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The August 2010 Wrap Up

August 31, 2010
by Mark

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It’s been a while since I did this, but I feel it’s good to take stock of what people are reading, tweeting and using from this site every once in a while. August proved a busy month with lots of Twitter updates, new followers and hits to the site here.  On the side I also started the OZTeachers Twibe on Twitter which is gaining followers daily.   On the Twitter front a staggering 300 people started following The Teacher’s Hub in August up to a total of nearly 1300. Post wise, the ten most popular post for August were;

1. Ten Amazing Tips from Einstein to Implement Technology into the Classroom.

2. OzTeachers on Twitter

3. StoryLine Online – Stories Read by Actors

4. WallWisher

5. Tessellation Creator

6. Tradukka – Realtime Translation for ESL Teachers

7. Better than Wordle? Try Word Mosaics

8. Best Resource Sites for Using Flip Cameras

9. 10 Google Forms For the Classroom

10. Facebook can be a GREAT Learning Management System

Don’t forget that you can subscribe via RSS or email, follow on Twitter or Facebook. I look forward to seeing you somewhere around the traps.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Facebook can be a great tool for Learning Management. Kudos to the teacher, the school and the principal that backed this idea. It seems to have worked.

Popularity: 5% [?]

Each year Jane Hart over at the Centre for Learning and Performance Activities (C4LPA) is once again putting the call out for help in compiling the Top 100 Tools for Learning. Simply head to her site and follow the links, then add ten tools that have been invaluable to your service as an educator. So far over 380 learning professionals have contributed their opinions on the most valuable tools that they have when considering e-Learning. You can also access the results back to 2007 when this annual compilation started, when the top ten tools for e-learning were;

  1. Firefox
  2. Delicious
  3. Google Search
  4. Skype
  5. PowerPoint
  6. WordPress
  7. Gmail
  8. Google Reader
  9. Blogger
  10. Word

Polling closes this year on the 17th of October, 2010.
Post your contributions here.
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Popularity: 4% [?]

Ewan McIntosh Hits The Mark

August 18, 2010
by Mark

Ewan McIntosh posted this article ePortfolios & Learning Management Systems: Setting our default to social a few days back, and as one who is currently at a school grappling with its Learning Management System these points Ewan makes in the article have struck a chord. While I recommend you read and view (he has a video) his original document I want to highlight some of what he says – and it would be easy to highlight the whole article.

  • Education has for too long defaulted to secrecy, opaqueness and inward reflection on “what education is”. It’s time to change that default setting.
  • [My] plea would be to set our own personal defaults to social: the benefits of others serendipitously bumping into our content, our ideas and our pleas for help greatly outweigh the perceived risk or inconvenience of ‘losing’ a piece of ourselves to the vast online wastelands.
  • [Current] preconceptions of what an ePortfolio is for and looks like [are] generally [perceived by] teachers and parents [as something]

    1. for showing the best of a student’s work;
    2. for students to use;
    3. convenient tools for capturing assessments and therefore….
    4. for private use, shared with a closed community of the teacher and/or class and/or school, but rarely the open web.

McIntosh believes that portfolios are (and this is stated in his video) for students, teachers and parents to use;

  1. for showing the workings that led to a final product (it’s time we stopped covering up our learning in English, showing our working in Maths – let’s get the process of learning out there for all to see, contribute to and build upon);
  2. convenient tools for capturing anything that might, one day, relate to some learning – light touch tools such as Posterous are transforming blogging from a web-based technically superior-feeling activity in education to something anyone can do, even when they are offline (you post by email with Posterous, so you can ‘blog’ when on a plane if you want to, and let Outlook do the catching up when you hit wifi again).
  • ePortfolios for teachers should resemble those useful moments of sharing in the staffroom.
  • For students, ePortfolios should be the messy learning log or journal de bord that, frankly, not enough of them keep on paper anyway;
  • for the whole, open web: otherwise we set ourselves up for nearly only introspective learning with people who share our viewpoints, cultural biases and outlook on learning and life.
  • Most Learning Management Systems on the market these days…have their defaults set to ‘anti-social’: private, closed networks that experts and co-learners in the ‘outside’ world cannot see or interact with.

