A Web 2.0 class: Students learn 21st century skills, collaboration, and digital citizenship — from Edutopia.org by Andrew Marcinek

Students in Van Meter, Iowa, Burlington, Massachusetts, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania are experiencing education in a new room. Yes, they still go to class in a building, with walls, doors, and windows, but there is something different about these three classrooms. They are all connected. The classroom is flat.

The Virtual Classroom
The class is designed to teach Web 2.0 skills, digital citizenship, personal network building, and social media responsibility and practice. The students in all three of these classes have never met in person; however, they have all connected via Skype and their class blogs. They have also had many professionals come and speak to them via Skype. This type of learning is limitless and allows students to broaden their scope of the world. “Since I have started using Skype and blogging,” notes Jessie Hasenwinkel, junior at Van Meter High School, “I have been able to virtually meet the people that can help me get the answers I need for what I am searching for in school and one day, in my career.”

Each week students write a blog post on topics such as defining a personal learning network, using Skype in the classroom, and how to promote blog traffic. Students subscribe to each other’s blogs using Google Reader and leave comments for each other. Some students in these three high schools have made great connections and found common interests. They are expanding their learning opportunities and through the efforts of the teachers and principals, engaging with vast community of learners.

Sad news…Drop.io removed voice recording feature, but there are some good alternatives! — from Toy to Cool: Cell Phones in Learning blog by Liz Kolb

From DSC:
Liz put together a nice list of potential tools to use to record digital audio. (Additional tool: Wimba Voice is another great tool that integrates nicely with Moodle and Bb CMS’s…but Wimba needs to bring the price waaaaay down w/ that tool.)

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Coming to a living room near you -- October 6, 2010 was a BIG day for videoconferencing!

Also from http://www.wainhouse.com/files/wrb-11/WRB-1120.pdf

  • Cisco Intros “Home Telepresence” with umi
  • Logitech Delivers Google TV to Living Rooms
  • Citrix Enhances GoToMeeting with Videoconferencing
  • More Video Briefs …

Also see:

Key trends in the web conferencing market — from nojitter.com’s blog by Melanie Turek, Industry Director, Frost and Sullivan
(BTW, nojitter.com provides a daily analysis of the enterprise IP-telephony, unified communications and converged networking world)

Fuze Box's Fuze Meeting -- hold online meetings on the iPad
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Also see:

Web collaboration trends — from The Webinar blog by Ken Molay

Intercall put out a press release today summarizing results from a survey of college students about watching webcast courses. I have to admit I was surprised by how widespread some of the behavior characteristics are… I knew that streaming courses over the web was done, but I didn’t realize how many students relied on it.

Consider that 48 percent of students said they take multiple classes scheduled for the same time! That’s a far cry from my college days, when I would painstakingly juggle which classes to sign up for based on whether I could get from one side of campus to the other in time. 78 percent of students said that professors had made courses available online, either live or on demand. What do you think these students are going to expect of communications when they enter the workforce? Will they agree to attend multiple product briefings or team meetings scheduled for the same time because they figure they can watch the webcast recording later?

Excerpt:
The survey polled college students ages 18 to 25 about their attitudes and behaviors towards streamed video content of their college courses. Additional findings from the survey include:

  • Use of streaming is on the rise — Eight in ten students (78 percent) report that professors have made lectures available either by live video feed or posting a videotaped lecture for students to access online. Nearly a third (30 percent) say their professors use web streaming frequently.
  • In two places at once — Almost half (48 percent) of students take multiple classes scheduled for the same time which was virtually impossible before streaming. Also, 63 percent “attend” classes even though they are in reality, out of town.
  • Juggling jobs and studies — Streaming helps those students who are working their way through school: 47 percent say having content available to view at a later time allows them to work more hours at their job.
  • Students are taking control over the way they learn — Nearly 60 percent say streaming video allows them to spend more time studying by themselves and grasp concepts better because they can go at their own pace (44 percent).
  • We want our streaming! — More than two-thirds (67 percent) of students said they wish more of their professors used streaming and the majority (85 percent) say they would find it helpful to have their classes live streamed or video posted online.
  • Parents just don’t understand — A third of U.S. students say that their parents or guardians would be very upset to know how often they actually attend classes in person because they “attend” by watching video of their course online. However, the majority of respondents report that streaming improves students’ performance and helps them balance school with work.

Reimagining education and learning in America — from spotlight.macfound.org
The MacArthur Foundation’s director of education says we don’t have to wait to create a new vision of learning for America’s schools. The time is now.

“The case for rethinking and reimagining learning in America for 21st century schoolchildren is as compelling as it gets,” writes Connie Yowell, MacArthur Foundation’s director of education, at The Huffington Post.

Yowell identifies four ways kids learn that sets them apart from pre-digital era students:

  1. They can pursue interest-driven learning at a tantalizing pace and to fascinating degrees;
  2. They readily collaborate and learn from their peers, across geography and cultures;
  3. They are participating and producing in learning, skill-building, and knowledge-sharing, as opposed to just being receptacles for information;
  4. They can communicate directly with knowledge-giving institutions and individuals all over the world.

