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Demetri Orlando

Planning to Share versus Just Sharing at EdTechPost - 0 views

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    grow your network by sharing, not planning to share or deciding who to share with
Lorri Carroll

CAIS Commission on Professional Development | CPD Blog for CAIS Colleagues to Share Pro... - 2 views

  • This post, written by Justine Fellows, is the first of a series of posts written by members of the CAIS Commission on Technology. 
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    You are invited to join our new professional development blog; enter the conversation and write posts about important issues that focus your learning and help other CAIS colleagues. Think of our blog as a faculty lounge for all CAIS educators. It's our venue to share professional learning, ask questions, and give advice:  [ http://caisct.wordpress.com/ ]http://caisct.wordpress.com/ Just as an "unconference" moves forward with a participant driven spirit, the Commission of Professional Development created this blog to be a forum for CAIS educators to exchange thoughts, questions and insights about important issues in our learning communities. Email [ mailto:bsullivan@suffieldacademy.org ]bsullivan@suffieldacademy.org for a simple step to becoming a member of this blog. What do we hope this blog will become? An opportunity for CAIS educators to jettison inhibitions that they may have about "writing in the social media" world and break into the digital forum by sharing the wisdom we know exists among CAIS minds. Click on this Edutopia link for an example of a dynamic blog for educators:  [ http://www.edutopia.org/blog/balancing-work-and-life-teacher-elena-aguilar ]http://www.edutopia.org/blog/balancing-work-and-life-teacher-elena-aguilar Imagine that the above content of that post and comments were specific to CAIS educators-perhaps from a colleague! The content would be so useful. Moving forward, the CAIS blog will host interesting topics with comment threads that relate to the contexts of CAIS learning communities because CAIS educators know a great deal about teaching and learning. The blog will also be another lens to design professional development programs. The CPD wants to read your posts. Also sign up for updates by clicking on the "Follow Blog via Email" hyperlink so that you can follow your colleagues: [ http://caisct.wordpress.com/ ]http://caisct.wordpress.com/
Demetri Orlando

Fluid Learning | the human network - 0 views

  • #1: Capture Everything
    • Demetri Orlando
       
      recording is cheap lecture is expensive
  • #2: Share Everything
    • Demetri Orlando
       
      the more it's shared, the more valuable it is
  • #3: Open Everything
    • Demetri Orlando
       
      open-source is more flexible. embrace smart phones. web filtering is lazy
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  • #4: Only Connect
    • Demetri Orlando
       
      connected all the time. students mentor students. expensive not in $ but in time.
  • It simply makes no sense to waste my words – literally, pouring them away – when with very little infrastructure an audio recording can be made
    • Sarah Hanawald
       
      Except that if you record everything, you end up with a new "administrative" issue-sorting, classifying, rating. . .
  • Many students will never be very computer literate,
  • the more something is shared, the more valuable it becomes.
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    This blog post takes ratemyprofessor.com as the starting premise of a radical shift in education based on crowd-sourcing. Identifies 4 trends shifting the landscape:: connection, openness, share everything, record everything.
susan  carter morgan

Raise Your Hands (Techlearning blog) - 0 views

  • Alan November adds, "The best thing to invest in right now is collegiality. The number one skill that teachers will need is to be team-based, collegial, sharing their knowledge and wisdom."
  • Dedicate a portion of your day to honing your professional practice
  • Establish a professional learning network
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  • . Establish and maintain a virtual professional learning space that fosters shared knowledge and resources
  • Make professional reflection and scholarly work a priority and make it public.
  • 5. Model professional learning for colleagues, students, and parents
  • We effect change by engaging in robust conversations with ourselves, our colleagues, our customers, our family, the world.... Your time of holding back, of guarding your private thoughts, is over. Your function in life is to make a declarative statement" - Susan Scott
Demetri Orlando

CK-12 - Next Generation Textbooks - 0 views

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    Customize and create your own text book. Share with creative commons license.
susan  carter morgan

Peace and Collaborative Development Network - Building Bridges, Networks and Expertise ... - 0 views

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    to foster dialogue and sharing of resources in international development, conflict resolution, gender mainstreaming, human rights, social entrepreneurship and related fields.
Dolores Gende

Learn, Share, Grow - home - 2 views

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    Larry and Susan's wiki
Lorri Carroll

We, the Web Kids - Alexis Madrigal - Technology - The Atlantic - 3 views

    • Lorri Carroll
       
      Do they really?
  • To us, the Web is a sort of shared external memory.
  • We do not have to remember unnecessary details: dates, sums, formulas, clauses, street names, detailed definitions.
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  • Why should we pay for the distribution of information that can be easily and perfectly copied without any loss of the original quality?
  • we do not want to pay for our memories.
  • freedom of speech, freedom of access to information and to culture. We feel that it is thanks to freedom that the Web is what it is, and that it is our duty to protect that freedom. We owe that to next generations, just as much as we owe to protect the environment.
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     We grew up with the Internet and on the Internet Great reflections about our students generation
Sarah Hanawald

