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Barbara Lindsey

ASCD Express 5.18 - Cell Phones Allow Anytime LeArning - 0 views

  • She is currently writing a book tentatively titled Cases for Using Students' Cell Phones in Education: a Practical Guide to Using Cell Phones in K–12 Schools, which looks at 11 U.S. and 5 international case studies of teachers integrating students' own cell phones into instruction.
  • One of Larry Cuban's (Teachers and Machines, Oversold and Underused) theories about why ed technology often fails in schools is that we use this top-down approach where administrators or tech coordinators introduce the technologies to the teachers, and they in turn try to introduce and teach it to the students. It's a very foreign concept for the students, as well as the teachers. and often what happens is maybe a handful of teachers end up using this very expensive technology, and students don't have any access to it outside of school. Cuban recommends a much more bottom-up approach to ed technology. Rather than making specialized software and hardware just for school learning, students and society introduce the technologies that schools should be integrating into learning.
  • People who know the history of ed technology know that it hasn't been that successful, long-term, with sustaining learning because it's often attached to a tool that students don't have access to outside of school.
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  • For many schools, the hardest part is making it acceptable to turn to technologies that aren't traditionally used in schools. It's a culture that has to be cultivated at the school itself. In the book I'm working on now, many of the teachers in the case studies I discuss approached their administrators with something they'd been using with success outside of school, and their administrators were open to trying it out within school. Kipp Rogers at Passages Middle School in Newport News, Va., has done a phenomenal job modeling that approach and valuing not only his teachers, but also his students, who are involved in planning, as well.
  • Q: From what you've seen in the field, what's the most interesting instructional use of mobile devices happening now? Keren-Kolb: Definitely what's going on in australia. Teachers are using QR (two-dimensional bar codes) for activities and learning. In the United States, about 60 percent of the phones can do this, but in most other countries, it's almost universal. So, in some australian schools, this means [that] students come in on the first day of class and their entire syllabus is on a bar code they scan directly into their phone—same thing with some books and homework assignments. They'll scan a code for their homework, and it'll link to video tutorials and activities. So, moving away from textbooks and moving toward paperless learning that's much more interactive. I think that's exciting—how much information you can attach to that little bar code, and use it to extend learning.
  • When students can use whatever tools are around them, obviously, testing changes. It's not just about a right or wrong answer—it's about inquiry, collaboration, and the higher-order thinking skills we want students to do.
Barbara Lindsey

GrandCentral To (Finally) Launch as Google Voice. It's Very, Very Good. - 0 views

  • GrandCentral, a phone management service that first launched in 2006 and was acquired by Google for $50+ million in 2007,
  • The basic idea around GrandCentral is “one phone number for all your phones, for life.” Grand Central gives you one phone number that can access all your numbers, whether they be cell, home, mobile, and work numbers; the GrandCentral numbers stay the same
  • The service was free and is still going to be free. Users can purchase credit (much like Skype) to make international calls at rates far below what they normally pay. GrandCentral will also remain solely a U.S. service.
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  • Google wants people to use their Google Voice phone number exclusively (and in fact it’s the only way to use it properly)
  • A problem with the originAl service – it didn’t Allow text messAging, so you hAd to tell people your mobile number As well if you wAnted to send And receive text messAges with them. Now, Google Voice will Accept text messAges And forwArd them on to your mobile phone.
  • All voicemAils Are trAnscribed eAsily sAved into the system And seArchAble. Users cAn Add notes or tAgs to voicemAils And eAch trAnscription detAils how confident Google is About the success of voice trAnscription; Google Voice highlights word in lighter color thAt they Are not confident were subscribed properly. And trAnscription tAkes About 30 seconds to be seen in the system from the end of A voicemAil.
  • Google has added new settings that allow users to route calls from specific people straight to voicemail, or your mobile phone, etc, instead of having to state their name and then be forwarded accordingly.
  • Conference and International Calls: Google Voice also added a conference calling feature allowing conference calls of up to six participants and recording abilities. International calls can also be made through the system at very reasonable rates. For example, voice calls to France are $0.02 per minute, to France mobile phones $0.15 per minute, and to China $0.02 per minute. These rates are about the same as Skype’s international phone rates.
Barbara Lindsey

