P3 stands for Peer-to-Peer Pedagogy
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shared by TESOL CALL-IS on 25 Aug 11
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The Anatomy Of An Infographic: 5 Steps To Create A Powerful Visual | SpyreStudios - 1 views
spyrestudios.com/ps-to-create-a-powerful-visual
digital_literacy digital_images teachers teacher-training pedagogy VSL

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"Information is very powerful but for the most bit it is bland and unimaginative. Infographics channel information in a visually pleasing, instantly understandable manner, making it not only powerful, but extremely beautiful. Once used predominantly to make maps more approachable, scientific charts less daunting and as key learning tools for children, inforgraphics have now permeated all aspects of the modern world."
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woices.com - location based audioguides - 2 views
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This might be a great tool for an extended project, e.g., have your students create an infospot audio guide to their local community. Lots of examples are linked on the front page, and there is an iPhone app to scan, listen, and record wherever you happen to be. There are currently over 1300 guides created by users, and more coming.
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 13 Sep 10
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P3 Conference 2010: Or, How Attending a Digital Humanities Conference Helped Me to Valu... - 1 views
www.hastac.org/...nities-conference-helped-me-va
evomlit multiliteracies pp107 Digital Humanities conference technology time disconnectedness education digital culture resources links

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ethics of using digital tools. "Its not about homogenizing difference," she said; "its about making space for difference."
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P3 reminded me that it's not about the technology--it's about the people who create it, collaborate on it, and question it.
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The Future of Thinking: Learning Institutions in a Digital Age, by Cathy Davidson and David Theo Goldberg,
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lateral rather than hierarchical modes of learning, individualized educational strategies, global vision, lifelong learning, and collaboration by difference.
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"technology is not just software and hardware. It is also all of the social and human arrangements supported, facilitated, destabilized, or fostered by technology."
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On my way home, I read William Powers' Hamlet's Blackberry: A Practical Philosophy for Building a Good Life in the Digital Age. Powers argues that by living in a world where "everyone is connected to everyone else all the time," we become disconnected from our own self-awareness and inner depth.
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Today's digital technology explosion is no different from the advent of language, writing, mass-produced print or the telegraph
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Seven Philosophers of Screens: Plato, Seneca, Gutenberg, Shakespeare, Franklin, Thoreau and McLuhan, who lived through other technological explosions
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By following the lessons of these seven philosphers in "a tour of the technological past," Powers shows how we can combat "the conundrum of the connected life" with techniques he calls the "Walden Zone" and the "Internet Sabbath," sacred times and places to disconnect with the Internet and reconnect with ourselves and our loved ones. Both of these books, like the P3 UnConference, celebrates technology not as an end to itself, but as a means to enhance the human experience. And like the P3 UnConference, both value time away from technology as a way to enhance that experience even more.
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 17 Dec 10
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How to: Export, Import and Migrate Your Delicious Bookmarks - 1 views
thenextweb.com/...nd-migrate-delicious-bookmarks
technology multiliteracies evomlit webtools tools bookmarking web2.0

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It was announced today that Yahoo is shutting down the popular social bookmarking service Delicious. So we thought we’d help you out with some solutions to export the bookmarks to other services.
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You can choose to export your bookmarks into an html file and import them into your browser or directly import using services like Diigo, Xmarks and Faviki.
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With Delicious leaving, you might want to fill the void by signing to up one of the following bookmark services.
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Each one of these services will import your current Delicious bookmarks. We’ve picked out five that we think you’ll love, and we’ll walk you through importing your links to each of them.
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Xmarks integrates with your browser and helps you to keep bookmarks safely backed up –including Delicious bookmarks. Xmarks can sync information across the following supported browsers; Firefox, Chrome, Internet Explorer and Safari.
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Diigo is a bookmarking service and more. This service will allow you to highlight text and attach notes to webpages or create sticky notes. And, it also gives users the option to import Delicious bookmarks.
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Pinboard is another great alternative to using Delicious. This service is a low-noise, simple, bookmarking site that will enable you to import your Delicious html file. To do this just go to the settings in your Pinboard account and choose the file.
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Mister Wong is a straight-forward bookmarking service to share and save websites. It imports quite a few different services and browsers including Twitter (links), Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari, Opera and Delicious. Mister Wong gives you two options; upload the Delicious html file or directly import using your Delicious log in.
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Historio.us is delightfully lightweight, simple, nothing fancy, many of the things that are beautiful about Pinboard, but it has the ability to bookmark in a flash and be able to search for ANY word in the pages you’ve bookmarked.
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Export your delicious bookmarks as per the above instructions and then import the file into Historio.us by visiting settings, then import/export.
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Faviki is a bookmarking tool that allows users to bookmark web pages using Wikipedia terms. With this service, all users use the same tags which makes searching bookmarks really easy.
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 31 Aug 11
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Giving Feedback on Student Writing: An Innovative Approach - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 1 views
www.facultyfocus.com/...writing-an-innovative-approach
commenting teaching writing feedback interaction student-writing collaboration onlineteaching pedagogy pot evomlit multiliteracies