Obama's inauguration: Class rules the streets of D.C. - Posted - 0 views

  • Obama's inauguration is providing students with the option to experience, share and report on a collection of days that are destined to be recorded for a museum or archive.
  • they were required them write their thoughts and to create a one-minute YouTube video.
  • "If you are not connected with social media, chances are you wont win the election,
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    Nice write up of how 11 students are going on a reporting trip from Worcester Academy in Mass to DC as reporters for their school. They will be reporting back to campus via flckr, twitter, youtube, and blogs.
Demetri Orlando

Texas administrators share vision to change schools - 0 views

  • The school administrators want to return control to principals, teachers, parents, school board members and others at the local level —
  • School can be a very boring place for a student sitting at a desk all day
  • emphasizes sanctions rather than rewards
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    I'm interested that they seem to be recommending moving towards more school-based decision making- one of the defining traits of independent schools
susan  carter morgan

Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0 (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUC... - 0 views

  • The original World Wide Web—the “Web 1.0” that emerged in the mid-1990s—vastly expanded access to information. The Open Educational Resources movement is an example of the impact that the Web 1.0 has had on education. But the Web 2.0, which has emerged in just the past few years, is sparking an even more far-reaching revolution. Tools such as blogs, wikis, social networks, tagging systems, mashups, and content-sharing sites are examples of a new user-centric information infrastructure that emphasizes participation (e.g., creating, re-mixing) over presentation, that encourages focused conversation and short briefs (often written in a less technical, public vernacular) rather than traditional publication, and that facilitates innovative explorations, experimentations, and purposeful tinkerings that often form the basis of a situated understanding emerging from action, not passivity.
susan  carter morgan

WebTools4u2use » Webtools4U2Use - 0 views

  • The purpose of this website is to provide a place for K-12 school library media specialists to learn a little more about web tools that can be used to improve and enhance school library media programs and services, to see examples of how they can be used, and to share success stories and creative ideas about how to use and integrate them. Hundreds of free and inexpensive web tools are available for school library media specialists to use that can make us more productive, valued, and, perhaps, more competitive.
Jason Ramsden

Making Wikis Work for Scholars - 0 views

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    Interesting take on wikis and scholarly research, coursework, etc.
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    Article on scholarly collaboration through the use of wikis noting both the pros and cons. Some excellent examples provided.
Sarah Hanawald

Top 100 Tools for Learning: Summary PDF - 0 views

  • Between January and March 2008 155 learning professionals shared  their Top 10 favourite tools for learning  (either for their own personal learning or for creating learning for others).  We used these lists to compile the Top 100 Tools for Learning Spring 2008. 
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    From the UK, top 100 tools for learning. Mostly web app's, lots of web2.0. Would be handy for a presentation, sort of "how many of these do you know about" overview for folks.
Demetri Orlando

i - 0 views

  • This network is a forum for discussing education and is a laboratory for experimenting with social-educational networking, blogging, wikis, social bookmarking, and multimedia. Educators and students are encouraged to participate and contribute to this virtual community.
    • Demetri Orlando
       
      These floating sticky notes are interesting when you're sharing them with a group. Does anyone else have trouble seeing embedded content on this page at school? I think it is my school firewall that is blocking some of the embedded items. At home, I see it all fine. I added the "weekly feature" item on 4-27-08, because I was so struck by that stack of slides from David Truss.
    • Christi Teasley
       
      I have just noticed this little note! Yes, I do not see this while at school. Makes me wonder what else I am missing!
    • anonymous
       
      I see it fine as I use Diigo toolbar tool. That is the basic requirement to participate in the Diigo world.
Demetri Orlando

Coming Together to Give Schools a Boost - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • Above all, they say, partners must come together and agree not just on common goals, but shared ways to measure success towards those goals. They must communicate on a regular basis. And there must be a “backbone” organization that is focused full-time on managing the partnership.
  • war rooms” in each school. Teachers have meetings every two weeks, where they closely monitor students’ progress
  • the network can engage in continuous learning based on evidence.
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  • In education, data has traditionally been used for punitive purposes, not for improvement
  • “The key to making a partnership work is setting a common vision and finding a common language. You can’t let people get focused on ideological or political issues,” says Edmondson. “You need a common language to bring people together and that language is the data.”
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    a lot of these ideas apply to any change management endeavor
Sarah Hanawald

20 Facts about Social Media that will make you go wow ! | Mccollins Media - 5 views

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    Interesting and fun for sharing with colleagues who say "I don't have time for. . . "
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