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Blair Peterson

Remixing Writing: A Digital Essay « The Unquiet Librarian - 1 views

  • I am currently collaborating with two of our English teachers to co-design and co-teach research and content creation for digital research projects.   Susan Lester (10th Honors World American Literature/Composition) and I began our project about three weeks ago (read more in this blog post), and I’ll be working with John Bradford (11th Honors American Literature/Composition) as of Tuesday for the next month or so on his twist on the project (more details coming soon).  In both of our collaborative projects, we felt our students were not quite ready  in terms of skill sets or prior learning experiences to completely open up the possibilities for a digital research “paper” or project although students do have creative latitude in choosing and designing their multigenre elements that will be integrated into the wiki based “text”; students also have the option to integrate multimedia into each section of their wikified “papers”.
  • the three of us  felt torn in wanting to open up the options and not setting up students for utter frustration (to the point many would completely shut down) in terms of combining two advanced skill sets (new research skills and content are being introduced);
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    Think about student digital essays on Prezi and partnerships between teachers and librarians. Great ideas here.
Blair Peterson

Project Information Literacy: Smart Talks - 0 views

  • But something like the concept of plagiarism has not changed.
  • But I don’t think that youth today are somehow more prone to plagiarism than their parents and grandparents, no, just as I don’t think they are somehow “dumber” or less interested in reading or many of the other myths about youth in a digital era.
  • Few of the handouts we analyzed—18%—defined plagiarism, discussed it as a form of academic fraud, and/or explained ways of avoiding it.
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  • an academic crime they have told us they really do not fully understand.
  • It’s not the core topic of most courses; it’s not fun; and it sounds school-marmish to bring it up. I prefer not to bring it up in my own teaching, so I quite understand the reluctance of teachers in your sample to do so.
  • It’s wrong to take the work of someone else and pass it off as your own, whether in the academic context or otherwise.
  • One area where some confusion seeps in has to with remixing content.
  • The remixing of content, with proper attribution and in keeping with the fair use principle under copyright, is something that we ought to encourage and to celebrate. We do need to help students understand the line between riffing off and ripping off the work of others.
  • These are skills that we should find ways to teach. I think they are best taught in the context of active projects where students have their hands dirty with materials, whether digital or not.
  • ibrarians should help our students figure out how to manage the rivers of digital information that they encounter every day…right now librarians are focused on the pools.
  • I think we need to be in the business of using these new rivers of information, adding to them, sharing what we know, and coding – developing, in the sense of writing computer code – new ones that work even better.
  • First, I want students to learn more about creativity and what they can and should do with information, whether or not it is held in copyright by someone else. How can they use and re-use they extraordinary wealth of information that they are blessed to have access too? Second, I hope that they will learn the skills to manage the vast amount of information they are confronted with. That includes knowing where to look, how to be efficient, how to stay on top of great sources.
  • And third, I think it’s crucial that they continue to learn to think independently for themselves.
Blair Peterson

SecEd | Features | The efficient classroom - 0 views

  • must engage in ongoing capacity-building; ideally including a combination of coaching, mentoring, support and training.
  • Not surprisingly, technology investments seldom produce maximal educational returns. To strengthen this weak link, any consideration of purpose-built technologies must benefit from including strong training, professional development, and ongoing professional learning components.
  • Similarly, waiting for equipment set-up (e.g. calibrating an interactive whiteboard), handling network glitches (e.g. security problems), and resolving equipment issues (e.g. burnt-out bulbs and stuck keyboard keys) too often sidetrack teaching, disrupt classroom activities, frustrate users, and ultimately diminish student learning.
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  • These include preventative maintenance, equipment loaner pools, remote helpdesks, and school-site repairs.
  • Teachers benefit because they receive training, professional development and ongoing support that aligns with technology they receive and the work they do in their classrooms. Moreover, they have reliable tech support when they need it.
  • The first involves shifting computers from school tech labs to classrooms and from classrooms to pupils’ backpacks. The second replaces books and print-based analogues with online curricula and digital content. The third removes one-size-fits all, teacher-at-front-of-the room instructional approaches in favour of personalised lessons, assessments, and instructional modalities.
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    Mark Weston Article on 3 trends in technology for education. No surprises on the three. Shifting computers from classroom to backpacks; replacing print based books with online curricula and digital content and changing from teacher at front of the room to personalized lessons, assessments and instructional modalities. The key information comes on building the capacity of teachers and making sure that tech issues don't hold back teaching and learning.
Blair Peterson