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British journal, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education involving the use of something called interactive cover sheets. First-year students in an outdoor studies degree program took a two-semester, six module course which required preparation of a number of written assignments. After preparing their papers, students attached an interactive cover sheet on which they raised questions about the paper they had just completed, thereby identifying the specific areas for feedback.
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The goal was to overcome the one-way communication that occurs when teachers write comments on student papers
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Does this idea of having students frame questions about their papers and writing offer a solution? The faculty who tried the approach found that students struggled mightily with the task
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It’s pretty easy to understand why students would find this task challenging. Most (especially beginning students) have little or no experience assessing their own work and then to have to frame a question that would elicit feedback helpful to improving your next paper—that’s a pretty complicated task. But it’s such a good one.
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I wonder if there might be some ways to reframe the task that would make it easier initially. Maybe students need guidelines early on: Identify the part of the paper you had the most trouble with and ask a question about it. Identify the part of the paper you think turned out best and explain why you feel good about it
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a potentially promising idea with the dual benefits of developing a great self-assessment skill and directing feedback
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The 5 questions that I ask are: 1) What are you trying to say here (what's the thesis/main point)? 2) Why is what you are trying to say important? 3) What is working in the piece and why? 4) What is not working in the piece and why? 5) What questions do you have for me?
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If students feel that they are graded on the writers that they currently are rather than the writer that they are trying to be, many will be hesitant to open an honest dialogue.
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dialogical cover sheet dates back to the expressivist movement in composition studies in the 1980s. I first came across it through Peter Elbow's writing
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scaffolding the feedback process by offering students the opportunity to identify aspects of the paper or parts of the paper they would like their instructor to respond to is empowering pedagogy
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100 Powerful Web Tools to Organize Your Thoughts and Ideas - 1 views
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Free Websites, Free Social Websites, Get More - 0 views
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 19 Apr 10
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monopolies of invention « Bethany Nowviskie - 0 views
nowviskie.org/...monopolies-of-invention
digital humanities evomlit technology tools web2.0 academic labor collaboration intellectual property open access

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Consciously ignoring disparities in the institutional status of your collaborators is just as bad as being unthinkingly complicit in the problems these disparities create.
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service personnel. This latter group includes programmers, sysadmins, instructional technologists, and credentialed librarians and cultural heritage workers.
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There is another reason, beyond discomfort, that we don’t really talk about how status factors in collaborative work.
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The problem was this professor’s assertion of a right — granted to lead faculty members on collaborative research projects by our institutional policies — to intellectual property over the whole concept of our shared work.
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the category of “work for hire,” no matter how intellectually rich and critical to the project these contributions were
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The Multiliteracy Project - 0 views
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The Multiliteracy Project is a national Canadian study exploring pedagogies or teaching practices that prepare children for the literacy challenges of our globalized, networked, culturally diverse world. Increasingly, we encounter knowledge in multiple forms - in print, in images, in video, in combinations of forms in digital contexts - and are asked to represent our knowledge in an equally complex manner.
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(a) the proliferation of multimodal ways of making meaning where the written word is increasingly part and parcel of visual, audio, and spatial patterns; (b) the increasing salience of cultural and linguistic diversity characterized by local diversity and global connectedness .
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 13 Sep 11
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How do you manage your information? - 0 views
landing.athabascau.ca/...do-you-manage-your-information
MOOC potcert11 cmc11 evomlit multiliteracies siemens information web2.0 tools

