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Bradford Saron

12 Fun Hacks for Getting More Out of YouTube - 2 views

  • SynchTube
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Imagine the possibilities with this. 
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    I can think of five educationally geared ways that I can use the hacks contained in this article if youtube was freed from our filtering system. Do you have any ideas? 
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    Appreciated this site and immediately sent it out to our administrators. We're active users of YouTube in Hudson.
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    Welcome, Mary!
Bradford Saron

Douglas Reeves @ NAESP 2012 - YouTube - 2 views

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    When clicking on link to view, the site states that this YouTube is private. Is there a way to share this where it will allow viewers in?
Bradford Saron

Dr. Gary Stager Discusses Best Educational Ideas in the World - YouTube - 1 views

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    Awesome (although informal) interview. 
Bradford Saron

The End of Wonder in the Age of Whatever - YouTube - 0 views

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    Michael Wesch's latest presentation. 
anonymous

Diigo - Improving how we find, share, and save information - YouTube - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 31 May 12 - Cached
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    staff professional development on web 2.0
Bradford Saron

YouTube - "Take Me Out" by Atomic Tom LIVE on NYC subway - 0 views

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    Any preconceived limitations of the capacity and reaches of the Apple I-touch are now obliterated. Wow. 
Bradford Saron

YouTube - Sir Ken Robinson answers your Twitter questions (#askSKR) - Question 6: The j... - 0 views

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    Sir Ken Robinson answers questions from twitter in this series. Here, he works in a preview to his next book. Can't wait to see him in January at WASB!
Bradford Saron

YouTube - Sir Ken Robinson en PalomaTV - 0 views

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    New thoughts from Sir Ken. Thoughts?
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Michael Wesch's New Youtube Video - 1 views

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    New Blog Post
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    Shared this with administrators on our technology leadership team - also like Wesch's "From Knowledgeable to Knowledge-Able"
Bradford Saron

YouTube - "The Visions of Students Today" 2011 Remix One (trailer) - 1 views

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    A quick view of what Michael Wesch's forthcoming video will look like. 
Bradford Saron

Development - Augmented Reality and Web 3.0 | Delta Publishing - English Language Teaching - 0 views

  • What about Web 3.0? So, that’s a very brief description of the shift to Web 2.0, but what about Web 3.0? Does there have to be one? Is it already here? I’ve heard quite a few people speculating about Web 3.0. At one point, when virtual worlds such as Second Life were all the rage, it was being described as Web 3.D and many were predicting that the web would become a 3 dimensional space that we would fly around using our virtual avatars. Others have described Web 3.0 as the ‘semantic web’. The development of semantic web standards was designed to help computers ‘understand’ and read web pages and make connections between them. This would dramatically improve the effectiveness of search engines and help people to access web based information more effectively. One of the most recent predictions is that with the drastic growth of internet able hand-held devices such as phones, gaming consoles and tablet devices Web 3.0 will be all about ‘the mobile web’.
  • Augmented reality is a kind of fusion between our existing physical reality and the internet.
  • What it means in reality is that mobile devices, will help us to access information from the internet which is specific to our physical location and proximity to real world objects places and even people. Check out mobile apps from Gowalla and Foursquare for examples of this.
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  • What’s more devices that have some form of optic, such as a camera, will enable us to see and interact with 3D multimedia visualizations of information which can be overlaid on what the camera shows us of the ‘real’ world. here’s an interesting video of an augmented reality web browser being used on a mobile phone; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b64_16K2e08
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    A current and insightful article on two trends of growing legitimacy. 
Bradford Saron

YouTube - ‪EngagingEducators's Channel‬‏ - 1 views

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    Great website to review!
Curt Rees

