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Monday, August 10, 2009

Thing 11.5 evaluation

1. I really most enjoyed the lessons and feedback on digital citizenship- I found them helpful to prepare for the upcoming year.


2.The things have assisted in meeting my goals by increasing my personal and professional knowledge! Yea!


3. I was not surprised at the great knowledge takeaways- I expected them from last time! But I was gratified to have the opportunity.


4. I like that we are pushed to try new things- but it's a bit of a downer when so many of them are blocked by our districts (like second life).

Thing 11

"The ability to form one's opinion and validate sources is the key. Digital citizenship is more than literacy, it is living safely, civilly, and effectively in our increasingly digital world." -cool cat teacher blog

This is the basis of a lesson I would create for middle school students learning about digital citizenship and ethical use of resources. Because there is more information available than ever before, it is even more important for them to carefully evaluate materials and their own opnions about works by the millions of internet authors. Lessons on ethcially using materials and copyright stem from an understanding of digital citizenship.


Stephen Downes says, "Indeed, a person who reads a website and concludes that it's true, no matter what it says, is dangerously illiterate."

Thing 10

Virtual worlds- I must admit, I have enough to do in the real world, I've always questioned why I'd want to spend time in these virtual ones. So this was an eye opening experience. This article helped me see that role playing can be quite educational, if we use virtual worlds not blocked by my district of course.
From an elementary perspective, some of these virtual worlds are a nice introduction, and this middle school library blog about using second life for class projects is very inspiring. Verdict- I need more experience with this using worlds set up for kids- not really for adults since I can't actually use them through work.

Thing 9

Slideshare is the bomb- it's the ultimate collaboration tool across distances, from two librarians in the same district to a group of kids in different states. It's also helpful that you can upload documents other than ppt (if a student at home does not have access to ppt, but does want to work on a project using this great site).
Great thing!

slideshare logo

Sunday, August 9, 2009

thing 8

Screencasts are so informative and helpful, especially for technophobes. I have tried to use Jing in my district- not allowed to download it.
So I tried a free online version of screenomatic without a mic, unfortunately. Very cool! I love that you don't have to install anything, just go!~
I would love to do one about posting to blogs or wikis. For practice I did a very short intro to etsy, didn't quite finish it, but got the hang of the tool.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Thing 7

Wow! I didn't realize that Hulu would have this fascinating study of sharks, and I found a good video on the National Archives Video collections (that's actually posted on youtube....so it would be blocked at school unless I download and convert from home).
These are engaging and address learning styles that need visual and audio cues for new concepts- without buying an entire video!

Thing 6

I have a Blackberry, so I had to phone a friend for this one. Using the iphone we crusied available downloads. Obviously twitter is a feature that can be used, but wow, Google Earth and math games? Very cool.
For more student use in the library I would be excited about Google Earth and Dexy, a neat way for kids to organize notes as they research. With all of this information available I can see writing a grant to get our foot in the technology door for these!

My district has also been blocked from editing wikipedia in the past. It's a shame because it is a great learning experience, all the better for us to create our own wikis with more security and accountability.

Thing 5

I love Facebook, I have used it frequently for personal microblogging. I was not as taken with Twitter at first, but reading the articles presented on how to use it in libraries; and seeing it constantly on television, makes me realize it is quite effective and popular. I am going to try it this year to share information about what's going on in my middle school library! I think it will be a way to share rsources chosen/suggested by the library and teachers, introduce new books and events, and support students' learning.
I am already using twitter for my part time job as vintage online store owner. It's fun to share new information with my tweets (I know I need to be careful and use the correct twitter lexicon).
The tinychat information was interesting, I know that any chat in my district is blocked, so I will look forward to seeing what they have to say about this option.
Backchanneling is very interesting...I prefer the idea of backchanneling in large presentations because it seems to include everyone while keeping the flow of the presentation going and giving feedback to the presentor.

Thing 4

I think there is a great advantage to having student created work uploaded to teachertube! But this was one of my most frustrating experiences with the 11.5 things yet- I tried to work on it at school and kept timing out or having issues. I'll have to troubleshoot further, but finally got something to upload from home.

Here's the link, I didn't choose to allow embedding..

runaway

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Friday, July 31, 2009

Thing 3

I was amazed by this Skype article written by a very resourceful librarian! I mentioned skype this summer as a low cost way to conduct a long distance interview but was told that it was not approved in our district.
That was just one way I think we could use this fabulous tool- look what Oprah has done with it! It's the ultimate distance learning tool.
I'd love to have a long distance book club meet with an author or a fan just like them!
And since it is used as long distance reference help in some situations- perhaps it could be used under supervision in our libraries if not in the whole school!

Thing 2

Here is my Wordsift, I like Wordle best, but wordsift's highlighting academic words feature is cool too!
category clay cleans compact cosmetic course destination enjoy etsy etsy…one fabulous favorite find found hopeis… like look love makeup mask need online perfect product pursereason relax routine sensitive shopping skin spend thursday time treat vegan vintage whatever

I think Voki would help a nervous student do a great job in a presentation!



Bookr is so amazing. I found this great book on tide pools, and thought how wonderful it would be for students to create their own books on biomes, their school, their community.... endless possibilities.

I love Glogster and have used it to create quick and fun webpages for teachers and kids. If you embed it into a webpage a user goes to your site instead of glogster.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Thing 1

I love Google Scholar and that the student in this video uses quality sources and shares them in productive socially networked way. The librarian can absoloutely facilitate learning this way- and many of us already are on the way to doing so! Lirbary websites that have links to valueable resources, including social networking like wikis and blogs students can access to work with their peers, is a step in the right direction.
Lehman HS in Hays CISD has made efforts in this direction.
http://lobolib.org/content/