lance.com/ and it is very useful. It does the re-size as simple as I have seen. Here is the picture that I re-sized. My colleague does not even realize how large the file for this one picture actually was.
This is a tool students need to know about for the 2.0 digital world they will be living in. Most students do not know or understand this as life long skill they need to develop. As an educator in the digital world it is my job to teach them about this.
2 COMMENTS:
- Christina Carboni said...
Colleagues that share are such a wonderous thing!
- NOVEMBER 8, 2009 1:34 PM
- McKinley_Megan said...
All these Web 2.0 Sites sound really awesome. I agree that most schools need to use Web 2.0 Tools that are free because of reduced budgets, so I think it is great you found so many amazing sites that are in fact free. I really liked the one where it teaches students how to resize photos because I definitely think that that is a simple skill that many students do not have because most social networking sites that students use have built in programs that resize the photos for them. I will admit that before I started this class I didn't know much about resizing photos, so I might just use that site myself :)
- NOVEMBER 8, 2009 6:51 PM
BP9_2009112_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 3
Zinepal Solutions Inc. (2008-2009). Zinepal. Now you are the editor. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://www.zinepal.com/
BP8_2009112_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools 2
(2009). Sketchful. Where you can design and share. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://sketchfu.com/
BP7_2009112_Researching and Blogging about Web 2.0 Tools
xWaylab. (2009). Askforia. Ask questions. Share knowledge. Make friends. Retrieved November 8, 2009, from http://askforia.com/
4 comments:
Hardy, I enjoyed your video explaining 'yacapaca', I have not used this Web 2.0 tool, but I will check out the website you provided and keep you informed of my progress if I decide to use this in my classroom.
Hardy,
What a great video. yacapaca sounds like such an interesting website. I'm always looking for new ways to check for fluency and comprehension in my class! I can't wait to check it out, thanks for the tip.
Hardy, How did I know you would have great sites! You rock! I want to be in your class! This sounds like a great site to use for many different things in the classroom. I love that students get instant feedback. I have been working with Reference and Research skills and have not been able to find a good way to assess what I teach - this sounds like the answer. Thanks for the informative video clip.
Hardy another great Video! Although, I am partial to the bugler one myself. Yacapaca is a great site and I love that students create their own "goals" before taking the mini quizzes because it really does create a student driven learning environment. It is even better when they have to decide at the end if they met their own goals. I like that the students can take the online assessments over and over if they choose to, so the focus is on the learning process, not just on the product. I think this is so important because often teachers will just give students an "F" on a test and move on without realizing that obviously the student didn't learn what you wanted them too and never will if you just move on. Overall, this was a great video and another job well done!