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July 08, 2007

More pies, fewer pie charts!

I've known about SlideShare for a while, but am just now trying it out on this blog, to compare with making slideshows in Flickr.  SlideShare is to PowerPoint presentations what YouTube is to video. You can upload your presentations and others can view them on the web, download them, or embed them in a blog, like I did here. If you're reading this via an email subscription, you might have to go to my blog site to see the slideshow.

PowerPoint can be dangerous in the wrong hands, but maybe sites like this where people can vote and add comments, might encourage more people to learn to use it as a communication tool instead of a stun gun.

June 01, 2007

Two new resources on ICT in international education

Well, they're new to me, anyway. Why not tag them for summer reading on del.icio.us to get some ideas for next year?

Teachers’ Guide to International Collaboration

This online publication from the United States Department of Education’s International Education Initiative.  was designed to “help teachers use the Internet to reach out globally”.  The guide includes chapters on cross-cultural interaction, guides for specific subject areas such as mathematics, science, and social studies, and tips on planning and executing projects.

International Journal of Education and Development Using Information and Communication Technology (IJEDICT)

The IJEDICT is an free electronic journal that publishes articles by researchers and practitioners to share best practices and to contribute to the understanding of the potential for integrating information technologies in education.  Among the articles in recent issues are Computer-based testing on (a) physical chemistry topic and Exploring Turkish science education faculties’ understanding of educational technology and use. You can sign up for notification of updates by both email and RSS.

January 16, 2007

Add notes to del.icio.us without typing

As a result of sharing del.icio.us with nearly 150 people at school in the last year, I have a growing fan base and lots of networked buddies who are passing bookmarks around. Awesome!

While I'm really pleased to see so many happy new users of del.icio.us, I'd like to gently point out the usefulness of the notes box when you post a new bookmark. You can type anything you want in this box to help you remember why you saved the book (or to give your friends a hint when you share bookmarks). 

If you don't like typing notes, just do this:

  1. Before tagging a website, first use the mouse pointer to select some text.
  2. Tag the page as you usually do.
  3. When the posting box opens, the highlighted text is already pasted into the note box!

Presto! Notes without typing!

December 07, 2006

Of two minds

I'm feeling ambivalent now about the request for comments on the del.icio.us rubric that I included in the previous post. It's a little strange to take something like social bookmarking that I appreciate for making my job easier and more productive, and turn it into a class requirement.  The "you have to do this because it's good for you" argument never sat well with me, and I'd prefer that students realize that I'm sharing things that will lighten their burden, rather than adding to that burden. 

With all the discussion about how new tools change the way teaching and learning happen -- fostering collaboration and creativity, turning teachers into facilitators who model experiential learning -- I wonder if requirements and rubrics turn our focus back onto the tools, and away from the enthusiasm for the things discovered and made with those tools.

December 06, 2006

Anybody got del.icio.us rubrics?

I'm halfway through my presentations to 10th grade pre-IB classes about rss and del.icio.us, and just got a very good question from a teacher about assessing students' progress with these tools.

She's thinking about a practical assignment in lieu of an exam that's scheduled next week, and is asking about something related to del.icio.us and/or Bloglines, such as a certain number of bookmarks tagged for an upcoming classroom debate, number of newsfeeds subscribed, etc.

I can think of a few things off the top of my head that might work for clarifying what the assignment entails and how it will be assessed, but I'd really appreciate any comments from readers with more experience in this.  We'd want something qualitative as well as quantitative, and that demonstrates a certain level of mastery of the skills.

We'll end up doing something no matter what comments come in, but my readership's gotten a modest boost lately and I'd like to give you all a chance to chime in.

December 04, 2006

Each one teach one

Today I started another series of presentations on tools that can help our IB students in web-based research.  I usually design these presentations so that I talk just a little, and then everyone works in a big chaotic group on lists of tasks. I have to do things differently this time because the target group - 140 pre-IB 10th graders -  is bigger than any I've dealt with before.  (Sorry, guys, for making you sit at desks!)

Our strategy is to give quick demonstrations of rss, del.icio.us and such just to show some of the cool stuff you can do, and see who comes back for more. Then we'll recruit a few students from each class to equip them as resource persons for their fellow students and teachers.  I can work with a small group more effectively than with the entire 10th grade class, and perhaps this will be an easy way to multiply my efforts.

So far so good. Today after my first 40-minute frantic demo, it looks like 10-C already has more than it's quota of volunteer experts.

If you want to see the paces I put them through, check this out: link.

