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Tero Toivanen

Free online Music Generator - Aviary.com's Roc - 0 views

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    Mielenkiintoiselta vaikuttava ilmainen musiikkipalvelu Aviary. Musiikin voi ladata omaan käyttöönsä mp3 -tiedostoina. Sen avulla voi tehdä myös yhdessä musiikkia ja jakaa sitä. Sillä voi tehdä omia soittoääniä, luuppeja jne. 50 erilaista instrumenttia ilmaiseksi.
Tero Toivanen

Free eBooks at Planet eBook - Classic Novels and Literature You're Free to Share - 0 views

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    Classic literature for download as free eBooks
Tarmo Toikkanen

Learnlets » Beyond the course - 0 views

  • the point is that supporting people in performance includes not just courses, but content and job aids, and connections to people.
  • The interesting thing for me is that this provides a strong justification for using social networks in learning: wikis can be places where people can store the information about problems they’ve solved, discussion boards and profiles fill the need of finding expertise, blogs may support people in their problem-solving as well, serving as a way to share questions and get feedback.  The social network provides the rest of the support around the courses which really only serve the situation where a major skill-shift change is needed.
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    Clark Quinn pohtii epävirallisen oppimisen vaiheita ja miten sosiaalinen media nivoutuu siihen. Havainnollistava kuva, jossa näkyy muiden ihmisten tärkeä merkitys oppimisessa.
Tero Toivanen

Open isn't so open anymore « Connectivism - 1 views

  • We need some good ol’ radicals in open education. You know, the types that have a vision and an ideological orientation that defies the pragmatics of reality. Stubborn, irritating, aggravating visionaries.
  • People are trying to make a living off of being open – i.e. openness as a utility to advance a career, gain recognition from peers, or make money.
  • Ideological purity in open education had a very short existence. Instead of building a future foundation, we see instead a foundation to serve for career advancement.
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  • Let me start by stating that “open” is a term that is now essentially meaningless. Apparently Twitter is open. So is Blackboard. And Facebook.
  • Richard Stallman has been somewhat replaced by, or even written out of, the open source movement. Stallman was (and still is) an uncompromising radical. Or at least that is how the well established proprietary software field sees him. The open source movement developed in response to what others perceived as Stallman’s unpalatable views for mainstreaming openness.
  • (If you’re interested, I explored this in a bit more detail in Free and Open Source Movements, part 1 and part 2 (somewhat related: Why we should share learning resources).)
  • But we first need a Stallman in open education before we can even begin to marginalize him. We need an idealist that sets the stage for thinking and debate around openness.
  • By not criticizing gradient views of openness, by failing to establish a solid foundation on which to discuss openness, we are providing an ideology for our generation, not one that serves as a future-focused movement. Openness is a hard topic to discuss ideologically because it’s important. Yes, pragmatics are easier. But pragmatics have a short life span.
  • Openness is an ideology along the lines of democracy. It is worthy of theoretical discussion. And various modes of implementation should be subject to debate and criticism.
  • Just like the “green movement”. I’m sick of commercials with new cars driving through lush forests, suggesting that if only I buy their vehicle the world will be greener. Green is treated as a utility to sell vehicles. For many companies in the educational field, open is the new green: use it to sell your product.
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    Onko avoimuus vaarassa tai muuttumassa?
Tero Toivanen

A Shared Culture - 0 views

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    Mielestäni hyvä video Creative Commons:sta englanniksi.
Tarmo Toikkanen

Christopher D. Sessums :: Blog :: A simple definition: Web 2.0 - 0 views

  • Web 1.0 = meWeb 2.0 = me + youWeb 1.0 = readWeb 2.0 = read + writeWeb 1.0 = connecting ideasWeb 2.0 = connecting ideas + connecting peopleWeb 1.0 = searchWeb 2.0 = recommendations of friends/othersWeb 1.0 = findWeb 2.0 = shareWeb 1.0 = techies ruleWeb 2.0 = everybody rules
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    Web 2.0 defined
Tero Toivanen

YouTube - Show Your Media Literacy - 2 views

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    Lyhyt (2:30) video YouTube:ssa siitä, mitä tarkoittaa "Media Literacy".
Tero Toivanen