Donald Clark Plan B - 0 views

  • My suspicion is that they know far more about this than we adults.
  • Never have the young shared so much, so often in so many different ways.
  • Teaching and lecturing are largely lone wolf activities in classrooms. Schools, colleges and Universities share little. Educational professionals are deeply suspicious of anything produced outside of their classroom or their institution.
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  • Beware of big, abstract nouns.
  • When it comes to creativity, my own view is that the music, drama and other creative skills my own offspring have gained, have mostly been acquired outside of school.
  • Universities were failing badly on the three skills they studied; critical thinking, complex reasoning and communications
  • Across the Arab world young people have collaborated on Blogs, Twitter, Facebook and Youtube to bring down entire regimes. Not one of them has been on a digital literacy course.
  • Pushing rounded, sophisticated, informal skills into a square, subject-defined environment is not the answer.
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    This is very thought-provoking, especially the section on collaboration. 
Bradford Saron

Sir Ken Robinson-Leading the Learning Revolution - 1 views

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    "The learning revolution we are talking about has lots of antecedents. It's not a mystery here."
Guy Leavitt

"In the book" video - 4 views

shared by Guy Leavitt on 26 Oct 10 - Cached
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    Video showing the transfer between scrolls and books. Funny.
Bradford Saron

Daniel Pink's Think Tank: Flip-thinking - the new buzz word sweeping the US - Telegraph - 1 views

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    Note that this article is written by Daniel Pink, the author of A Whole New Mind and Drive. 
Bradford Saron

How Should We Use Technology in Schools? Ask Students | MindShift - 1 views

  • he 2010 Education Council had plenty to say — and they’re certain they’ll be heard. Among their suggestions: 1) Allow access to restricted Web sites like YouTube for educational purposes. 2) Hold technology integration training workshops for teachers. 3) Use cell phones as a “teacher-defined learning tool.” 4) Partner with media-savvy youth organizations like YouMedia so that students who participate in technology-rich projects outside of school can receive elective credits.
  • he most important recommendations is for CPS to offer workshops for teachers on using technology in the classroom.
  • teachers should have a personal password for unblocking restricted websites for educational purposes.
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    Interesting article. Like most of these "recommendation" type articles, much of what you read is familiar and obvious. 
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    It may be obvious to you.
Bradford Saron

E-Mail's Big Demographic Split - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    What a great graphic to ponder. Apparently, email is not instantaneous enough for generations new to technology. Michael Wesch often quotes Marshall McLuahn who said, "We look at the present through a rear-veiw mirror. We march backward into the future." This is a perfect example of how older age groups adapt to new technologies, which is through their understanding of the past. 
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    I think this connects to your post about the youtube "cheating" video. We have to understand how the world is changing and, even if we do not like it, adapt to these changes. Just as email has become outdated, so has multiple choice tests from test banks developed by book publishers. I'd be inteersted in Michael Wesch's thoughts on the "cheating" incident.
Bradford Saron

Confessions of an Aca/Fan: Archives: Introduction to Communications Technologies - 0 views

  • Henry Jenkins COMM 202 Introduction to Communications Technology This course is intended as an introduction to the ways new and emerging communications technologies impact our culture. While the primary focus will be on digital and mobile technologies and practices (contemporary new media), the course will also consider a range of older media when they were new - including print culture, cinema, television, recorded sound, photography, and the telephone. The course is divided into three broad units: Understanding Technological Change is intended to offer broad conceptual frameworks for thinking about the relations between technology and culture. Reinventing... takes as its starting point the ways that the emergence of digital, networked, and mobile communications technology has impacted pre-existing media forms. Rethinking... examines a range of institutions and practices as they are re-imagined in response to the introduction of new communications technologies. Taken as a whole, this class will introduce students to: Core issues concerning the study of communications technologies The process of media in transition The ways that new media impact existing media and institutions Core digital platforms (YouTube, Facebook, Wikipedia, Twitter, eBay, Flickr, Second Life, etc.) and the ways they are reshaping our everyday lives.
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    Here is Henry Jenkins' (a leader in the edtech think-tank style publications) new class on technology.
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