Sunday, December 31, 2006

Blog Listing

I've added a new feature to DigitalEdu called "Edublogs I Read". It's a list of links to other blogs that deal with education and technology. One of the things I love about blogging is the rich resource it provides to people who are interested in learning. These are all blogs that I read on a regular basis and often learn a lot from them. Hope you enjoy them also. I'll update the list as I find new blogs worth reading.

Happy New Year!

Monday, December 18, 2006

Time Magazine Person of the Year


Time magazine announced their annual "Person of the Year" and it's you. That's right. You are the person of the year. The cover on the physical magazine (yes - I don't just read blogs) even has a mirror on it so when you look at it you see yourself. Of course, if you are just reading blogs and not writing your own, then they are really talking about me and not you (so start writing!). To be factually accurate (a raison d’ĂȘtre* of DigitalEdu) it's not a mirror but a piece of reflective mylar that creates a rather disturbingly distorted image of one's face. Frankly, it's a bit of a hoot to see myself move from a pinhead (magazine in a convex shape) to a multi-headed monster (slightly concave).

The editors at Time have recognized the fairly dramatic change that has taken place on the Internet in the last couple of years as the web has shifted from a producer/consumer model of information flow to a more participatory architecture. It has been dubbed Web 2.0 and blogs, wikis and RSS are emerging from the geek ghetto into the mainstream of American culture. It is shifting the national dialogue away from the powerful elite toward - well - toward anyone who has an opinion and doesn't mind sharing it. Evidently, that is a whole lot of people. According to my favorite blog search/index site, Technorati, every day about 100,000 new blogs are created and 1.3 million new blog postings are created. That's a lot of dialogue.

The timing of this article in Time is perfect because in January I'm speaking during our faculty in-service on this very issue. I'm doing a presentation called "Geek Report: Web 2.0" at the Chancellor's In-Service session and then at each campus I'm doing a session called "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Blogging - But Were Afraid to Ask". I've been working on the presentations the last few days and I was beginning to worry that the topics might be a bit on the geeky side. Now, thanks to Time - I'm mainstream USA!

* Look it up

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Edublog Awards

I didn't realize it until recently, but someone is giving out awards for educational blogging. I think it's a bit odd to turn blogging into a competitive sport and would rather not participate in such an unsavory activity (in other words, I didn't win anything). You should be able to find some good information by visiting the winners.

I've been using the Google Reader site to keep track of blogs and it's amazing how quickly my list grows. I'm subscribed to over 70 blogs - about 11 of them are dedicated purely to educational technology. The Google Reader is a great service and makes it very easy to skim through articles until one catches my eye.

Monday, December 04, 2006

CASFAA Conference

I gave my "iPod Generation" presentation at the CASFAA conference in Ontario today. It was a great group - very interested and engaged in what I had to say. I have been giving this presentation for about a year and a half now, and each time I always ask questions such as "How many people have an IM screen name?" or "How many people have used Wikipedia or Google Earth?". The largest percentage of people who would raise their hand before today was about 1/3 of the audience, but today I had half or more respond positively. I figure this is due to one of the following possible reasons:
  1. The technology is working its way into the mainstream
  2. This audience was younger and more open to trying new technology (hence the iPod Generation)
  3. Financial Aid people are very hip
It was interesting to see the difference in population at this conference. I'm usually at technology conferences where you have a large gathering of people with (at best) rudimentary social skills. It was interesting to see a conference with "normal people" engaging in actual conversation instead of staring at their laptops. Interesting, but creepy nonetheless. It will be good to back among the geeks tomorrow.

Web 2.0 Awards

David Barkol, one of our amazing Neudesic consultants, sent me a link to a site that lists Web 2.0 award winners. If you want to see the sites that are the very best of Web 2.0, check it out.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

John Seely Brown on Web 2.0 and Education

There is a nice article on the CNET web site that quotes John Seely Brown on how Web 2.0 technologies can impact education. The quote I liked the best:
Rather than treat pedagogy as the transfer of knowledge from teachers who are experts to students who are receptacles, educators should consider more hands-on and informal types of learning. These methods are closer to an apprenticeship, a farther-reaching, more multilayered approach than traditional formal education, he said.

Mohammed Aref

There is an amazing article on the front page of the LA Times today regarding a teacher in Afghanistan by the name of Mohammed Aref. The Taliban have been making a resurgence in the area in which he was teaching, and he had been warned through a "night letter" attached to his house that he needed to stop teaching. He chose to ignore the warning and about two weeks later a man on a motorcycle drove into the schoolyard and fired six shots into the teacher from an AK47. The article stated:
Aref had no way to defend himself. His only weapons were his faith in knowledge, some tattered books and a piece of chalk. He died in the dirt in front of horrified pupils.
What an amazing man. He chose to place the education of children over his own life. The article went on to describe a number of other educators in the same life-threatening situation. One woman has taken to carrying a pistol with her at all times to defend herself.

It's interesting to me that those who want to impose tyranny on a population see education as a threat. If your ideas can not stand the test of critical thinking, and you cannot bring yourself to reexamine those ideas, then I suppose it makes sense (in a sick and twisted way) to eliminate those who would teach people to think.

Ultimately I think that is what education is all about. Not just teaching a set of facts to be memorized, but to train people to think critically and to challenge the ideas of the status quo. I'm proud to be working in an industry that has that as its "end product". Let's hope that people like Mohammed Aref are able to succeed and train children who can think for themselves.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Web 2.0 and Education

There is a great article on the Educause web site regarding Web 2.0 and higher education. This is a topic that I've been thinking of a lot lately and plan on speaking about it during our in-service week in January.