12 things you didn't know Google Docs could do | News | TechRadar UK - 0 views

  • 7. Full screen mode
  • 8. Emulate classic word processors
  • 9. Publish to your blogClick "Share > Publish as Web Page" in any document. Next click "Set your blog site settings" and enter your login details. You can publish to Blogger, LiveJournal, SquareSpace and others.
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  • 10. Create new documents fastHere's a trick from the Official Google Docs Blog [googledocs.blogspot.com]. Drag the following link to your browser's bookmark bar:New Document [http://docs.google.com/?action=newdoc]Select the bookmark to make a new Google Doc.
  • 11. Open MS Word docs in Google Docs with FirefoxDownload the Google Toolbar for Firefox. Go to the installed Toolbar's options and choose "Tools". Tick the box labelled "Google Docs" and click "Edit". Tick the box labelled "Double-click a file icon". Save the changes and Microsoft Word docs will now open in Firefox.
  • 12. Take it to the limitGoogle Docs files can be up to 500k in size with a limit on embedded images of 2MB. There's a combined limit of 5,000 documents.
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    Lisää esimerkkejä Google Docs:in ominaisuuksista.
Tero Toivanen

Noteflight - Online Music Notation - 0 views

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    Ilmainen musiikin kirjoitus ja jakamisohjelma verkossa.
Tero Toivanen

Dewey Music - 0 views

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    DeweyMusic is a new interface for Archive.org's wonderful public domain music library.
Tarmo Toikkanen

Creative Commons on Flickr: Users Prefer Restrictive Licenses - ReadWriteWeb - 0 views

  • In total, Flickr now hosts over 100 million CC-licensed images, so even the least restrictive CC license accounts for a total of 12 million photos, and, of course, even the most restrictive CC license still allows for free sharing of the images, as long as the image is not changed and the author is attributed.
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    Analyysia Flickr-kuvapalvelussa käytetyistä avoimista lisensseistä.
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    Flickr now holds the world's largest repository of Creative Commons-licensed images, but according to a new study, most Flickr users opt to license their images under the most restrictive CC license.
Tarmo Toikkanen

The Ed Techie: Using learning environments as a metaphor for educational change - 0 views

  • In examining the current physical space Wesch (2008) asked students what a lecture hall ‘said’ about learning, in essence what were the affordances (Gibson 1979; Norman 1988) of the standard learning environment. They listed the following: To learn is to acquire information Information is scare and hard to find Trust authority for good information Authorized information is beyond discussion Obey the authority Follow along
  • These are obviously at odds with what most educators regard as key components in learning, such as dialogue, reflection, critical analysis, etc. They are also at distinct odds with the type of experience students have in the online world they inhabit regularly, particularly the social network, read/write web. These environments are characterised by User-generated content Power of the crowd Data on an epic scale Architecture of participation Network effects Openness
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  • When it was necessary for education to be performed face to face, a number of services were bundled together. When it becomes digital and online, this may no longer be the case, as we have seen in most content industries, such as music and newspapers (education has some similarities with content and also some significant differences). The first round of learning tools replicated the centralised model, but as the tools have become easier to use, and the methods for integrating them simpler, so this centralised approach seems less applicable. Clay Shirky (2008) argues that the ‘cost’ of organising people has collapsed, which makes informal groupings more likely to occur and often more successful:"By making it easier for groups to self-assemble and for individuals to contribute to group effort without requiring formal management, these tools have radically altered the old limits on the size, sophistication, and scope of unsupervised effort"Part of the function of universities is to provide this organisation, for example by grouping individuals together to form a student cohort who are interested in the same subject. But as this grouping becomes easier to do online, it becomes less of a valued function of the university - ie you don’t need to go to a university to find like minded people. Education then faces the same challenges regarding the cost of organisation that, say, the Encyclopedia Brittanica faced from wikipedia. Returning to the theme of this paper, Shirky’s argument can also be applied to technology, namely that the ‘cost’ of integrating technology has drastically reduced, meaning it is now feasible for individuals to do this, thus alleviating the need for centrally provided pre-integrated solutions. For example, we could reword the above quote to read:By making it easier for tools to (self) assemble and for applications to contribute to the environment without requiring integration, these approaches have radically altered the old limits on the size, sophistication, and scope of any individual to create their own environmentProjects such as SocialLearn, illustrate that the conceptualisation of a learning environment goes beyond technical, or even pedagogical considerations. In a digital society it comes to represent the institutional response to changes in the nature of knowledge creation, sharing, and participation, in short to the nature of education itself. Shirky argues that ‘when we change the way we communicate, we change society’, and the new socially based technologies we have today are doing this in fundamental ways. It is only by exploring their potential that universities can remain relevant to the society they are helping to shape.
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    The central theme of this article is that the online learning environment can be seen as the means by which higher education can explores the challenges and opportunities raised by online and digital society.
Tarmo Toikkanen

TargetMap - Create & share customized data maps on Googlemaps. Free Online Mapping tool - 5 views

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    Create colored maps based on spreadsheet data.
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