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Mervi Jansson

Second Life Blogs: Features: The New SecondLife.com - 0 views

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    Second Lifen uudistui
Mervi Jansson

20 + mind-blowing social media statistics | Blog | Econsultancy - 0 views

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    sosiaalisen median tilastoja
A Rongas

10 Ways Universities Share Information Using Social Media - 0 views

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    Vadim Lavrusikin, Columbia University in his blog (15.7.09): "Universities are constantly exploring new ways to use social media to fulfill their missions of engaging and sharing knowledge with their constituents."
A Rongas

The Long Tail - Wired Blogs - 0 views

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    Sivulla 190 jokavuotinen aikaa vievä siivous ja miksi? :-) Kuinkahan monta tuntia yhdessä koulussa menee opettajilla yhteensä sähköpostien poistamiseen, kun muuten posti ei kulje? Tässä olisi herätyksen paikka.
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    Totta Sirpa! Meillä on sähköpostin raja 40 Mt, mikä tarkoittaa sitä, että siihen mahtuu muutama liitetiedosto niiltä, jotka eivät edes tajua lähettävänsä 5 megan kokoista liitetiedostoa, jossa on printtikelpoinen A4 jostain tapahtumasta. Nykypäivänä tuollainen TYÖsähköposti on aivan onneton. Siis en itse käytä sitä kuin pakollisiin. Samoin työnantajan tarjoama verkkolevyllä on rajoitettu tila, niin etten ainakaan itse saa enää tallennettua sinne mitään. Kun en jaksa siivota, tallennan omiin verkkotiloihini ja joskus harvoin tikulle. Luvussa kuvailtu tilannekin on tuttu. En voi luottaa, että työpaikalla tallennetut säilyvät, jos ne ovat tärkeitä tiedostoja, tallennan ne ensisijassa jonnekin muualle. Sitä paitsi en tietenkään pääse käsiksi työpaikan tiedostoihin muualta kuin sisäverkon koneilta. Mitä siis edes teen moisella säilytystilalla? Miksi työnantaja ei voi hankkia tuhratun työajan kustannuksella tilaa palveluntarjoajilta, verkkotila on halpaa ja luotettavat palveluntarjoajat ottavat varmuuskopiot säännöllisesti. Opetushenkilöstön tiedostot eivät ole mitään kovin arkaa aineistoa, verbien taivutuksia, solurakenteen harjoituksia ja sen sellaista. Kaikki missä on oppilastietoa, on oppilashallintojärjestelmissä, ei omissa tiedostoissani.
Mervi Jansson

The Five P's of Social Media--Where Do You Start? | The Ten Commandments Of Social Medi... - 0 views

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    sosiaalisen median viisi P:tä
Henriikka Laiho

Top 100 Tools for the Twittering Teacher | Best Colleges Online - 0 views

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    Vinkkejä, miten Twitteriä voi käyttää opetuksessa sekä yhteydenpidossa kodin ja koulun välillä
Mervi Jansson

HOW TO Sell Social Media to Cynics, Skeptics & Luddites - Tips, Resources & Advice - UP... - 0 views

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    Miten myyt sosiaalisen median organisaatiollesi. Koottuna peräti 33 eri näkökulmaa ja vinkkiä avuksesi.
Mervi Jansson

The POST Method: A systematic approach to social strategy - 0 views

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    POST-malli neljä askelta sosiaalisen strategiaan
Tarmo Toikkanen

50 Ways to Use Wikis for a More Collaborative and Interactive Classroom | Smart Teaching - 1 views

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    Wikis are an exceptionally useful tool for getting students more involved in curriculum. They're often appealing and fun for students to use, while at the same time ideal for encouraging participation, collaboration, and interaction. Read on to see how you can put wikis to work in your classroom.
Tero Toivanen