November 26, 2006

How to read this blog

I've been getting some new readers lately who are also new to blogs in general, so this is intended as a brief guide to help them dive in right away and enjoy reading what I've been up to. If you're reading this via an email subscription, you'll need to visit my actual website (click here) for any of this to make sense. If you ever get lost while browsing my site, just click on the big Tryangulation title that you see on every page.

Down_arrowThe center column
This is where you find my most recent posts, with the newest first. My older posts are in the Archives section (more on that later). I usually post in English, occasionally in Turkish, and rarely in Spanish. That could change if I get more subscribers who read Spanish. Each post has:

  • the date
  • a title
  • the main text, usually including some links to other websites or to other places on my blog
  • categories that I assigned to the post
  • the permalink (the unique web address for each separate post)
  • the comments link (click on this to add your own comments)
  • the TrackBack link (to create links between blogs who write about my topic)

Left_arrow The left hand sidebar
This is where you find links between this blog and other things happening on the web. 

  • About. A brief bit about me (click on the link) and the books I'm reading currently (click on a book to get details).
  • Blogroll: This is a list of some of my favorite blogs. If you like my blog, you will probably like the others in my blogroll too. I have them arranged broadly according to topics.
  • Tryangulate! These are links to services where you can connect with me and with others in other parts of the Web. For example, you can look up some of my del.icio.us tags, subscribe to the rss feed of my blog with Bloglines, conduct searches, or subscribe to this blog’s newsfeed.

Right_arrowRight hand sidebar
This area has links to other items on this website.

  • Email subscription box: Use this box to get new Tryangulation posts by email.
  • Recent posts:  This is a quick list of posts that can be viewed on the first screen (without looking through the Archives).
  • My favorite posts: These are posts that I have picked that I think give you the best idea of what I write about at this website.
  • Web Tech 101: These are posts that give tips to people who are new to blogs, tags, wikis, and other features of the new Web.
  • Categories: If you click on any of these categories, you’ll be able to browse only the blog posts that are in that category.
  • Archives: You can see links to the last 10 months or so. If you’re looking for something older, click on the word Archives, and you’ll get a list of all the months with posts (since September 2005, when I moved my blog to Typepad).
      

November 03, 2006

New site for finding the best feeds

I've written before how feed aggregators like Bloglines are very useful for collecting and managing feed subscriptions, and how this can be an important tool for research on the web. For an example you can look at my public feeds --that is, the subscriptions that I allow others to see-- at this link.

Right now there are about 83,000 people like me who have public subscriptions on Bloglines, and about 35% of these people (like me) organize their subscriptions into topical folders, and (like me) average about 20 feeds per folder. 

Now the clever people at the University of Maryland have created Feeds That Matter. FTM interprets all that information about nearly 3 million individual feed subscriptions to generate lists of the most popular feeds in the most popular categories. If you are researching one of these categories, you can quickly find the most reputable bloggers for that category and find information and resources that have already been filtered by like minded people.

I did a spot check of the education category, and found that I am already subscribed to 6 of the top 20; not bad. But if I want to branch out into a new area, this is one of the first sites I'll visit.

October 10, 2006

Why we don't learn more

In keeping with the theme of using technology to improve access to education, I thought I'd share some thoughts about some reading I've done recently on why ICTs haven't caught on more, and how that fits into general theories about how people learn - or in some cases, how we don't learn.

One of my favorite blogs out there right now is Creating Passionate Users. Kathy Sierra writes about how designers and marketers of software and other technological products can do more to help people use their products successfully. However, there is plenty in her site that can be transferred to education, whether or not you're using the latest information technology. A post that Kathy wrote some time back that turned me into a regular reader is titled Most classroom learning sucks. That doesn't sound like something a teacher will want to read, but here's how it starts:

The best learning occurs in a stimulating, active, challenging, interesting, engaging environment. It's how the brain works. The best learning occcurs when you move at least some part of your body. The best learning occurs when you're actively involved in co-constructing knowledge in your own head, not passively reading or listening... Forcing people to sit in a chair and listen to (or read) dry, formal words (with perhaps only a few token images thrown in) is the slowest, least effective, and most painful path to learning.

So why do we all do it that way? I recently found an article by Grandon Gill,  5 (Really) Hard things about using the Internet in Higher Education. Grandon discusses some general obstacles to adopting new technologies in education, but in my opinion none of the excuses he gives (lack of models, having to keep up with changes, not being understood by others), is exclusive to ICTs in education, but rather are the same old excuses used by anyone who resists innovation. By the end of the article you realize that Grandon is actually in favor of being a pioneer,  but I think he creates a picture of innovators and early adopters working in isolation from each other and fighting alone against the current, when that really isn't the case.

