Alex Ragone :: Blog Archives

January 2007

January 01, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/01/new-years-resolutions/

1. Spend as much time with my family as possible. I learn from my wife and kids each day more than I could ever learn from any other group of people.


2. Keep blogging, webcasting, and reflect on my learning as much as possible. This reflective part of my life has become critical to my being.


3. Be honest about my strengths and weaknesses. Embrace them.


4. Keep reading. I listen to numerous podcasts, read blogs, and listen to the radio — but I have lots books and research that are piled up. I need to balance this out.


5. Have fun with all of this — say no when I need to — and try to keep my life in balance.


Lots to do — lots of challenges — 2007 looks like a good one.


Happy New Year to you all.

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January 03, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/03/faculty-survey-update/

Back in November, I posted about a basic skills survey for faculty. I received a number of surveys from folks on the ISED-L listserv and pulled them together into this survey.


The results have been interesting. Many of our faculty knew much of what is on the survey. The holes and comments are what we’ll be digging through the results next week during the first of two 3 hour Technology Department meetings.


Just wanted to get the link to the survey up. Thanks to all who helped me putting this survey together.

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January 05, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/05/google-map-meme-started-by-l

Lucy Gray has started a Google Map Meme.


She asked us to answer the two questions below in a Google Earth Placemarker and then send her the file — she’s going to compile them into one big map…


1) What has been your most memorable learning experience?

2) Who is the teacher that has influenced you the most? and why?


Her instructions are here.


Lucy, Here’s My file!


Now for the folks I’m going to tag… Here we go:


Arvind Grover

Fred Bartels

Bill Knauer

Jim Heynderickx

Richard Kassissieh


The wonder of the blogosphere….

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January 12, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/12/help-iste-develop-the-next-g

Just a forward that I thought the EdTech Community would appreciate:


Help ISTE Develop the Next Generation of NETS for Students


ISTE’s National Educational Technology Standards (NETS) were introduced

in 1998. Since then, the NETS have served as a common denominator for

effective technology integration in education throughout the country and

around the world. To keep the NETS relevant in today’s increasingly

digital world, ISTE is developing the next generation of the NETS for

Students (NETS*S) and needs your feedback. There are two easy ways for

you to get involved:


* Take the NETS Refresh survey


* Register to attend one of these free NETS Refresh Town Hall being held at regional conferences: FETC, January 25, Orlando, FL and TCEA, February 6, Austin, TX


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http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/12/young-readers/

Our Librarian just asked us for a picture of us as a kid and a book that we remember reading… I forwarded it to her, but thought it would be fun to share.


I remember lots of Dr. Seuss when I was a kid: Especially Yertle the Turtle.


Here’s my picture:


Alex with Dad

This is my dad and me on my Mom’s VW Boxback. I was about 3.

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January 14, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/14/the-readwrite-web-rss-blogs-

1/15/07 Update:


What are they? How can I use them in my Classroom?


Here’s the outline of my NYSAIS Professional Development Seminar for Tuesday. Any comments would be appreciated. Bring Blue SnowBall, Get Richardson: Blogs, Wikis and Podcasting. Review last blogging outline:


Goal of Day: Exposure to RSS, Blogs, Poscasting, Social Bookmarking and


    Wikis.  The ability for participants to take one of these and start using it in classes in the near future.


General Themes of the Day: Categories, Tags, Taxonomy, and Folksonomy



9:30 - 10:00: Framing the day


Yarn exercise: How you link together in the real world


10:00 - 10:45: RSS: Reading 21st Century Style



Get a Bloglines Account. Search, Subscribe, Comment.


Other rss feed aggregators: NetVibes and Pageflakes


More about RSS:



10:45 - 11:00: Break


11:00 - 12:00: Blogging


Blogging Definition:  Will Richardson and Others (see Examples below)



Why Blog? What is the difference between 21st Century Learning and 20th Century Learning? Dr. Lawrence Lessig’s “Read/Write Society” presentation at Wizards of OS4


Get an EduBlogs Account — What will you blog about? Linking. Categories. Trackback. Tabbed Browsing and Social Bookmarking.



