NECC ’09: LiveScribe

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OK, fair warning. I went by the LiveScribe booth very late in the conference when I was tired and weary, and it took me a while to find them.  I went based on the description I got over dinner from Deven Black (Twitter user @Spedteacher), I’m  giving them the Bronze Medal for this conference’s most interesting products.

So the idea is that it’s a pen that records as you write.  You use the pen with special paper as you write, and the built-in camera records where on the paper your diagram, drawings or notes are.  The microphone records what is being said around you, and synchs those recordings directly with the lines on the paper as you draw them.  Then, when you synch the pen with your computer, it uploads your recordings — and digital copies of your pages — to a digital version of the notebook in your hard drive.  All the lines you drew, whether words, phrases or diagrams, become clickable links / hyperlines in your digital notebook… and clicking on those lines replays the recording. More

NECC ’09: Nystrom Maps

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The silver medal from my ventures into the Vendors Hall at NECC goes to Nystrom, which produces maps.  They’ve taken Google Earth, wedded their proprietary content to the Google Earth globe, and then modularized it.

What does that mean?  It means that they’ve chopped the program up into smaller bits. So if you’re a particularly unusual school that only does Grade 3, and only does Latin America, you can buy the Latin American module for Grade 3.  You only pay for the content that you actually plan to use. More

NECC ’09: Animation-ish

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I’ve spent close to four hours down in the Vendor Hall, which is enormous.  I was singularly impressed with the vast futility of most of it.  Most of the equipment and gear is directed at administrators and IT people, who are empowered to make budgetary decisions.  And most of the gear I saw is stuff with almost no practical applications to the way I actually teach.  Sure, I’d like a white board with smart tech, or a projector, and I’d find ways to use a lot of the gadgets downstairs if the administrators came in and gave them to me.  But I didn’t see anything I had an immediate use for.

Animation-ish

Animation-ish

Except one.  Animation-ish, from FableVision.  It’s a drawing and animation program easy enough for a second or third grader to learn to use well, and advanced enough that I want a copy RIGHT NOW.  Yes, they’ll tell you it’s based on the best-selling books of Peter Reynolds. Yes, they’re based out of Boston, at the Children’s Museum there.  Yes, yes, yes. All that’s really cool. More

NECC ’09: Blogging Best Practices

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Just met Scot McLeod of Dangerously Irrelevant in the Bloggers Café.  Hi, Scott.  That’s definitely a blog worth reading regularly.

About to attend a session with John G. Hendron of Goochland County Public Schools, titled Blogging Best Practices for Educators. John’s been blogging since 19919, he’s an instructional technologies, a musician and the author of RSS for Educators. In 2005, he ran the Teacher Blogging Initiative which required each teacher to maintain a weblog on the school division’s server from principals down.  In 2003 they had 10 teachers blogging, 18 in 2004, 205 in 2005, and WordPress multiuser they’ve gone to 230 bloggers in the district, along with podcast support, and comment and trackback performance.  Shout out to Akismet for WordPress, mentioning that it needs a purchased license from the company. More

NECC ’09: Open Educational Resources

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Education should be free for everyone.

Meaning, open source content that’s shared over technology leads to differentiated instruction, tools for all grades and all levels of ability within each grade.  Example: http://www.freereading.org/ & Kids’ Open Dictionary: http://www.dictionary.k12opened.com

This is about assembling classroom materials on a class-by-class basis, and adding them to the great library of materials that anyone can use.

Things that are free now but are not open, may not always be so.  Things that are open and free are likely to remain free and open. More

NECC ’09: Podcasting for 21st century teacher

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I’m here at NECC 2009 in Washington, DC, as most of you should know by now.  I’m interested in Podcasting because many of my students are dyslexic, and finding ways around their reading incomprehension is critical for my learning objectives. Listening to materials is very bit as important as seeing it or reading it.  With podcasting (especially podcasting with subtitles, images, and audio all combined), I may be able to break through some barriers. Hence my presence here.