Usually with innovations (and not just the ICT kind), you get a few enthusiastic early users, who might enjoy using the innovation for all kinds of wrong reasons purposes not intended by its creator. These early users tend not to be good examples for the ones who follow, those who try to implement those innovations either out of coercion or a misunderstanding of the innovation's purpose. Like I hinted at before in this site, innovations are best adopted when they help us do something that already needed to be done.

In Grandon's case, he teaches in an MIS department, and found that the new ICTs tools available for teaching create opportunities for different ways of learning. Student-to-student interaction becomes easier and more creative, and the role of the teacher changes into that of a facilitator.  Of course if a teacher isn't ready to become a facilitator and co-learner, technology integration in the classroom is going to be a rough ride.

Lastly, David Pollard wrote on why collaboration tools are so underused. Like, Grandon Gill, several of the reasons he gives have more to do with how people think communication, group work, and learning are supposed to happen, and then have trouble with tools that create opportunities for new paradigms. I'm very enthusiastic about the potential for wikis and podcasts and other cool web 2.0 tools for helping people learn and create knowledge. But if people don't know how to work well together in the same room, then the best wikis, intranets and telecom systems in the world won't help. 

So why don't we learn more, or better? I believe that we try too often to learn the wrong thing: a tool that doesn't fit the job we're trying to do, a skill that impresses but doesn't satisfy, gaining more information rather than gaining wisdom. It's always easier to figure out how to go somewhere if you first know where you're going.

September 19, 2006

More teachers for wikis; more wikis for teachers

A big thanks again to  Koç School for their enthusiasm as they got some first hand experience with wikis. In just about an hour we were able to have a quick orientation and then get down to work creating and editing pages. After that we had a demonstration of Basecamp and a discussion about how these two different tools can help teachers and administrators manage school projects.

 Our workshop wiki includes practice pages for workshop participants and some resources for reading more about how wikis can be used in schools. In my experience, it seems that wikis work best for group tasks that focus on a text-based outcome such as a project proposal, a course syllabus or a collection of creative writing. For general project management, however, I believe that Basecamp is a better tool, so we included it in the workshop.

… and now for a word from our sponsors

 As soon as I got home from the workshop I found out that Wikispaces is offering 100, 000 password-protected and advertisement-free wikis to teachers. This means that teachers can create wikis that are safe for their students, their pages won’t be cluttered with a lot of ads, and there's no subscription fee. I’m going to get one to try out at my next workshop. Click on the button to sign up.

 I think Basecamp is a great tool for keeping reminders, files and communication all in one place. It’s very easy to learn, and comes in all sizes.  There’s even a personal version called Backpack which I use for planning vacations, personal writing projects, and keeping track of my online shopping. If you’re interested, click on the button and they’ll know that I sent you:

Backpack: Get Organized and Collaborate

July 05, 2006

Podcast test

This is a test podcast, produced by uploading a digital audio file (in this case a .WAV file) to this blog, in the same way that I would upload a photograph.

Click here to listen: Download 060705000.WAV

May 09, 2006

Internet censorship report: Taking back the web isn't always easy

At the Spring Teachers Conference in Bursa last weekend I showed participants some easy and free tools for creating web content and making our experience on the web more personal and productive. The tools are part of a technology shift called Web 2.0, which is a movement described by some as 'taking back the web."

However, sometimes 'taking back the web' isn't so easy, as can be seen in the 2006 Internet annual report by Reporters without Borders. According to the report, technologies  developed in China to monitor and restrict web sites, blogs, and even web searches, are now being exported to other countries determined to decide what their citizens read, write or share.

Among the targets of criticism is the European Union, which passed a directive that makes Internet service providers ("ISPs") responsible if anyone uses their service illegally. This is analagous to making the telephone company responsible for illegal conversations, or the postal service responsible for the illegal content of letters. This directive forces ISPs to restrict their customers' free speech in order to avoid incrimination themselves, putting them in the roles of both police and judge.  Will this lead to Blogger censors screening your blog posts before they can be published?

Another international organization that wishes we would trust them more, that is, the United Nations, is also looking for ways to protect us from thinking too much.  BoingBoing reports that:

The UN's Intellectual Property Organization has reconvened to discuss a treaty that will kill innovative Internet audio/video offerings -- like podcasting, YouTube, Google Video, and Democracy Player -- in order to protect the business models of a few entrenched broadcasters.