As I said earlier, the whole article is worthy of quoting and it’s hard to pinpoint just the highpoints but I want to finish with a longer quote;

The reasons for this [closed system] are normally noble sounding enough: safety of learners, the perceptions of teachers and parents are currently too ‘conservative’ (i.e. they didn’t learn like that) to ‘cope’ with the concept of anyone seeing the work of students. Allanah King in Nelson does a good job asking the difficult (and not-so-difficult) questions of Learning Management Systems in this respect in her post: why would a school spend good money on one?

But the longer teachers put up with these attitudes, rather than challenging them and asking intelligent questions about the balance of risk in not having students share with the world wide web, the longer we do not have conversations with parents, and invite them to spectate and participate in what learning can look like now, then the longer we will continue to do a disservice to the digital footprints, competitiveness and understanding of otherness in our young people.

Full article: ePortfolios & Learning Management Systems: Setting our default to social

Popularity: 5% [?]

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One of the applications on the web that is a lot of fun is Yearbook Yourself. If you haven’t heard about the concept, the site allows you to upload a photo, or take one via webcam and superimpose it over a headshot from a certain year, all the way back to the 1940s. It’s very easy to do, and so much fun for the school staff meeting. YearBookYourself.com – you know you want to. And yes, that is me. Somewhere lost in the ’80s I think.

Popularity: 4% [?]

The Question of Balance

June 15, 2010
by Mark

5142uJTG1EL._SL160_.jpgFor the more astute of you, you will have realised that this blog of resources as been rather neglected of late. I understand that Twitter updates aren’t riveting reading, nor are they always overly informative. And I apologise. During the months of March through to end of May, there were many issues that I was dealing with behind the scenes. As well as that, the demands of work were always marching on. While I tried to keep up with this, I didn’t do a very good job. Finding the balance between family (especially a family under pressure), my career and my love of doing administrating this site were all being attacked. I don’t even think I kept up with my work program very well.

That’s why I was encouraged to see this article by Judith Epccke who was responding to Beth Still’s article, Finding Balance. There were some great points in both pieces, namely;

  1. Evaluate the current balance between your teaching / online life and your personal life of family and friends
  2. Learn to turn off the distractions – pop ups, email, notifications
  3. Make a deliberate time to spend with family
  4. Be efficient when work is at hand
  5. Leave the phone alone

For me the plan is to come back into balance; issues have settled now, so I plan on rebuilding this blog as a constant resource for its readers. At the same time too, family is important – and for a season they needed so much more attention, which in turn caused work and blogging to fall behind. I’m looking forward to returning to regular programming! Thanks Beth and Judith for some pointers on how to get back on track.

Popularity: 3% [?]

Top Posts for March, 2010

April 1, 2010
by Mark

The end of March rolls around and it is again time to thankyou for your support this past month. The Hub topped over 800 direct hits, which is again a big improvement from the 500 in February. The top post was, without a doubt the 10 Tips from Einstein. Thanks to all those who tweeted and retweeted the article. I am indebted to you. Below are listed the top 10 posts that people found useful for the month of March. You’re able to now subscribe to The Teacher’s Hub via RSS, or now via the Feedburner email link to the right of this page.

Popularity: 4% [?]

My Apologies

March 25, 2010
by Mark

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Often I will start the week with grand intentions of covering new products, new websites and thoughts on different articles. But then Monday happens, followed closely by Tuesday and before I know it Wednesday has happened, but nothing of substance has appeared on the blog. This has been one of those weeks where productivity has slowed right down.

Currently I am in the final week of term, trying to tidy up different ends and prepare things for next term. On the home front, we are all recovering from being sick. I had a touch of illness a few weeks back, but then it really knocked around one of my little boys with him ending up in hospital. I don’t think I have fully recovered from that and getting back into all the routines that were suspended at that time.

With the term break coming up over the next fortnight, I hope to get back into the swing of regular writing.

Thanks for understanding, and I look forward to seeing you via the comments section, the Facebook Fan page or on Twitter.

Popularity: 10% [?]

800 Pledge Paperless

March 24, 2010
by Mark

Congratulations to Teach Paperless who have recruited 800 pledges from teachers who are going to teach paperless for Earth Day 2010. Have you pledged? Picture 1.jpg

Popularity: 3% [?]

With Earth Day approach on April 22nd, TeachPaperless is campainging for teachers to do just that for the day – teach paperless. You can join over 700 teachers who have already signed the pledge at the TeachPaperless website.   

Popularity: 9% [?]

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