Thursday, October 21, 2010
Changing Education.......
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Howdy Folks!!
I'm going to add a couple of websites which I hope you will find useful to use in your classroom. You may or may not use them already, I don't know, but they're useful anyway!!
Hopefully you are a BIG user of youtube in your classroom! It's without a doubt one of the web's best resources. Two of the unfortunate features of youtube are a)the often colourful comments underneath, and b) the increasingly random video links down the side of the page.
One way to remove both of these annoying problems is via the website http://viewpure.com/.
It's easy to drag this website address into your bookmarks bar for easy use. Once you find a youtube video you want to use, copy and paste the url into the viewpure box and you video will be 'purified!!!!'
Another fantastic website for use with anything animals - www.arkive.org
This website is a virtual ark for videos, images and information to do with animals anywhere! It has a massive library of images and videos of New Zealand creatures, as well as any world wide animal. There are also several basic online games available on this site which relate well to endangered species etc. It is being improved all the time and you are able to bookmark your own resources on the site for easy access.
I hope you find these sites useful and I'll pop back in a week or two to add a couple for.
Ka kite,
Alistair
Monday, October 18, 2010
Ulearn, Ilearn, WElearn
During week two of the school holidays, rather than sunning myself on a crowded beach on the Gold Coast, I was up in a shaky Christchurch for the 10th Ulearn conference.
The BIG question for me was how can I ensure that the learning is shared through the cluster and that we make the most of the professional learning opportunities we all access?
Hence the title, Ulearn, Ilearn, WElearn.
My aim and the aim of Dave, Alistair and Sarah who attended is to share some of the highlights, the new learning, the 'where to nexts?' as well as some national and international best practice.
Over the next couple of weeks, through this blog, we will be sharing our experiences, posting links, ideas and discussion points.
We welcome your feedback, questions, ideas, links and examples and as we have said previously, to learn from one another is immensely valuable. We invite you to take the time to read, to comment, and definitely TO POST!
So without further ado (drumroll please...), WELCOME to Karla's conference experience:
I decided to utilize the pre conference workshops and though disappointed to miss out on the ipod/ipad option that would have enabled me to learn how to design and create my own apps (which I will definitely be following up independently) I attended a workshop with
Suzie Vesper entitled 'Utilising web 2.0 tools to support today's learners'
Those of you who have been lucky enough to attend a workshop with Suzie before will know how knowledgeable and inspirational she is, for those of you that haven't yet, keep an eye on her blog http://sharetheaddiction.edublogs.org/ to share her love of learning and keep up to date with new ideas!
The session was highly interactive and explored a wide range of FREE online tools that can be used easily by teachers and students.
For ideas about some of these recommended tools, follow this link:
http://learningweb2.wikispaces.com/Table+of+tools+for+blogs+or+wikis
In the afternoon, we had the chance to focus on a particular area. I chose to focus on Voicethread: http://voicethread.com/ which I know many of you have already been exploring, but for those of you that haven't yet, this is another tool that can be easily utilised
How to use Voicethread
To get a completely free educator account that allows you to make up to 50 VoiceThreads, start from this address: http://voicethread.com/products/k12/educator/
Choose the VT Educator option and complete the steps (the apply button appears to be grayed out but it still works).
Using this tool you can:
Create an online media album that can hold essentially any type of media (images, documents and videos)
Make comments about the media in 5 different ways - using voice (with a microphone or telephone), text, audio file, or video (with a webcam
Share a Voicethread with anyone so that they add comments to your Voicethread or are even able to edit the media as a collaborator
Use the Doodle tool to draw on the media as you add a comment to illustrate your point.
You can download a VoiceThread as a movie file (but this costs if you don't have an educator account)
You can embed your VoiceThread into online spaces
For ideas on how Voicethread can be used in your classroom, Suzie has put together a great presentation that can be accessed from slideshare http://www.slideshare.net/suziea/voicethread-examples-in-education-presentation?type=powerpoint (even though it is 3 years old, it is still very relevant)
I worked with Tabitha, an AMAZING Secondary teacher from Auckland, and building on an existing VoiceThread on 'Interesting Pants'. We wanted to have fun with the tool, to focus on the tool itself, rather than the content, so we explored pants in Christchurch, link to our VoiceThread is below, this is simply for a giggle so I hope you enjoy it!
http://voicethread.com/share/1369597/
Until next time
Looking forward to your comments
Karla
Thursday, October 7, 2010
NZ Interface Magazine | Eight habits of highly effective 21st century teachers
Thought this list was worth sharing :)
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
The Open Source School
Albany Senior High School in New Zealand is the country's first open source high school. (Thanks Ewan for the tweeted link).
This is a great story from the blog: The Open High School of Utah. Not only do they use open source software, they also use open courseware. All of their courses are released as Moodle packages under a creative commons licence at the end of each year, covering both sides of the free tools and free content equation. One of the drivers behind this project is David Wiley whose TEDx talk is inspirational.