One of the most important effects of Web 2.0 is that consumers of content become creators of content, and these creators thrive on the content of other amateur content creators.  This threatens not only states who want to control content (that is, what you read and what you think), but also companies whose paradigm dictates that everything (including thoughts) must belong to someone, and cannot possibly belong to everyone.

May 05, 2006

Is the Internet convivial?

I'm off to Bursa to give a presentation on Tools for Internet Conviviality. The question is still, how convivial is the Internet?

Ivan Illich adopted the word conviviality to mean the autonomous and creative intercourse among persons. He describes conviviality as a state of individual and social well being where persons are once again in control of the tools that fulfill their physical emotional and spiritual needs.

These tools are not just physical objects; they include language, administrative structures, and other "soft technologies" that are work implements. Illich believed that modern technology that is developed chiefly for the sake of efficiency and that economies of scale can be used out of proportion to the good that is added to a person's life, with the result that men work for  machines instead of the other way around.

The Internet is a good example of sophisticated technology that, until recently, has reinforced the dominant-dependent relationship between those who control technology and those who consume its products.  However, new tools on the Internet (often referred to collectively as Web 2.0) are reversing the situation: there are many technologies available now that allow users to personalize their Internet intake and actually create their own content. Millions of individuals (yes, mostly Western, but that's changing) create their own content in their own voice (as if a million amateur writers had their own publishing companies) and these same "amateurs" are also the audience, critics, fans and collaborators of other amateurs.

The distinction between content creator and content consumer are beginning to vanish as individuals seize these new tools to make the Internet into what they want it to be.  Firefox, the open source web browser that is designed for such creator-consumers, expresses this in the  clever slogan "take back the web."

To read some excerpts from Ivan Illich's Tools for Conviviality and Deschooling Society, click here to visit our workshop wiki.  One of my favorite lines was first published in 1970:

What are needed are new networks, readily available to the public and designed to spread equal opportunity for learning and teaching.

Perhaps we're getting there.

April 13, 2006

Web 2.0 workshop for students

Yesterday I led a workshop for TED Ankara's Politics and Diplomacy Club (TED PDC) on how to use Web 2.0 tools for research to support projects like the Model UN and our upcoming European Youth Summit. I planned for around 12 students; we got (I think) around 25. The topic struck a chord with the participants, who were ready to break out of the Google and Wikipedia rut.

It didn't take long for the presenter/leader role to transform into facilitator, and then just troubleshooter as the students worked through my "scavenger hunt" tasks and started exploring and learning on their own.

Social bookmarks and feed aggregators were the big hit of the day, followed by a smattering of wikis and blogging. I was gratified and somewhat amazed to see how some of the students caught the ideas so quickly: even before the workshop was over they had already identified ways to apply these new tools to real and specific needs.  We're now looking for a block of time when we can work at a whiteboard to sketch out how 25 people can organize and share resources and simultaneously delegate tasks and track progress.

So in less than a day, we progressed from collaborative tools to collaborative knowledge management. Not bad for 10th grade!

October 23, 2005

Social bookmarking

Share your bookmarks with others (& with yourself). Work at one computer at work, and another at home? Ever needed a bookmark that's on the other computer? Or have you ever tried sharing a list of weblinks with someone else?  Try del.icio.us , which allows you to set up a free account where you store links to websites with your own customized tags (descriptors).

If you're clever you already have your dozens (hundreds?) of bookmarks organized into folders in your web browser's bookmarks/favorites menu, so you already have some idea about tagging. With del.icio.us you can add several tags to a single bookmark, and you can make up the tags as you go along.  Your website lists then show up as a webpage; the list of sites that corresponds to each of your tags is basically a separate webpage with its own url.

Here's an example: A colleague asked for my help in finding websites that students could use when planning for university study in the U.S. I did some searching on the net and used del.icio.us to tag the sites that looked most useful.  To see the result, just click  here

When you're done, go back to the top of the page and click on my username (themingway) to see all my bookmarks, or click on another one of the tags in the list on the right side of the del.icio.us screen.  And  (surprise!) you can subscribe to an RSS feed for either the entire list or for any one of my tags, so you'll know if I have added more sites to one of the lists.

To find other social bookmarking services like del.icio.us, check out this list from Wikipedia.

Update (05/2006): Elise at Simply Recipes writes how to use del.icio.us tags to organize recipes online, sorting them by ingredients, nationality, or whatever system she wants. Since del.icio.us is social, she can share her bookmarks with other recipe collectors. Click here to read Elise's blog post and join her del.icio.us network.