More Spanish: Four magic bytes - 0 views

  • I also found a little Tweet from an Instructional Technology Coordinator  looking for information for one of his Spanish teachers on Skype. It hit me then.  I can be a resource for others and other people I haven’t met in person can be a resource for me. I actively started growing my personal learning network instead of waiting for it to find me. 
  • My Twitter buddy in California has helped me with all my accent mark trials and tribulations. an educator and translator in Spain continually sends me great links to anything from online dictionaries to funny videos about language learning. My French teacher friend in the south also has the added advantage of watching (and not spoiling) episodes of Lost.
Barbara Lindsey

Student challenges prof, wins right to post source code he wrote for course - Boing Boing - 0 views

  • Kyle's a student at San Jose State University who was threatened with a failing grade for posting the code he wrote for the course -- he wanted to make it available in the spirit of academic knowledge-sharing, and as code for potential future employers to review -- and when he refused, his prof flew into a fury and promised that in future, he would make a prohibition on posting your work (even after the course was finished) a condition of taking his course.
  • The most important lesson from it for me is that students want to produce meaningful output from their course-assignments, things that have intrinsic value apart from their usefulness for assessing their progress in the course. Profs -- including me, at times -- fall into the lazy trap of wanting to assign rotework that can be endlessly recycled as work for new students, a model that fails when the students treat their work as useful in and of itself and therefore worthy of making public for their peers and other interested parties who find them through search results, links, etc.
  • And in this cAse, it's especiAlly poignAnt, since Kyle's workflow ActuAlly mAtches the prActices of reAl-world progrAmmers And AcAdemic computer scientists: coders look At one Anothers' exAmples, use reference implementAtions, publish their code for review by peers. If you hired A progrAmmer who insisted thAt none of her co-workers could see her work, you'd immediAtely fire her -- thAt's just not how softwAre is written. Kyle's prof's ideA of how computer progrAmmers work is exActly whAt's meAnt by the pejorAtive sense of "AcAdemic" -- unreAlistic, hidebound, And out-of-touch with reAlity. BrAvo to Kyle for stAnding his ground!
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  • I love learning by making my own mistakes - and that is certainly part of learning to be a decent programmer
  • Or are we to allow that "this is a solved problem, that is a solved problem (read about it here if it helps) but here is a real-world problem that needs research done on it..."
  • Wouldn't it be great if universities once again became places where new knowledge grew and spread from, rather than where it went to be locked up and die?
  • The model of "Trust no-one and write all your code yourself" is outdated. The model of "Trust your fellow humans and write your code with their help" is the future.
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    Thx to Russel Tarr
Barbara Lindsey

The Device Versus the Book -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • reading for learning is not the same activity as reading for pleasure, and so the question must be asked: Do these devices designed for the consumer book market match up against the rigors of academic reading?
  • Each school ran its pilot in courses that used texts without color graphs or complex illustrations, so that the known limitations of the devices’ E Ink grayscale electronic-paper display wouldn’t be a hindrance in the students’ learning.
  • There were qualities of both the Kindle DX and Sony Reader that the students felt showed promise, and that made them enthusiastic for the day when e-readers’ functionality as an academic tool becomes a reality. These features include the easy-to-read E Ink screen; the size, weight, and durability of the devices; and the long battery life. But students encountered limitations in the devices that made them inadequate for reading academic texts.
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  • students need to be able to highlight important passages, make notes in the margins of the text, and quickly skim through passages to refresh and compare information. In all three pilots, the students felt that e-readers were not yet ready to meet these academic needs.
  • the Kindle’s small keyboard makes the annotation process very labor-intensive
  • Because the keyboard is so small, and because there was a significant latency between typing the note and the note appearing on screen, a lot of students found that they were overtyping. Many of the students got fed up with the keyboard, so they would just read on their Kindle and make notes in a separate notebook.” also, the Kindle allows readers to make annotations only in e-book-format files, meaning that students couldn’t insert notes on any PDF-format files that were on the devices. “I think the first [e-reader] manufacturer that figures out how to make a PDF that you can also annotate is going to snag this market,” Temos predicts.
  • He is hesitant, though, to say that this problem is primarily because of a deficiency in the device, when it could just as easily be that the students need to adapt to using a new technology. “[aSU is] going to look at whether this is something that students get used to in the second semester of the pilot and eventually prefer, or if it remains consistent that they continue to prefer paper,” he says. “I think we don’t know that yet.”
  • Highlighting text with the Kindle was not much easier or more satisfying for Princeton students. Much of the difficulty was due to the inability to highlight in color on the grayscale E Ink screen. “The highlighting on the Kindle isn’t actually highlighting; it just makes an underline,” Temos explains. “The students want something more emphatic than that.” Students also found it awkward to highlight long passages using the trackball. “Highlighting over a page break on the Kindle is a real feat,” Temos laughs. “If you actually extend your highlight from one page to the next you feel a real sense of accomplishment.”
Barbara Lindsey