The 33 Digital Skills Every 21st Century Teacher should Have - 1 views

  • 1- Create and edit  digital audio
  • 2- Use Social bookmarking to share resources with and between learners
  • 3- Use blogs and wikis to create online platforms for students
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  • 4- Exploit digital images for classroom use
  • 5- Use video content to engage students
  • 6- Use infographics to visually stimulate students
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    I like the list and she provides links to resources to help educators learn more about the tools.
Shabbi Luthra

Manifesto for 21st century school librarians - 1 views

  • You market, and your students share, books using social networking tools like Shelfari, Good Reads, or LibraryThing.
  • Your students blog or tweet or network in some way about what they are reading
  • You review and promote books in your own blogs and wikis and other websites. (Also Reading2.0 and BookLeads Wiki for book promotion ideas)
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  • You know that searching various areas of the Web requires a variety of search tools. You are the information expert in your building. You are the search expert in your building. You share an every growing and shifting array of search tools that reach into blogs and wikis and Twitter and images and media and scholarly content.
  • You open your students to evolving strategies for collecting and evaluating information. You teach about tags, and hashtags, and feeds, and real-time searches and sources, as well as the traditional database approaches you learned way back in library school.
  • You work with learners to exploit push information technologies like RSS feeds and tags and saved databases and search engine searches relevant to their information needs.
  • You know that communication is the end-product of research and you teach learners how to communicate and participate creatively and engagingly. You consider new interactive and engaging communication tools for student projects. ● Include and collaborate with your learners. You let them in. You fill your physical and virtual space with student work, student contributions—their video productions, their original music, their art.
  • Know and celebrate that students can now publish their written work digitally. (See these pathfinders: Digital Publishing, Digital Storytelling)
  • Your collection–on- and offline–includes student work. You use digital publishing tools to help students share and celebrate their written and artistic work.
  • You welcome and host telecommunications events and group gathering for planning and research and social networking.
  • You realize you will often have to partner and teach in classroom teachers’ classrooms. One-to-one classrooms change your teaching logistics. You teach virtually. You are available across the school via email and chat.
Blair Peterson

BBC News - Digital textbooks open a new chapter - 0 views

  • students to learn "whenever and wherever"
  • He said the government would support an open content market containing a variety of learning materials, aimed at keeping up quality while keeping down costs.
  • They were best at evaluating information on the internet, assessing its credibility and navigating web pages.
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  • But the Achilles' heel - commonplace with educational technology - was the teachers. They felt they needed far greater training in how to integrate the resources into their lesson plans.
  • Preliminary results from a US military "digital tutor" project suggested the time needed to become an expert in information technology could be reduced from years to months, said the White House.
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    Another article on digitizing textbooks. 
Blair Peterson

Can educators in the 21st Century be content experts, but media illiterate an... - 0 views

  • I’d say that 21st Century educators first need to be content experts and second need to be media literate to be relevant to their students.
  • We can’t expect students to use media correctly if as educators we’re not willing to jump in and learn, share and collaborate with our personal learning network.
    • Blair Peterson
       
      This supports our work on modeling the use of digital tools in teacher learning and work.
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  • Content experts are a necessity, but there is no excuse to be media illiterate Let students be your guidance if you need help with technology “Media Literate” means willing to learn continuously about tech Using new tools is necessary — new learners have new tools Media savviness doesn’t necessarily mean great teacher Content knowledge is a necessity to evaluate the quality of sources Must remember that many teachers are in different places regarding their tech knowledge — differentiating support is necessary How do Schools of Ed play into this?  What’s their responsibility?
Blair Peterson