Nexus | the human network - 1 views

  • a leap
    • Tero Toivanen
       
      Harppaus!
  • The next twelve months will be crucial. If we can only change the way we think about what is possible, we will change what is possible. It’s a big ask. It’s the challenge of our times. Will we rise to meet it? Can we make an agreement to share what we know and what we do? That’s all it takes. So simple and so profound.
  • When the histories of our time are written a hundred years from now, sharing is the salient feature which historians will focus upon.
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • Another example of sharing, just as relevant to educators, comes from a site which launched back in 1999 as TeacherRatings.com. Like Wikipedia, it grew slowly, and went through ownership changes, emerging finally as RateMyProfessors.com, which is owned by MTV, and which now boasts ten million ratings of one million professors, lecturers and instructors. This huge wealth of ratings came about because RateMyProfessors.com attached itself to the innate desire to share. Students want to share their experiences with their instructors, and RateMyProfessors.com gives them a forum to do just that.
  • Knowledge seems to have a gravitational quality; when enough of it is gathered together in one place, it attracts more knowledge. That’s certainly the story of Wikipedia, which has grown to encompass more than three million articles in English, on nearly every topic under the sun. Wikipedia is only the most successful of many efforts to produce a ‘collective intelligence’ out of the ‘wisdom of crowds’.
  • This is the era of sharing
  • That shared knowledge, put to work, changes the power balance within the university. For the last six hundred years, universities have been able to saddle students with lousy instructors – who might happen to be fantastic researchers – and there wasn’t much that students could do about it except grumble. Now, with RateMyProfessors.com, students can pass their hard-won knowledge down to subsequent generations of students. The university proposes, the student disposes. Worse still, the instructors receiving the highest ratings on RateMyProfessors.com have been the subjects of bidding wars, as various universities try to woo them, and add them to their faculties. All of this has given students a power they’ve never had, a power they never could have until they began to share their experiences, and translate that shared knowledge into action.
  • The Government wants us to adopt a different point of view. With the National Broadband Network (NBN), they intend to build a fibre-optic infrastructure which will deliver at least 100 megabit-per-second connections to every home, every school, and every business in Australia. Although no one has come out and said it explicitly, it’s clear that the Government wants this connection to be unmetered – the Internet will finally be freely available in Australia, as it is in most other countries.
  • The next event – and perhaps the most salient, in the context of this conference – is the Government’s commitment to provide a computer to every student in years 9 through 12.
  • First, it radically alters the power balance in the classroom. Most students have more facility with their computers than their teachers do. Some teachers are prepared to work from humility and accept instruction from their students. For other teachers, such an idea is anathema.
  • Second, these computers are being handed to students who may not be wholly aware of the potency of these devices. We’ve seen how a single text message, forwarded endlessly, can spark a riot on a Sydney beach, or how a party invitation, posted to Facebook, can lead to a crowd of five hundred and a battle with the police.
  • We are all being given an opportunity to start again – to throw out the old rule book and start over with another one. But in order to do this we’ll have to take everything we’ve covered already – about sharing, the National Broadband Network, the Digital Education Revolution and the National Curriculum, then blend them together. Together they produce a very potent mix, a nexus of possibilities which could fundamentally transform education in Australia.
  • A teacher might normally prepare their curriculum and pedagogical materials at the beginning of the school term; during that preparation process they would check into a shared space, organized around the National Curriculum (this should be done formally, through an organization such as Education.AU, but could – and would – happen informally, via Google) to find out what other educators have created and shared as curriculum materials. Educators would find extensive notes, lesson plans, probably numerous recorded podcasts, links to materials on Wikipedia and other online resources, and so forth – everything that an educator might need to create an effective learning experience. Furthermore, educators would be encourage to share and connect around any particular ‘string’ in the National Curriculum. The curriculum thus becomes a focal point for organization and coordination rather than a brute mandate of performance.
  • The student sits in the middle of an nexus of resources designed to offer them every opportunity to succeed; if the methodology of their own classroom is a poor fit to their learning style, chances are high that they’ll find someone else, somewhere else, who makes a better match.
  • We must stop thinking of the classroom as a solitary island of peace and quiet in the midst of a stormy sea, and rather think of it as a node within a network, connected and receptive. We must stop thinking of educators as valiant but solitary warriors, and transform them into a connected and receptive army. And we must recognize that this generation of students are so well connected on every front that they outpace us in every advance. They will be teaching us how to make this transition seem effortless.
A Rongas

PubSubHubbub (Mitäh?) - ,sanoi Erkka. - 2 views

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    "PubSubHubbub on nimihirviö, johon verkkoviestinnästä kiinnostuneiden kannattaa kiinnittää huomiota. Sana sisältää viittaukset julkaisemiseen (publish), tilaamiseen (subscribe) ja hubiin (="keskitin", hub)."
Tero Toivanen

Writer - Windows Live - 1 views

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    Live Writerilla kirjoittelet helposti omaan blogiisi, jos olet Windows-käyttäjä.
Tero Toivanen

What the web is teaching our brains -Features, Health & Families - The Independent - 2 views

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    Mielenkiintoinen artikkeli webin käytön vaikutuksista aivoihin. Miten netissä surffailu, pelien pelaaminen, blogin tai websivun tekeminen. sähköpostien kirjoittaminen, hymiöiden käyttäminen, tweettaus ja chatit vaikuttavat aivoihin.
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