The presenters in room 151 A are setting up the SMARTBoard, and works exactly like the one we have at school — insofar as the one at school ever works.  Our SMARTBoard’s main cables are missing, its projector was scavenged by another teacher, and the board itself sits behind our copier.  Hmm.

I’m also surprised to discover that I’ve had 6-8 important conversations at this conference using Twitter… with people who aren’t even at this conference.  In fact, my online discussions with non-attendees may actually outnumber the conversations I’ve had with attendees.  Hmm.

Anyway, the meat of the BYOL session, Podcasting for 21st Century Teachers, will follow below. More

NECC ’09: Teachers Vote for Schools

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In other news, water remains wet.

During this morning’s Oxford-style debate, 37% voted before the debate started FOR the proposition that “Brick and mortar schools are detrimental to the future of education.”  During and after the debate, this percentage declined to 26%, so those AGAINST the proposition were said to have won.

Yet in essence, school teachers voted overwhelmingly for the continued existence of their institutions and their livelihoods.  Imagine that.

It doesn’t mean that their livelihoods will look anything like they do now in ten years.  It fact, it’s highly unlikely that their schools will look anything like they do now in five or seven years. The students who can leave for better options, will.  The only ones in traditional brick-and-mortar schools will be the students who can’t break free of the chains of the educational system.

How is this unlike farmers and shepherds opposing the Enclosure Acts in Great Britain, or the Luddites opposing the factories and mills?  They’re on the wrong side of the innovation curve.

And those of us who think the future of education lies elsewhere?  I’d love to say that we’re on the right side of the innovation curve.  But the truth is, we haven’t won yet.  There’s nothing to prove that it won’t all come crashing down completely.

NECC ’09: We need new language

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I’m in the Bloggers’ Café at NECC 2009, and listening to the ISTEvision tv show in the background.  I’m amazed at the language.

No, people aren’t swearing.  But they’re using the language of motion. “We have to move into the future.”  “We have to change direction and speed into the changing world.” “We’re moving forward at incredible speed.” “We’re stepping into the future, not a step back in time.” – (ISTE CEO for the last one).

I’m guilty of this myself.  But it’s the wrong language.

First of all, we’re always “moving” through the dimension of time, as Einstein demonstrated with his famous temporal arrows diagrams, and as the theory of relativity further proved.  Second, that arrow pushes us in only one direction, out of what was and into what will be.

An earlier commenter pointed out that “change” is also a loaded term. It’s what you get when you buy a cup of coffee.  It’s what you put into the cup or hand of a beggar.  A Buddhist monk, in the old joke, would tell you that it comes from within, not from without.

Again… it’s the wrong language.

The School 2.0 BYOL session yesterday talked about how important it is when talking about school 2.0, and educational and learning reform, to engage in specific concrete thinking and action.  Maybe we should shift our language choices to other forms, away from language connected with change and motion, and toward specific,  concrete actions… hence:

  • I will USE digital tools in the classroom.
  • I will DESIGN lessons around student action
  • I will SHUT UP and let students talk.
  • I will STOP USING paper worksheets in class
  • I will GRADE using frequent student input
  • I will PAINT, SCULPT, and WRITE. to model for my students
  • I will WORK ONLINE and STOP FEARING the Internet
  • I will TALK WITH PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD.
  • I will VOTE for progressive education with my vote, my money and my feet.
  • I will DANCE with ambiguity and music.
  • I will PLAY online games and CONNECT with my students and my teachers with social media.

Feel free to add to the list, but I think that this kind of language is a whole not more valuable than “moving into the future.”