Blogging Platforms:





Examples…



Educator Social Blogging



Blogging Resources:




12:00 - 1:00: Lunch


1:00 - 1:15: Globalism…



1:15 - 1:45: Podcasting



1:45 - 2:30 - Wikis


Review: Creating a Wiki and Wiki While You Work (Basic): Mark Wagner


Examples:



Possibly: 2:30 - 2:45: Bringing it all Together


Epic 2014


We need to model and teach using information in deep ways! 


Quotes. 


Contact info.



Resources:


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January 22, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/22/questions-about-basic-techno

I have been thinking a lot about what basic technology skills faculty should know. We’ve surveyed our faculty on basic tech skills, and have a good idea of what people know and don’t know, but what Technology skills should they know?


The reason I ask this question is that we have half of a professional development day in February to work with our entire faculty on technology skills. Our plan now is to run 4, 40 minute sessions on the basics: word processing, spreadsheets, presentation software, desktop publishing, e-mail, information literacy skills, laptop hardware optimization and troubleshooting and configuration, and a number of other ‘basics’. We are planning lessons that demonstrate and allow participants to practice 2-4 skills, walk them through an Atomic Learning Lesson (if applicable), and give examples of the use of that software in a classroom.


NETS has a long list of skills that beginning teachers should have when entering the classroom. This list is well above the performance point of my faculty.


In order to learn something new, faculty (for that matter - anyone) must feel a need and be engaged. How do we get the second and third wavers to be engaged when teaching the basics? Nancy White asks these types of questions often.


Here are some of the other questions running through my head:


If you were running a seminar for faculty who have a wide variety of technology skills, what would be the core goal of each session that you teach?


Just thinking through my fingers: Start with the learners, know their skill set, and teach them what they need to get to the next level, even if that means configuring windows and file management.


What skills/applications would you teach?


Word vs. Google Docs


Do you have links to examples?


Our lesson plans will be posed here: Tech at Collegiate when complete.


Thanks for your time and thought.

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January 24, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/24/questions-about-basic-techno

Thanks, Nancy and David for stretching my thinking about this professional development day.



I’m struggling with appropriate administrative pressure and my department’s buy in to provide basics training to faculty. I have been re-tooling our sessions to allow for better technological solutions for everyday problems. For example, “Appropriate Presentations” would include a discussion about what appropriate skills and guidelines are, how to find images, and create a presentation that is visually appealing. Another example is, “Creating a Newsletter” which would include pulling resources together and then formatting them in a desktop publishing program.


Nancy, I love your visualization question,


“Try to “imagine it is a year from now and you have embraced a couple of tools and practices that make your work more meaningful/fun/productive. What does that look like?”


I plan on using this when asking folks to register for sessions.


I am truly struggling with David’s game. I believe in my heart that that is the way to go, but want to start slow in smaller groups so we have some practice before going to the “big group”. I would like to try this with a small group of faculty during this day.


I hesitate because this is my professional development first day like this with a new Head of School and Business Manager. We have a traditional faculty and I want to expose small groups to this before we do it with the entire faculty.


I will definitely use these exercises in my department over the Spring, and then during our Summer Professional Development series where we’ll be working with faculty to use read/write web options…


I’m trying to be transparent in my writing here… Honest and open. But boy do I feel like I’m not living up to good pedagogical principles for adult learning… It’s very hard to let go of that “control”.


Thanks again, Nancy and David, for stretching me.

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January 28, 2007

http://www.learning-blog.org/2007/01/28/john-seely-brown-interview-b

If you haven’t checked out the School 2.0 interview series that Steve Hargadon had been doing, you’re missing out.


This interview with John Seely Brown challenges my thoughts about education and gave me wonderful ideas on how to begin to explain the shift to my colleagues. This one is getting burnt to CDs and handed to my Administrators. It is inspirational and wonderfully reflective.


Thanks, Steve, for your great work on these interviews!

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