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Managing resources is one of the most important skills for students (people!) to master. I started blogging in 2000 and have spent a significant amount of time trying to devise an information management system that I can use to make sense of a topic or discipline. I've attached an image below that highlights the process and tools that I use.
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What tools do you use? Eric von Stackelberg Profile Edit profile icon Following Followers Market Posts Poll Pages Blog Files Photo Albums I have moved to fewer tools with the intention of increasing the depth of data held in those tools while reducing duplication.
Grouply Blog » Blog Archive » 7 things to think about before you move from Ning - 2 views
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How This Course Works | Critical Literacies Online Course Blog - 0 views
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This type of course is called a ‘connectivist’ course and is based on four major types of activity: 1. Aggregate
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2. Remix Once you’ve read or watched or listened to some content, your next step is to keep track of that somewhere. How you do this will be up to you.
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- create an account with del.icio.us and create a new entry for each piece of content you access. You can access del.icio.us at http://del.icio.us
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- tweet about the item in Twitter. If you have a Twitter account, post something about the content you’ve accessed.
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- anything else: you can use any other service on the internet – Flickr, Second Life, Yahoo Groups, Facebook, YouTube, anything! use your existing accounts if you want or create a new one especially for this course. The choice is completely yours.
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We don’t want you simply to repeat what other people have said. We want you to create something of your own. This is probably the hardest part of the process.
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What thoughts? What understanding? Well – that is the subject of this course. This whole course will be about how to read or watch, understand, and work with the content other people create, and how to create your own new understanding and knowledge out of them.
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the critical literacies we will describe in this course are the TOOLS you will use to create your own content.
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you don’t have to share. You can work completely in private, not showing anything to anybody. Sharing is and will always be YOUR CHOICE.
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How this Course Works Critical Literacies is an unusual course. It does not consist of a body of content you are supposed to remember. Rather, the learning in the course results from the activities you undertake, and will be different for each person. In addition, this course is not conducted in a single place or environment. It is distributed across the web.
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Personal Learning Environment (PLE) Project - 0 views
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The National Research Council of Canada's Institute for Information Technology (Learning and Collaborative Group) has started a research and development project exploring the Personal Learning Environment. The project researches how new technologies can be used in a personalized informal learning environment and focuses on two dimensions. The first dimension is the pedagogical: given the new affordances offered by web technologies, how can access to a wide variety of learning opportunities best be managed in an online environment? The second dimension is technical. Given a set of desired types of connections, what technologies can be assembled to best provide seamless access to a large variety of educational resources and services? Existing learning management technology (such as the Learning Management System) is centered on the institution that owns and operates it as enterprise software. With the increase of lifelong and student-centered learning, individuals are more frequently enrolling in learning opportunities from multiple institutions and have a need to manage their learning through an entire career. Thus there is a need for a type of application that is centered on the learner and would constitute the person's personal learning record, portfolio, business and educational contacts, communications and creativity tools, library and resource subscription management, and related services.
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Rather Random | How to participate in an open online course - 0 views
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The first few weeks of an open online course are the most disorienting. As a learner, you approach the course with expectations that have been defined by previous learning experiences.
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The Ning Thing.docx - 0 views
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Ning pricing structure is three-tiered, as explained here: http://blog.ning.com/2010/05/introducing-ning-pro-ning-plus-and-ning-mini.html
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Participants can sign up or sign in and set up profiles for any particular Ning, parts of which carry over to other Nings, achieving familiarity with minimal repetition of data entry
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Webheads in Action used to enroll participants in its free bi-annual WiAOC international online conferences in a Moodle, but for the last one, moved the community over to a Ning (http://webheadsinaction.ning.com/). This Ning now has over 350 members.
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Because Nings were free and robust for collaboration, they were an ideal tool for educators seeking to jump-start communities on little or no funding.
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Alec Couros sees this kind of thing happening more and more in the crystal ball future and suggests that schools and educators would be better off investing in self-hosting using FOSS, free and open source software (Couros, 2010).
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other side of the coin is the nature of teaching, where hard-pressed teachers with little time and less budget tend to cobble together whatever resources they can muster
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The immediate concern following an announcement such at the one issued by Ning April 16 is simply preservation of content stored at the free site
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sponsorship is available only for “Ning Networks focused on North American K-12 and Higher-Ed ... including Ning Networks that facilitate learning in a classroom, best practices, educator-to-educator collaboration, or parental support,”
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Pearson, who have offered to sponsor Nings for educators at the Mini level, the lowest level of Ning
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the only reliable alternative to Ning is to host your community yourself, or at a trusted institution
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http://tinyurl.com/alternatives2ning). This document remains the most comprehensive source of advice on what to do about replacing Ning that exists anywhere on the Internet
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there are a number of sites offering Ning-like look and feel which will (attempt to) import your content, or some of your content, from Ning
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Stevens, V. (2010). The Ning thing. TESL-EJ, Volume 14, Number 1. Retrieved on today’s date from http://www.tesl-ej.org/wordpress/issues/volume14/ej53/ej53int/.
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Siemens, G. (2004). Connectivism: A Learning theory for the digital age. Elearnspace. Retrieved June 27, 2010 from http://www.elearnspace.org/Articles/connectivism.htm.
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Good, R. and Bazzano, D. (2010). Ning Alternatives: Guide To The Best Social Networking Platforms And Online Group Services. MasterNewMedia May 3rd, 2010. Retrieved June 27, 2010 from http://www.masternewmedia.org/ning-alternatives-guide-to-the-best-social-networking-platforms-and-online-group-services/.
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If you wish to write anonymously on a Ning thing document, you can do so at Alec Couros’s crowdsourced Google Doc here: http://tinyurl.com/alternatives2ning
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Individual Knowledge in the Internet Age (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 14 Jul 10
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Whither the Wikis? - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views
www.insidehighered.com/...wikis
wikis web2.0 higher education evomlit tools multiliteracies technology