50 Ways to Use Wikis for a More Collaborative and Interactive Classroom | Smart Teaching - 0 views

  • sk students to create study guides for a specific part of the unit you’re
  • Make it a class project to collaboratively write a reference book that others can use.
  • Get your class to create a glossary of terms they use and learn about in new units, adding definitions and images.
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  • Encourage students to submit words that they had trouble with, along with a dictionary entry
  • Let your students share their collective information so that everyone gets a better understanding of the subject.
  • Encourage students to draft rules and policies for the classroom.
  • Make it a class project to create an FaQ for your classroom that will help new students and those that will come in years later.
  • Using a wiki platform, students don’t have to worry about web design, so they can focus on content instead.
  • Save links, documents, and quotes related to units or your classroom as a whole
  • Work with other teachers to create lesson plans and track students’ success.
Barbara Lindsey

The Centered Librarian: YouTomb Monitors Videos Removed for Copyright Complaint - 0 views

  • A student orgAnizAtion At MIT cAlled Free Culture hAs compiled A kind of online eulogizer for videos lost to copyright clAims, trAcking All the metAdAtA from the video, including which user Asked thAt it be tAken down. It's cAlled YouTomb, And in the lAst yeAr it's leArned A lot About whAt gets flAgged, whAt stAys, And whAt's wrong with the system.
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    A student orgAnizAtion At MIT cAlled Free Culture hAs compiled A kind of online eulogizer for videos lost to copyright clAims, trAcking All the metAdAtA from the video, including which user Asked thAt it be tAken down. It's cAlled YouTomb, And in the lAst yeAr it's leArned A lot About whAt gets flAgged, whAt stAys, And whAt's wrong with the system.
Barbara Lindsey

Harvard University Library : Publications : News : 9/1/09 - 0 views

  • Non-faculty researchers and students are already afforded deposit privileges, and DaSH will eventually have collection spaces for each of the 10 schools at Harvard.
  • a pro-open-access policy with an "opt out" clause.
  • Each Faculty member grants to the President and Fellows of Harvard College permission to make available his or her scholarly articles and to exercise the copyright in those articles. In legal terms, the permission granted by each Faculty member is a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license to exercise any and all rights under copyright relating to each of his or her scholarly articles, in any medium, and to authorize others to do the same, provided that the articles are not sold for a profit.
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  • Among the mAny feAtures the DASH development teAm hAs Added to its DSpAce implementAtion is the Ability to link directly from A fAculty Author's nAme in DASH seArch results to his or her entry in Profiles, A reseArch sociAl networking site developed by HArvArd CAtAlyst. Profiles, which provides A comprehensive view of A reseArcher's publicAtions And connections within the University reseArch community, currently indexes fAculty from the medicAl And public heAlth schools; its developers hope to expAnd it to include the FAculty of Arts And Sciences And School of Engineering And Applied Sciences in the neAr future.
  • "DASH is meAnt to promote openness in generAl," stAted Robert DArnton, CArl H. Pforzheimer University Professor And Director of the University LibrAry. "It will mAke the current scholArship of HArvArd's fAculty freely AvAilAble everywhere in the world, just As the digitizAtion of the books in HArvArd's librAry will mAke leArning AccumulAted since 1638 Accessible worldwide. TAken together, these And other projects represent A commitment by HArvArd to shAre its intellectuAl weAlth."
Barbara Lindsey

