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;
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]
for showing the best of a student’s work;
for students to use;
convenient tools for capturing assessments and therefore….
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;
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);
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.
Just wanted to quickly highlight a great channel on YouTube run by Tyler Fowler. If you use a Smartboard and are relatively new to it and the technology, then may I suggest you take a look at Tyler’s work. He currently has 6 videos uploaded that help users come to terms with what Smarboard Notebook is all about. So far he has videos explaining about the various pens that can be used. Tyler also has a ‘getting started’ video, which I have included below. I hope you take a moment to visit Tyler at his YouTube channel. I’m looking forward to seeing other videos in the future.
Thanks to the resources of the Web2.0 search engine somebody, who seems to have a lot of time on their hands (of which I am not complaining of) has compiled 1001 social media resources. Listed here on the EduDemic website, these are broken down into categories, and one of the features includes the ability to see similar products;
What follows is a huge and long list organized by subject. You’ll likely want to scroll or hit CTRL+F to find what you’re looking for. For example, you can hit CTRL+F and type ‘Pandora’ to see all the other competing companies that are like Pandora, but a bit different. Enjoy!
As I wrote, all the applications and sources are broken down into categories. The categories include;
Audio
Blog2Pod
Blogging
Browser
Calendar
Chat
Collaboration
Collect
Comix
Communication
Community
CRM
Database
Design
Dictionary
E-commerce
Economy
E-Learning
Email
Filesharing
Financials
Fun
Gambling
Games
Hosting
Identity
Images
Imaging
Jobs
Knowledge
Lists
Mapping
Marketing
Memo
Multimedia
News
Office
OS
Outlook
Personal Manufacturing
Polls
Portals
Powerpoint
Projects
Publishing
Read
RSS
Scheduling
Search
Software
Stats
Tagging
Task Manager
Text
Text2Speech
Time Management
Track and Trace
Video
Voice2mail
Voicemail
Web2Feed
WiFi
Wikis
Wishlist
Word
Write
As I noted, there are heaps of categories, some of which I had never heard of. You can imagine the list that these categories provide. Have fun searching, finding and using products for your teaching and learning. Again, here’s the link.
Tim Holt has put together a page of Education widgets that you can quickly and easily embed on your website or blog page. Tim is taking further input on widgets people would like to share. You can contact him via his email address which is located down towards the bottom of the page. Currently listed are;
Widgets from Education Week – Research, Technology, Curriculum and Learning, Top Stories
For many people, the internet does not just revolve around Facebook, or Twitter, or Tumbler, or Youtube. In fact, many internet users have accounts at all these applications and more. Some Lemonade exists to simplify the feed that comes in from these accounts. Some Lemonade allows you to ‘filter’ the feeds that you wish to view. Starting with your Twitter sign in, options continue to exist for other application sign ups.
One thing I was particularly impressed with was that the links to pictures and videos that are shortened in the Twitter updates are shown in full blown colour and size.
No doubt applications like this will continue to be launched, and Some Lemonade has shown a cool and refreshing way to update, favourite and read your feeds and accounts.
We all love Wordle and we have found heaps of uses for that particular web app. For the classroom they are great. They’re eye catching, fun and a great visual aid. However, there is another application which is just like Wordle, but adds another dimension. Word Mosiacs is part of the Image Chef website and just like Wordle will list randomly words that are inputted. The twist comes when you can then put those words into shapes. Here’s one that I made in a matter of moments – ‘Nothing Without Joy’ is mantra that my boss often uses and was, for some reason, the first thing that came to my head. I like the avenues of sharing your creations. You can Facebook it, Tweet it, MySpace it (what?) and even embed into blogs or other web pages. You can also save the image, something that Wordle can’t do at the moment.
I suggest that you have a look for some fun and visually stimulating effects that take word usage another step up from Wordle.
Last year at the Vitta Conference I had opportunity to hear news about App_tiude, a new application developer who is specifically targeting primary students and schools with their product for the iTouch/iPhone. I received news last week that the first application 1,2,3 Sheep has been launched and is now ready for download from iTunes, and seeing as though they sent me a $10 iTunes voucher to do so, I did.
123 Sheep is a clever and engaging game that was developed in consultation with teachers and has been trialled in schools with students aged 6 and 7. My daughter loves playing with it (she’s in Year One) and I’ll try and coerce her into doing a video review in their near future.
Children explore basic counting concepts in three fun activities – flying a helicopter around the farm, herding sheep into pens and guiding the sheepdog into the truck.
The game difficulty automatically adapts to match their progress, with content based on the school curriculum. Children are drawn to the friendly, detailed graphics, playful audio and lots of humorous encouragement.
There are three fun counting games that this application revolves around, but the interesting extension to this is the ability for it to be used on a class set of iPods with the teacher being able to track and assess each student. As of the time of writing, this functionality has not yet been released but should be shortly.
More information about the company App_titude can be found via their website and you can follow them on Twitter too.
You can find more about the application via their YouTube video;