Alex Ragone :: Blog Archives

August 2006

August 10, 2006

http://www.learning-blog.org/2006/08/10/elggeducationbridgesnet-a-social-network-for-teachers/

splitworldlogo.png


We now have a logo and a favicon (Thanks to Mark Penny) and a great conversation happening about using mapping mashups within 6-12 classes.


Check this all out at the Education Bridges Elgg.

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August 15, 2006

http://www.learning-blog.org/2006/08/14/testing-google-picasa-web-albums/

I’m always interested to see how new software works, and being a Picasa user, I jumped at the idea of beta testing Google Web Albums. So here goes… It’s not Flickr, but there is potential — Very simple, and for most folks, that works.









Jun 11, 2006 - 11 Photos


That’s Evan, by the way!


And, Photo Albums are linked right into my Gmail Account (see below). Plus, do you also see that spreadsheet link???

Google Services


Oh, yeah — the photo albums are RSS enabled… Now tagging — need to figure that out.

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http://www.learning-blog.org/2006/08/15/11-time-to-start-the-discussion-again/

During the past few months, I’ve been thinking and reading a lot about Information and Media Literacy — I believe that this is one of the most concrete reasons to implement a laptop or 1 to 1 program in a school. To be responsible citizens in the 21st Century, students need to be ethical, life-long learners. To do so, they need to be information and media literate. The need to be fluent in digital and print.


David Warlick was visiting a laptop school and hit the nail on the head in this post :


Bottom line? 1:1 does not provide all the answers. In fact, it provokes lots of new questions, which is the approach of the school’s chief administrator, Stuart McCathie. He believes in, promotes quite eloquently, and offers lots of examples for, facilitating more powerful learning by asking a different kind of question. What occurred to me, as he was talking, was that most of our questions ask for answers. McCathie is suggesting questions that ask for conversations. Engaged in conversation, students become responsible to a community for what they find and learn. Answering a question is merely between the student and the teacher.


I am ever more impressed by the almost overwhelming challenges of working in a 1:1 teaching/learning environment. It requires so many shifts, most of them subtle, but no less difficult for a teacher — even young teachers. Even a first year teacher has 12+ years of experience in traditional classrooms. The challenges are enormous — but we simply have no choice!


I left even more convinced that contemporary literacy can be a potent

angle to make these shifts from, that it isn’t about the new tools on

students desks, but the new access to information and the new abilities

to produce information. The answer, I believe, can be as simple as The Beacon School’s

approach of simply saying, “At this point, no student work will be

turned in on paper. Everything will be done digitally.” It’s a focus on

the nature of the information, not the shape of the pencil.



2 Cents Worth » Another Missed Opportunity


He’s right — we have no choice — and we need to focus on contemporary literacy. And what better way to teach our students to be 21st Century Learners than to model this type of learning ourselves in a 1 to 1 program. Cheers to David for putting this so well.





Blogged with Flock

Posted by Alex Ragone | 17 comment(s)

Hello --- Here's a quick screencast introduction to the EducationBridges.net elgg.  I look forward to seeing you all in our community. 

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Posted by Alex Ragone | 3 comment(s)

Hello --- Here's a quick screencast introduction to the EducationBridges.net elgg.  I look forward to seeing you all in our community. 

Download the file here.

 

Posted by Alex Ragone | 0 comment(s)

August 23, 2006

http://www.learning-blog.org/2006/08/22/back-to-school/

Well, it’s 11pm, I just got back from the beach, there are bags surrounding me, dishes to do, lunches to make, but tomorrow I head back to school after a three week vacation. So it’s time to think about the big picture, get ready to use our new web portal, the 18 new smartboards, the 35 new computers, the 30 new faculty with Tablet PCs. Boy — that’s a lot, but what’s most important is that each one of those upgrades/improvements is associated with a student who learns better throughout the school year. That the faculty come to understand that we are in a different place, and that faculty and students need to collaborated to figure out what that new place is.


Here we go!

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