Skip to main content

Home/ Literacy with ICT/ Group items tagged pbwiki

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Evans

PBwiki Offers $25 Million in Web 2.0 Tools for Educators : August 2008 : THE Journal - 0 views

  •  
    Collaborative technology developer PBwiki has launched two new grant programs for education offering free upgrades to the company's hosted wiki service and other awards.
John Evans

PBwiki Resources - 0 views

  •  
    A collection of videos to learn about the various features of PBWiki.
John Evans

Podcast245: Technology Shopping Cart Podcast05 - Digital Citizenship and an I... - 0 views

  • Welcome to episode five of the Technology Shopping Cart podcast where educational innovation thrives on the food of creative ideas! This week Karen Montgomery, Vicki Allen and Wesley Fryer host an interview with Kristine Molnar of PBwiki. PBwiki is one of our favorite web 2.0 sites for creating collaborative wiki documents with teachers and students. After sharing our geeks of the week, we discussed digital citizenship and the ways teachers in different places are helping students as well as educators connect 21st century skills with digital citizenship skills including Internet safety, safe online collaboration, and netiquette. It is helpful to situate conversations about Internet safety within a broader discussion of digital citizenship, and insure the constructive and positive uses of collaborative digital technologies are also highlighted.
John Evans

My E-Learning Journey: 21st Century ICT Pedagogy Conference 2009 - 0 views

  • The ' C 'GenerationConnect, Communicate, Colloborate, CreateLearning is Fun with Images
  •  
    I have added many of these resources to the Flickr Toys and More page on the Literacy with ICT: IMYM Tutorials Wiki at http://joevans.pbwiki.com/Flickr+Toys+and+More
John Evans

25 Websites To Have Fun With Your Photos | Web 2.0 - 0 views

  •  
    Have many of these already added to Flickr Toys and More at http://joevans.pbwiki.com/Flickr+Toys+and+More along with some ideas of curricular fits.
Rob McDonald

PBworks Summer Camp / FrontPage - 0 views

  •  
    PBwiki Summer camp is structured so each week there will be a specific lesson on how to use your wiki. You will receive an email every Monday with a video, a lesson, and with links to the homework, examples and more. Review the video, do your homework and meet with us on Tuesday for a virtual presentation.
John Evans

discoverychange / What do you wonder about - 0 views

  •  
    Very cool website. 5 words says alot!
John Evans

Digitally Speaking / Podcasting - 0 views

  • The weaknesses of using a tool like Gabcast are few.  First, the recording quality that you'll get from a cell phone or a landline doesn't match the recording quality that you'll get from a microphone and a program like Audacity.  What's more, while it is possible to edit a Gabcast recording----by downloading the file, working with it on your computer, and then uploading it back to Gabcast----it's not easy!  That means your recordings will lack the "bells and whistles" that more polished podcast programs have
  • The solution:  Begin your podcasting efforts using a free podcasting service like Gabcast.  What makes services like Gabcast so valuable is that student recording is done over the phone----whether that be a cellphone, landline or computer-based connection.  Users dial a 1-800 number, enter a specific code that identifies their podcast program and then begin recording.  It's as simple as that!   What's even better is that your recordings are automatically posted on a Gabcast webpage, where listeners can access new content and comment on the recordings that you've added.  Teachers who start with Gabcasting essentially get an all-in-one home for their podcasting efforts---no special tools or skills required (other than a telephone----and if you don't have one of those, ask your students.  I guarantee you that there's a cell phone or two in a locker on your hallway right now!)
  • But for me, the weaknesses are nothing when compared to the benefits of Gabcast.  With little trouble, my students can record on any topic from anywhere.  If we're on a field trip and they want to record their reflections, it's no sweat.  All they have to do is dial a 1-800 number from their cellphones.  If we're in the classroom and I want small groups of children to comment on a topic that we're studying in class, it's done.  "Kids, go get your cell phones and working with a partner...."    (Needless to say, that's one of their favorite parts of our day.)   What Gabcast offers is immediacy.  Students and teachers using Gabcast to record can begin podcasting today without having to take any continuing education classes or begging for resources to buy new digital tools.  That kind of flexibility is what literally defines the work of the 21st Century----and it is the kind of work that teachers should be emphasizing in their classrooms.    (If Gabcast is blocked by your school district's firewall, consider checking out Gcast or Podomatic.  Both are similar services that may be of value to you in your efforts to get plugged in.)
1 - 20 of 74 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page