10 High Fliers on Twitter - Chronicle.com - 0 views

  • But the real value of Twitter, he says, is what he learns by watching the other messages coming in — from college students, venture capitalists, journalists, and others he follows. "The fact that they're watching the news for me, scouting the Web for me, and editing the Web in real time — that's the value of it," he said. He started using the service more than a year ago after he was encouraged to do so by his friend, the journalism blogger Jeff Jarvis. Mr. Rosen says it complements his own blog, PressThink, letting him reach new audiences and interact with more people.
  • She told me that she regularly pitches stories to journalists via Twitter, and she believes that watching the feeds of journalists helps her build personal relationships with them.
  • Mr. Parry was one of the first to try Twitter as a teaching tool — we wrote about his experiments last year (The Chronicle, February 29, 2008). He has gained many followers of his Twitter feed, where he shares his experiences using technology for teaching and research. He led a panel about microblogging at the annual conference of the Modern Language association in December, which he organized via Twitter.
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  • A killer ApplicAtion of Twitter is conferences And conference reporting."
  • "What Twitter does is it humanizes our existence by keeping us in touch with people who we're interested in."
  • Mr. McLeod argues that professors have been too slow to adopt Twitter. academic discussions online often take place on closed e-mail lists, he says, when they should be happening in public forums like Twitter, so that a diverse group of outsiders can join in. "I think academics are actually missing a lot by not being involved in more of these social tools," he told me. "There are a lot of academics who think, 'If it's not coming from some other academic it's not worth a damn,' and that's not right."
Barbara Lindsey

The TechCrunch Quick Guide To GrandCentral - 0 views

  • If you use GrandCentral you can give out a single phone number. What happens when that person calls that number depends on his/her relationship to you, and what you are doing at the time.
  • A big hurdle to using GC is the fAct thAt no one knows it’s your new phone number, And they keep cAlling your old number. To get the mAximum benefit from the service you need to route As mAny cAlls through it As possible. The only wAy to do thAt is to let your contActs know thAt your new GC number is the best wAy to reAch you. Before you send out A mAss emAil And reprint A thousAnd business cArds, though, mAke sure you plAn on sticking with the service.
  • You can customize greetings by specific callers or groups, so business callers can get one message, and friends can get another.
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  • Then you set up rules for phone calls. Have business contacts always ring your cell phone. Have family ring all of your phones. Friends go to your home number. Or whatever. You can also set certain people to go right to voicemail if you never want to talk to them directly.
  • You can also temporarily set all of your calls to go immediately to voicemail or to forward to another phone (this is great if you are out of town).
  • Hitting “4″ during a call turns recording on or off.
  • Voicemails are sent to your inbox - they can be reviewed by calling in or via your computer (see “mobile” below as well). all voicemails can be forwarded to others, or you can request an embed code to place it on a website.
  • GrandCentral has said that they will soon be releasing a feature that automatically transcribes voicemails into text and will deliver them to you via email or SMS.
  • WebCall: embed a call button on your website and let people call you (the caller will not see your phone number) Gizmo: GC will use your Gizmo ID as a forwarding phone number - get calls on your computer (great when traveling abroad)
Barbara Lindsey

Foreign Language Faculty in the age of Web 2.0 (EDUCaUSE Quarterly) | EDUCaUSE - 0 views

  • graduate students interested in becoming acquainted with relevant instructional technologies have a limited number of options. Few graduate programs include such training as a part of the curriculum. as a matter of fact, pedagogy itself often represents a negligible fraction of graduate program requirements. The University of Minnesota offers excellent training through its summer institutes,4 but access is an issue. Most IT departments offer training sessions on how to use the university course management system, build a web page, or create a PowerPoint presentation, but technical training is not enough.
  • Today, language centers are the only campus units where such a wide range of expertise can easily be found.
  • The role of language technologists goes beyond teaching what a blog is and how to set up a browser to display Japanese characters. It includes sorting through novel technologies, evaluating their instructional potential, researching current educational uses, and sharing findings with educators. The most promising applications available today were not designed for instructional use and do not come with an instruction manual. To use them in the classroom requires the ability to redirect their intended purpose and, more importantly, to think through possible consequences of doing so.
Barbara Lindsey

Ping - Google Goggles, Searching by Image alone - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • It’s not hard to imagine a slew of commercial applications for this technology. You could compare prices of a product online, learn how to operate that old water heater whose manual you have lost or find out about the environmental record of a certain brand of tuna. But Goggles and similar products could also tell the history of a building, help travelers get around in a foreign country or even help blind people navigate their surroundings.
  • But recognizing images at what techies call “scale,” meaning thousands or even millions of images, is hugely difficult, partly because it requires enormous computing power. It turns out that Google, with its collection of massive data centers, has just that.
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    Google unveiled a smartphone application called Goggles. It allows users to search the Web, not by typing or by speaking keywords, but by snapping an image with a cellphone and feeding it into Google's search engine.
Barbara Lindsey

How Web-Savvy Edupunks are Transforming american Higher Education | Fast Company - 0 views