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higher education’s relationship with wikis — Web sites that allow users to collectively create and edit content — has been somewhat hot-and-cold
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using wikis to pool human knowledge of various topics into single, authoritative accounts falls into the “not” category
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“Either senior, post-promotion faculty will need to lead some successful wiki-based projects, or there will need to be an overhaul in the way we think about publication.”
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Scholarpedia, meanwhile, only lets selected experts play in its virtual sandboxes, making it more like a traditional journal or encyclopedia than a true wiki
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The greatest contributions wikis have made to academic research can be found not in actual wikis but in collaborative tools built on a similar model,
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“Whether it’s the idea of user-generated content, or inviting many eyes onto a project (e.g., CommentPress), or, tools that facilitate collaboration, such as Google Docs or Zoho Office, wiki-like ideas are increasingly important to the scholarly community.”
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the areas where they have gotten the most play in higher education seems to be in classrooms and various administrative apparatuses
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shared by Vanessa Vaile on 19 Apr 10
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Life Under An #Ashtag: Online Networking My Way Home From Europe | techPresident - 0 views
techpresident.com/...-networking-my-way-home-europe
social media sociocultural lens Twitter Facebook tagging networking evomlit web2.0 tools multiliteracies collaboration

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I don’t feel like a displaced person, but more like a ball being buoyed by an invisible network of friends and strangers, all connecting to me and with each other via the Internet.
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But at every moment, whether I was hearing from friends or strangers, I was comforted knowing that people were looking out for me. And I got a lot of useful answers when I needed them.
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what failed this past week was not the Internet, but corporate and government agency websites. They’ve been rendered useless by this crisis because they operate under a no-fail rule: nothing can be posted on them unless cleared from above
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By contrast, the networked public sphere of bloggers, friends and strangers grouping around hashtags and online social networks, has been doing what it always does: sharing information, offering support, highlighting problems and improvising solutions.
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Nik Peachey's Presentation - The Online Educator - 0 views
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Links to Nik Peachey's "Developing materials and practices for the digital generation," a webinar presentation for the IATEFL Young Learner SIG. Nik focses on how teacher can combine online tools to encourage students' digital literacy and linguistic skills more autonomously. Both a recording of the presentation (Adobe Connect) and the slides are linked, as well as links to some of his recent informative blog posts.
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