NECC ’09: WildFire vs. Bricks & Mortar

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I spent last weekend learning how to spin fire at a tent city in northeastern Connecticut.  On Thursday, three hundred people showed up to set up more than 18 tents, a wifi spot, a tent lunch room, and open-air classrooms for teaching performers of ages from 12 to 74 how to play with fire in front of live audiences. I saw classes on poi spinning, juggling, marketing, accounting for business expenses, building a business plan, costuming, making publicity materials, explaining your show to fire marshals and fire safety protocols. On Monday morning, the school instructors fed everyone breakfast, packed up the school and put it in the backs of their cars.

It’s not brick and mortar.  It’s not even a year-round school. Yet it has as many attendees as the average school.  It has a full schedule of classes, 8:00 to 5:00pm.  It teaches things valuable and useful to its (self-selecting) attendees. But it’s certainly a school.

Cost for this school, run with volunteer labor from participants (1 two-hour shift over the four days), and some additional time from instructors and leadership: $90.  A school run this way for a 180-day year would cost a little over $8000… comparable to what we pay per student in many state districts (last time I checked, it was around $7800).

What’s the difference? Well, first, these students were self-selecting.  They chose themselves for this school.  The instructors were all proven performers in their fields — not the best necessarily, but active participants in the performance culture.  The students trained intensely for four days, volunteered their time for the school’s operations, and the all knew that they needed to practice the skills on their own time (as opposed to in school). Students were doing homework in the lunch lines, even so.

Our own bricks-n-sticks schools, though, require student presence but not necessarily participation.  We have an unclear sense of what our cultural mission is, in a time when the 19th century model of command-and-control in business and military affairs has given way to a collaborate-communicate-and-cocreate model of business and creativity, and in which the military (while still operating under command-control hierarchies) nevertheless expects its boots on the ground to handle face-to-face communications with average Iraqis and Afghanis.

Is what my students write on college-ruled paper (with hanging chads, no less, as Tom Hunt of the York School in Monterrey, CA, noted to me in the Bloggers’ Café this morning) relevant to the collaborate-communicate-cocreate model?  Or is it still what Samuel Pepys was doing in the 1600s, writing to hand down orders from on high to subordinates down low?

Hmmm.

NECC ’09: Quest Atlantis

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Wandered into this session with teachpaperless (Shelly Blake-Plock) and I’m listening in on a conference call from Australia about the kids’ virtual world Quest Atlantis.

It sounds like this program is World of Warcraft wedded to Second Life related to Microsoft Word and Kindle… by which I mean that it’s a place to present and review and edit your writing within the context of a 3-d virtual world.

They’re saying the kids are between 8 and 14, and safety is paramount. There are profanity filters on the automated side, and chat logs are also monitored by live observers.  So there is moderation of negative or phobic or bullying behavior, but also praise of positive behaviors and acts of virtue and quality.

In other words, it’s a utopia.  Or a dystopia, I’m not sure which.  Kids become enforcers of the norms after time.  The teachers in the room seem to think this is utterly cool and wonderful.

I come at this from a very different perspective.  More than a third of my students are connected to me through facebook, which I treat as a professional site as much as I can.  They monitor what I do as much as I monitor what they do. I understand that sometimes their norms do not match mine, and they recognize that I am (when it comes to Facebook) an unreasonable and probably prudish dweeb.

But my friend John in college said once, AOL isn’t bad.  It’s sort of like being virtually in the Jacob K. Javits convention center.  All sorts of people are telling you, come look at this, watch this, look at our product, see our stuff.” And the whole time, they’re distracting you from the signs that say EXIT. “you don’t want to see anything out there,” they say. But outside those doors is New York City, and I live there.

By which he meant, that we should be cautious of sticking kids into paradises, or walled gardens.  THis program may be great, and this virtual world may be wonderful. But why must we build ‘fake’ environments for kids to practice in, instead of giving them adult tools, and teaching them ab initio to be cautious about strangers, behave appropriately, and produce work worthy of your name?

On the Other Hand, they did have some kids making gains of 2 years in reading ability in only six months. So that’s a good thing, and maybe it does speak to a kid’s need to have a walled garden.

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