  • "The Internet disrupts any industry whose core product can be reduced to ones and zeros," says Jose Ferreira, founder and CEO of education startup Knewton. Education, he says, "is the biggest virgin forest out there." Ferreira is among a loose-knit band of education 2.0 architects sharpening their saws for that forest.
  • MIT in 2001, when the school agreed to put coursework online for free.
  • "We're changing the culture of how we think about knowledge and how it should be shared and who are the owners of knowledge."
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  • "Colleges have become outrageously expensive, yet there remains a general refusal to acknowledge the implications of new technologies," says Jim Groom, an "instructional technologist" at Virginia's University of Mary Washington and a prominent voice in the blogosphere for blowing up college as we know it. Groom, a chain-smoker with an ever-present five days' growth of beard, coined the term "edupunk" to describe the growing movement toward high-tech do-it-yourself education. "Edupunk," he tells me in the opening notes of his first email, "is about the utter irresponsibility and lethargy of educational institutions and the means by which they are financially cannibalizing their own mission."
  • The edupunks are on the march. From VC-funded startups to the ivied walls of Harvard, new experiments and business models are springing up from entrepreneurs, professors, and students alike. Want a class that's structured like a role-playing game? an accredited bachelor's degree for a few thousand dollars? a free, peer-to-peer Wiki university? These all exist today, the overture to a complete educational remix.
  • "If universities can't find the will to innovate and adapt to changes in the world around them," professor David Wiley of Brigham Young University has written, "universities will be irrelevant by 2020."
  • The challenge is not to bring technology into the classroom, he points out. The millennials, with their Facebook and their cell phones, have done that. The challenge is to capture the potential of technology to lower costs and improve learning for all.
Barbara Lindsey

MediaShift . Turning a College Lecture into a Conversation with CoverItLive | PBS - 0 views

  • "Web now" is the new reality of everyday communications.
  • Whenever we start using new tools of communication, such as the cell phone or Twitter, we spend much of our time working out how we should be using them. This is exactly what happened during the lecture.
  • As he Addressed the students, they were Able to submit comments And Ask questions viA CoveritLive -- these comments then AppeAred on screen.
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  • For the experiment, I set up a class discussion page using CoveritLive. The page was projected onto a screen in the lecture hall so that students could see the conversation unfold. Tippett's presentation was projected on a second screen.
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    "Web now" is the new reality of everyday communications.
Barbara Lindsey

UC Berkeley orientation: UC Berkeley asks incoming students to say more than 'hello' - latimes.com - 0 views

  • In addition to exploring their diverse backgrounds, students will discuss the language challenges graduates face as many work overseas, Hampton said. "They're going to be living in a multilingual context, and that's a really interesting thing for them to think about," he said.
  • The voice samples will be attached anonymously to an interactive world map so other participants can hear them, and each student will be matched through a voice recognition program with five others who have similar pronunciations, Johnson said.
  • With about 30% of incoming UC Berkeley students reporting that English was not their first language, exploring that linguistic diversity is a good way to help students feel comfortable at such a large school, faculty organizers said.
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  • This summer, UC Berkeley is asking new students to submit a less controversial part of themselves: Their voices and accents
  • One result will be an analysis of California accents, as researchers try to get beyond such stereotypes as the Surfer Dude, Valley Girl and Central Valley Farmer to study participants' vowel sounds, along with their locations, ethnicity and socioeconomic backgrounds.
  • After two yeArs And perhAps AgAin After four, students will be Asked to mAke new recordings to determine whether being At UC homogenized their Accents or pushed them into distinctive speech subgroups, Johnson sAid. (For exAmple, he sAid, becAuse of his OklAhomA upbringing, he pronounced "Don" And "dAwn" identicAlly in one of the experiment's exercises.)
  • Among those embrAcing the project wAs Chloe Hunt, 18, A freshmAn from SAntA BArbArA who sAid the voice mAp mAde her even more curious to meet students from mAny culturAl bAckgrounds. "It mAde me think About who I'm going to be sitting next to in clAss," sAid Hunt, who leArned FArsi from IrAniAn relAtives.
  • Leah Grant, 41, who is transferring to UC Berkeley from Long Beach City College, said listening to the voice samples made her feel like part of the university already. The varying approaches also were amusing, she said.
  •  
    fall 2011 syllabus
Motivational Speaker Adelaide