ISTE | NETS for Students Essential Conditions - 0 views

  • Proactive leadership in developing a shared vision for educational technology among all education stakeholders including teachers and support staff, school and district administrators, teacher educators, students parents, and the community
  • Technology-related professional learning plans and opportunities with dedicated time to practice and share ideas
  • Consistent and reliable assistance for maintaining, renewing, and using ICT and digital learning resources
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  • Content standards and related digital curriculum resources that are aligned with and support digital-age learning and work
  • Planning, teaching, and assessment centered around the needs and abilities of students
Blair Peterson

Multimedia Library Search - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views

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    This video from the MacArthur Foundation. 2 ways that digital media has changed learning. Interest learning and mentoring learning.
Shabbi Luthra

Nine Important Trends in the Evolution of Digital Textbooks and E-learning Co... - 0 views

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    Fascinating post on the changes in publishing.
Blair Peterson

The Gutenberg Parenthesis - 0 views

  • This new revolution started in the 20th century with sound recording and film, moved next to television and radio and today takes the form of the internet.  He points out that there is a common theme when people consider these changes – that they are not simply something new but also the end of something old. 
  • The primary impact on the mediated context of content during the parenthetical period is containment.  Look at a printed work, Pettitt suggested, and you will see strict regimentation.  Words are forced into lines, surrounded by margins, placed on pages that are sewn into a binding, contained by a jacket and placed on a shelf where they can be contained and controlled.  The words have been "imprisoned" and have lost much of their pre-parenthetical fluidity.  This confinement of cultural production has obviously not been limited to the written work: plays move to stages and music to concert halls during the parenthesis.
  • He said that human consciousness in the digital age, which de-emphasizes the kinds of categorization that marked the age of print, makes us think in a way that is reminiscent of a "medieval peasant."
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  • Another point by Donaldson was that there have been and will continue to be other parentheses – hypertext and Google for example – that attempt to contain and control content.  But at the end of the day, he said, there is no way confinement can work.  There will always be content beyond the boundaries of the parenthesis.
Blair Peterson

Multimedia Library Search - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views

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    The 21st Century Learner - 4 min video on today's learners.
Blair Peterson

Multimedia Library Search - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views

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    Learn about putting "chocolate on top of broccoli". Shift from education to learning, consumption of information to participation and production, and thinking about institutions to thinking about networks.
Blair Peterson

Bring a "Knowledge Broker" to School Today! | Psychology Today - 2 views

  • First, he or she is up to date with technology, not only in the educational arena, but across the board.
  • Second, your knowledge broker must be able to have the interest in finding resources for any class content.
  • Third, and perhaps most important, the knowledge broker must be able to transfer his/her knowledge to a teacher - who is most likely not all that excited about technology or at best a bit skeptical - in a calm, jargon-free style.
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  • ome teachers get whiteboards and dazzle themselves, while the students, for the most part, crave the media-rich environments in which they live when they are not in class. It is a conundrum to say the least.
  • Allowing teachers to fumble along implementing technology experiences haphazardly is no longer productive or effective.
    • Blair Peterson
       
      We have to keep this in mind when we think about professional development. Can't do it haphazardly.
  • "harbinger of innovation" meaning someone who keeps up with new educational technologies by attending conferences and staying connected with other knowledge brokers.
  • Second, he/she must have time to develop classroom (or outside of classroom) technology-related activities.
  • Third, these select individuals must be excellent teachers and know how to explain complicated technology to digital immigrants.
  • Fourth, knowledge brokers have to be available to help the teacher learn the technology, help introduce it to the students (or stand by while the teacher does the introduction to help with the expected problems), and be willing to return calls - shouts - for help immediately.
  • Finally, knowledge brokers need to be catalysts for change in the school environment which means that they have to be able to assume all four roles PLUS coordinating all the present and future technology integration. In other words, they have to love it and embrace it and get the teachers to feel the same way.
Blair Peterson

EPortfolio Rubric (Digital Portfolio Rubric) - 2 views

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    A great, straight forward resource - an anchor for considering key components
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