Notes from the Ridge


Yahoo Tackles School 2.0
September 4, 2007, 9:05 am
Filed under: Uncategorized



In an effort to service web savvy educators, yahoo.com will soon be releasing its Yahoo Teachers web site. (See video here).

According to Ars Technica writer, Thomas Wilburn, the site will offer a combination of bookmarklet, archive, and collaboration space for educators, Yahoo Teachers was originally meant to be a research tool for trip planning.”

I found the following to ring most true based on my own experiences sharing Web 2.0 technologies to date:

…tech use in education falls across a wide gradient—while students are generally more wired than ever, teachers may be tech savants, total Luddites, or anywhere in between. In their discussions with educators… they heard that teachers must spend large amounts of time outside of their workday working on lesson plans and preparation, and they feel disconnected from other teachers; after all, they can’t just walk out of the classroom to chat around the water cooler, particularly at lower grade levels.

I’m going through a similar shift in my own teaching style. While I am excited about implementing my class blog, wiki site, and our new Moodle tool, I find that I’m struggling to make time to get things Web 2.0 up and running. Joe, from Global Classrooms has been a great help, and I will continue to look to my fellow educator friends, like Lisa Durff, who is always ready to offer a swift kick in the technological pants!

Anyway, I’ve signed on to be notified of Yahoo’s release of this product, as the tool chest still isn’t quite filled to the brim! :)

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Making OpenOffice the Teacher’s Pet…
September 4, 2007, 8:28 am
Filed under: TechTips



For those of you who have been able to escape the clutches of Microsoft’s Office Suite – favoring instead the OpenOffice.org product offerings, Teacher’s Pet may be of some use!

From the site:

The Teacher’s Pet is a free text tool that can help you transform text into fun classroom activities. Developed by a teacher, here are just some of the things the tool can do:

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Lo Siento…
September 1, 2007, 2:26 pm
Filed under: General



Sorry for not writing much the past week or two. Think we’re all in the same boat – for the most part – with school starting up! Kids are great this year, but teaching the 3 community college courses may end up being a bit much! Look for several new posts soon! In the meantime, check out Creative Commons’ search function! Makes finding images for class projects a breeze!

Best -

Kevin



Professor Tosses Out Textbooks – Favors Wikis
August 21, 2007, 2:25 pm
Filed under: pedagogy, wikis



Well, looks like at least one educator has taken to using wikis in lieu of traditional textbooks! (See Wes Fryer’s Infinite Thinking Machine post on this very idea.) According to Computerworld, Gerald Kane, assistant professor of Information Systems at Boston College is encouraging his students to use a wiki site to confer and collaborate. Students also use the wiki to propose potential examination questions, some of which end up on actual tests! According to Kane, the practice of using student authored questions has worked out well, because students have more of a sense of what will be on the exam. I wonder if he had to provide students with some basic test and measurement guidelines before he started receiving questions that merited inclusion on his tests? Having done so, I would imagine an increased level of student engagement and buy in regarding the course as a whole, and I’ll look into incorporating this practice in my Contemporary Humanities course this fall.

I can truly relate to Kane’s sentiments regarding the shift in teaching style that takes place once wikis are brought into the classroom. In the article, he states that the wiki “has become a really robust tool and has changed the way I teach, primarily because it means I am more of a guide to them rather than a lecturer. My job is to teach them how to navigate this information on the Web. The wiki is now the basis and the platform on which my class is based.” I spoke to my middle school students about this very idea today by explaining to them that my job is to teach them how to use the tools that will engage and excite them about knowledge acquisition. This, in contrast to the standard “sit there and let me tell you what you need to know” approach. Boring!

Active Knowledge Transfer and Collaboration

Students are also using the wiki space to provide each other with proofreading assistance – offering each other useful editing suggestions prior to turning in their work. Gates states that his review of those papers receiving peer editing help versus those not relieving it showed that the peer edited efforts typically garner higher grades. I was the resident “paper editor” for my dorm floor fresman year. While it provided me with a little pocket change — yes, I charged for my services — it sure would have been easier to ditch the hard copies for easily editable electronic versions! I imagine that students also benefit greatly from higher caliber work examples posted on the wiki site by more advanced researchers and writers in the class.

Something John Pederson mentioned the other day via one of his copious and very entertaining twitters (keep ‘em coming, John!) that wikis work so well for eduction because they allow for Just In Time (JIT) editing. While I share John’s impression that this feature also eggs on professor OCD tendencies, I can imagine no better way to relay current information to my students. The typical textbook takes two years to go from the draft to general readership stage. This fact alone makes the benefits of using wikis in the classroom crystal clear.

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