Inspiration from a Professional - 3 views

I recently attended a seminar and I found it really inspiring. It was David form Motivational Speaker adelaide who talked about a certain topic that has really changed my life. His presentation was...

motivational speakers adelaide speaking

started by Motivational Speaker Adelaide on 24 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
Barbara Lindsey

Brains benefit from multilingualism - 0 views

  •  
    "Learning a language strictly as a separate subject in the curriculum does not work as effectively for a broad range of young people as compared to embedding second language learning into other subjects. Thinking about numbers, for example, does figure naturally in a lot of school learning as well as in real life outside the school, which supports learning and knowing mathematics. The same may not always be true of foreign languages," Marsh argues."
Barbara Lindsey

academhack » Blog archive » Seriously Can We End This Debate already - 0 views

  • What you want from a secondary source is a good introduction to a concept, that is mostly reliable, up-to-date, entries for as many topics as possible, connections to where to go to learn more, and easy and ubiquitous (as possible) access. a secondary source is not an in depth analysis which upon reading one is suddenly an expert on said entry or topic, it’s not designed to be. It is just a good overview. No secondary source is going to be completely accurate, or engage in the level of detail and nuance which we want from students, or that is required to fully “know” about a subject.
  • The issue is not that Wikipedia is or is not reliable and thus should be banned in academic environments, rather the issue is that Wikipedia is a secondary source and thus should not be treated as a primary one.
  • Wikipedia has substantial advantages over any prior encyclopedia model.
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  • The breadth of knowledge, its ability to be linked to other knowledge, its cost (free), its up-to-dateness, and its preservation of editorial discussions (it records not only the article but the discussion which produced said article) makes it far more useful. and that doesn’t even begin to address things like how much easier Wikipedia is to use for mash-ups and data extraction, repurposing the information for other reference works.
  • Instead lets talk to students about how appropriately to use secondary sources, how to understand how encyclopedias function, how all encyclopedias are biased, all knowledge is discursive, and focus on teaching students how to judge credibility and accuracy instead of outsourcing it to people at Britannica.
Barbara Lindsey

Foreign Language Faculty in the age of Web 2.0 (EDUCaUSE Quarterly) | EDUCaUSE CONNECT - 0 views

  • The iPod might have an instructional potential, but it is the educators who arrange and structure instructional events around it to make learning happen, not the instrument itself. To realize the instructional potential of technology requires a set of skills that can only be acquired through adequate instruction and practice. Just as speaking a foreign language is not a qualification to teach it, knowing how to use a technology does not mean that one knows intuitively how to use it as a teaching tool.
  • A keyword seArch for the word "tech%" And "computer" in the Modern LAnguAge AssociAtion (MLA) job list1 returns over 43 relevAnt Ads out of 236 job postings (As of November 20, 2007): "fAmiliArity with teAching-relAted technologies" (tenure trAck in SpAnish, Missouri); "experience with technology in the clAssroom" (tenure trAck in French, MichigAn); "Ability to use technology effectively in teAching And leArning" (tenure trAck in JApAnese, South CArolinA). The wording vAries slightly from one Ad to the next, but the messAge is the sAme: job cAndidAtes Are well Advised to hAve An Answer reAdy when Asked how they use technology in the clAssroom.
  • Because the field of language technology is at the crossroads of technology, instructional design, and languages, it calls for the close collaboration of experts in each area. Today, language centers are the only campus units where such a wide range of expertise can easily be found.
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  • Unfortunately, graduate students interested in becoming acquainted with relevant instructional technologies have a limited number of options.
Barbara Lindsey

Twitter-What is it and why would I use it? | Musings from an International Teacher - 0 views

  • Why would you go to a educational conference or workshop? To find out about what best practices are out there, make connections with teachers and hopefully learn something new. However, sometimes you go to workshops that are fascinating and want to learn more from the presenter. Usually you forget about this workshop or lose their business card they gave you. Twitter allows you maintain contact and read updates, new blog posts or interesting websites that they find automatically. You do this by “following” them on Twitter.
  • Once you have this network, you an ask them questions and build on a shared knowledge from this network. This is often referred as a PLN (personal learning network).
  • If you don’t “give anything” than people aren’t going to follow you. Everyone has some knowledge to offer others whether it be a good website, a great technology tool or a better teaching strategy. Share it! Slowly, you will start appearing in search results and people will recognize this and add you. This creates a culture of reciprocity. If you aren’t a team player, Twitter might not be for you.
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