Using VoiceThread to give students a voice outside the classroom — from The Chronicle by Shannon Polchow, an assistant professor of Spanish at the University of South Carolina Upstate.

Elliot Masie's Learning 2010

Our Keynote Thought Leaders include:

  • Apolo Ohno: Mastering the Olympics & Dancing with the Stars
  • Marshall Goldsmith: Putting the Mojo in Learning and Leaders
  • Maestro Roger Nierenberg: Orchestrating Greatness: The Musical Paradigm!
  • Betsy Myers: Counter-Intuitive Leadership
  • Diane Hessan: Communities of Knowledge & Collaboration
  • Lori Aiken: MTV Networks, 20’s Talent!
  • Jonathan Kopp: The Power of Word of Mouth & Video Stories
  • Greg Hale: Disney Parks & Resorts, Teaching Safety!
  • Elliott Masie: Learning Changes and Learning Challenges in 2010

Our Learning Themes in 2010:

  • Changing Learning: Agile, Social, Targeted, Mobile & Global
  • Distributed Work: Distributed Leadership and Distributed Learning
  • Learning Leadership: Creating & Implementing Strategic Learning Projects
  • Learning Research: Neuroscience & Learning, Impact and Evidence-Based Learning Design
  • The Business of Learning: How to Resource, Charge and Support Learning Budgets
  • Learning Modes : Video for Learning, UserContent, Coaching & Performance Support
  • Learning & Talent: Changing Role of Learning in Retention & Development of Talent
  • New Learning Roles: Evolving & ReSkilling the Learning Function & Roles

Marshall McLuhan and web conferencing — from The Webinar Blog by Ken Molay

“The medium is the message.” One of the most quoted five-word phrases in the last 45 years. I’ll bet you think you know what it implies. I’ll bet you’re wrong.

I just finished reading an erudite and fascinating article by Mark Federman, Chief Strategist, McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology. The article has the unwieldy title of “What is the Meaning of The Medium is the Message?”

There are questions I see all the time from webinar creators and administrators. Some common ones include:

  • How long should a webinar be?
  • How do I hold my audience’s attention?
  • What’s a good audience size?

I see an underlying communications message in these questions that is based on a prior medium.

Webinars extend our communications reach to that audience in a new way. And the change in the medium changes the dynamics of the message between hosts, presenters, and audience members. There is no more sea of faces. There is a multitude of simultaneous one-to-one communications between a presenter and an individual listener.

So instead of concentrating on “How much time do I need to reserve before it is seen as worth the trip?” we need to ask “How much time do we really need in order to deliver the value we promised?” Don’t be afraid to end a session early. Or at least end the lecture quickly and move to audience-guided questions and discussion.

Stimulant's SAP Insite Studio

Brick, Mortar, the Cloud and Drones – the Future of the Classroom– from Kirsten Winkler

What if you could actively participate in a class that takes place on a campus on the other side of the world, not only watching a live stream but actually interacting with the teacher and writing your solution on the whiteboard?

What if you could be physically present on a campus on the other side of the world and talking to your professor before walking into the next class while sitting at home on your computer?  Futuristic you say? Wrong. Take a look at the two videos below and see what is already possible today.


Also see:


scribblar.com

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.anybots.com

http://innovations.helixhighered.com/

HELIX Innovations Collection Press Release

A NEW, CROWDSOURCED RESOURCE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION PRACTITIONERS, RESEARCHERS, AND POLICY MAKERS HIGHLIGHTS POSTSECONDARY INNOVATION
The Higher Education Leadership and Innovation eXchange Launches the HELIX Innovations Collection

Boston, Massachusetts – August 19, 2010 – The Higher Education Leadership and Innovation eXchange announces the launch of their online, crowdsourced resource HELIX Innovations Collection at http://innovations.helixhighered.com. The Innovations Collection is intended to spark conversation about new ideas and promising practices for the next generation of higher education.

“The Collection invites higher education practitioners, researchers, and policy makers to make their voices heard and speak out about potential solutions to the challenges faced by the education field today,” said Jim Woodell, HELIX co-founder. “True innovation is open. We created the HELIX Innovations Collection to allow everyone concerned with improving higher education to share and comment on innovative solutions.”

Applying the interactive potential of Web 2.0 technologies to problems in higher education provides the opportunity to share innovations quickly, identify their potential, and refine them with the help of peers worldwide. Visitors to the Collection can suggest innovative solutions, comment on suggested ideas, and rate an idea’s potential to influence the field along several ‘innovation dimensions’.

“It is our hope that the innovations which receive broad support and fine-tuning by the ‘crowd’ will be picked up by practitioners in the field and discussed, piloted, and perhaps even implemented by their home institutions. We hope that true linkages between and among research, policy, and practice will be forged from such collaborative efforts,” said HELIX co-founder Greg Lamontagne.

About the Higher Education Leadership & Innovation eXchange (HELIX)
HELIX is a networking and information sharing resource for Higher Education research, policy, and practice. Founded in 2010 by Jim Woodell and Greg Lamontagne, HELIX is located in Boston Massachusetts. More information is available at http://www.helixhighered.com.

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