[[wiki:researchtools:delicious blog post]]

September 26, 2005

No batteries required

The PocketMod is billed as a "free disposable personal organizer", and is a very cool Flash application that lets you design a pocket-sized 8-page notebook from a single sheet of printer paper. You can choose designs for calendars, to-do lists and such, drag them around to different pages, then print the page, fold it and go.

I loved this as soon as I saw it, but I first wanted to test this for a few days before making any recommendations. I'm not giving up my Sony handheld computer, but PocketMod notes worked great for impromptu notes that I could easily transfer to my PC or PDA later. 

Chad and others at PocketMod are adding new templates regularly, and they report that a new version will be released soon that will allow us to design our own pages.  I can't wait!

September 15, 2005

Work together. Learn Hawaiian.

Like blogging and RSS, wikis are part of a technology wave that is giving us the ability to work together via internet in ways people never dreamed when email and web browsing first became mainstream.

Wikis are websites that allow users -and not just the website administrator- to change the content of the site. The most famous example is  Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that lets users update and edit its information.  That sounds risky, but actually it's not.

If a wiki attracts a lot of regular traffic, visitors begin to share the responsibility of keeping the site free of improper material.  Wikis usually allow some restriction of activity, for example by requiring registration or a password in order to allow editing. But both more open and more closed wikis seem to share a feeling of a neighborhood that watches  its parks and playgrounds to make sure they stay safe and clean.

Here's a wiki you can try out: it's The Teacher's Lounge, hosted by Rob Lucas. Rob designed the site for teachers to share lesson plans and ideas with other teachers. Instead of sending material to Rob for him to add to the website when he has time, he is allowing you to directly add the material yourself.

After Hurricane Katrina in the US, dozens of wikis were created to use as bulletin boards to reunite families, match evacuees with people willing to provide housing, and to share other critical but constantly changing  information quickly and to a widely diverse audience.  Two of these are Think New Orleans and the Hurricane Katrina Help Page. While the content is sobering, it is worth thinking as well about other vital applications for this technology.

And the name?  Wiki is short for wikiwiki, which in Hawaiian means something like quick.

September 13, 2005

really simple, really useful

Moving my blog to a new location got me thinking about which tools I've reviewed over the last several months were the most useful for me. There's no question that it's rss.

Until I found out about rss (also known as really simple syndication) I was becoming a blog reading junkie, following links from one blog to another, adding the interesting ones to my bookmarks, trying to remember which blogs I needed to follow up  next, and losing track of a lot of good stuff. At the same time, I was subscribing to more than a dozen email newsletters, and had signed up for email notification from certain websites that update their content frequently.

Web technology now allows automatic tracking of websites that change frequently, such as news sites, blogs and e-magazines. You can tell which websites are available for this kind of tracking because they have an icon somewhere that uses words like syndicate, feed, RSS or webfeed .

You then sign up with a web based service  like Bloglines or Feedster  (they're also called feed readers or aggregators), and choose which websites you want to track (subscriptions). After that, every time you log on,  you can scan all the updates to your subscribed sites on a single web page. Instead of going one by one to different websites or email messages to see what's new, all the new content comes to you in one place.

After researching and trying a few feed reader sites myself, I chose Bloglines because

  • it's free and web-based, so you don't have to download anything;
  • it lets you organize your subscriptions into your own categories;
  • many websites with email update notifications are now available as rss feeds, so you can reduce email clutter;
  • you can  save time because it's easier to scan blogs quickly;
  • you can publish your own free blog as a kind of journal with web clippings

  To get started, you can go directly to the About page at Bloglines and read the introductory information.  Otherwise, see Amy Gahran's Contentious blog about feeders, or click here for her tutorial on rss feeds.

To keep learning more, check out my del.icio.us bookmarks that I've tagged "rss" by clicking here.  Better yet, subscribe to that del.icio.us link so you can get updates automatically!

23 Oct 2005 update: Steve Rubel lists several ways that using RSS feeds can enhance your life.  Click here.

3 Nov 2006 update: Right now there are about 83,000 people like me who have public subscriptions on Bloglines, and about 35% of these people (like me) organize their subscriptions into topical folders, and (like me) average about 20 feeds per folder.  Now the clever people at the University of Maryland have created Feeds That Matter. FTM interprets all that information about nearly 3 million individual feed subscriptions to generate lists of the most popular feeds in the most popular categories. If you are researching one of these categories, you can quickly find the most reputable bloggers for that category and find information and resources that have already been filtered by like minded people. 

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