Saturday, April 25, 2009

Online Conferences - Awesome, Convenient Professional Development for Educators

Time and money often prevent educators from attending as many conferences as they want, but Web 2.0 is really changing this. Many conferences today have some aspect of online participation either in real-time or via archived sessions. One really great directory to check out is the 2009 T.H.E. Conference Calendar. Set up your search according to month and geographical location. Clicking on a particular conference will give you details such as when and where, a conference description, who should attend, website location/reference and contact information. While not all of these will have a virtual participation component, it certainly is the trend.

First time trying some of these out? Here's one to try on: just recently I attended the FETC virtual conference. You'll find some great archived sessions here . Free registration is required-a.k.a some minor hoop jumping - but once in, go to the Auditorium and select from choices. Topics you'll find include the following:


  • Keynote: 21st Century Learning: A Necessity for our Students
  • Crossing the Threshold to the Future of Learning
  • Emerging Interactive Media: What to Use, When, and How?
  • Wireless N: WiFi Finally Delivers
  • Getting the Most Bang For Your Buck: Key Considerations For a Successful Technology Rollout and ROI
  • Impact of the Federal Stimulus Package on Districts and Schools
  • The 21st Century Web: Beyond the 2.0 Tools
  • The Future is Here: STEM, CTE & Academic Mergers
  • Students "Speak Up" about 21st Century Learning and Education Games
  • Digital Survival Kit: Empowering the 21st Century Educational Leader


Also, don't forget the awesome learning opportunities via all the archived sessions for the Live Classroom 2.0 webcasts.

Happy professional development!
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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Pick Me! Pick Me!

Microsoft is offering up NECC '09 scholarships, I've recently read. But you must do the following, so here I go.

How can Microsoft help you teach better? Please respond with a URL to a blog post or online video.
Microsoft - you can help me teach better by continuing your awesome free webcasts for educators! Send me to NECC '09 so that I can bring the most current and effective technological pedagogy back to implement in my classroom. If selected, I promise to do 2 things; blog about all that I learn PLUS I promise to take two other educators from my district to NECC '10! Do I want to go? Heck yes!!! :)
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Monday, April 13, 2009

Leadership and Web 2.0: There is no "Arriving", just the Journey


Writing can be intimidating. Writing a blog that the whole world can read, even more. And that's why I applaud all those administrators and teachers who engage in this activity, or any Web 2.0 activity that promotes the sharing of ideas and growth.

In my own attempt to share and grow, I posted the following discussion question on Classroom 2.0, Steve Hargadon's Web 2.0 Ning, back on March 27th.

What types of support/working conditions are a must if progressive, technology-embracing educators are to be productive, creative, innovative and committed to their profession for the long haul? Yes, it's a big question, but I find myself thinking more and more about it. What would our working conditions look like, feel like, sound like? To what degree would teachers themselves be responsible and to what degree administators?

Within moments a quite insightful reply by high school educator Matt T. came back.

Great question! I've been thinking about this a bit, too. A few thoughts that come to mind:

...some sort of sustained professional development/learning - no more "this year's initiative is..." This might be accomplished via professional learning communities, individual personal learning networks, and/or a "knowledge base" of previous PD articles, slides, etc.

...administrators who join in and "do it," too. I went a conference break out a few months ago where the presenters mentioned that their administrators vowed to learn along side everyone else as they rolled out Moodle at the building and eventually district level. The faculty were using it with their students and the administrators used it to get feedback after each PD day as well as to get input from other stakeholders in the district in what would have otherwise been done killing a few trees.

...an emphasis on assessment reform. I personally believe assessment has the potential to spur future change. Once we re-think the "way" and the "why" we "assess" then it's much easier to view how other things such as classroom management might improve, too. It may also help better define technology's role in the big picture.

Looking forward to this discussion. Thanks for starting it up!

What a fantastic response! While all of these points are certainly true, the second one resonated strongly with me. Only a few days later, Will Richardson wrote on this very same issue in his April 6th post Transparency=Leadership.

What two things (and only two) would you tell educational leaders are the most important steps they can take to lead change today? I got that one from a professor at Oakland University last week, and after pausing for what seemed like an excruciatingly long time, I answered build a learning network online, and make your learning as transparent as possible for those around you. And while I really think the first part of that answer would make sense to most leaders out there, I think the second would have them running for the hills.

The obvious commonalities? Both Matt T., an in-the-trenches teacher, and Will Richardson, a well-respected educational blogger and consultant, are saying that the two most important endeavors educational leaders (this includes both teachers and admin) can embark upon are as follows:

1. building a DIGITAL ONLINE personal learning network (PLN)

2. learning along side of one another all the while making that learning TRANSPARENT so we can see we're all on this non-stop journey together


Whether administrating or teaching in the classroom, we're to be Learners and Teachers.....and it's a cycle that is non-ending and re-energizes itself. It's contagious and stimulating. Creativity and innovation are the end results because transparent growth is the ultimate admission that we "haven't arrived", heck that "there is no arriving" in this profession, only the journey.

If you want to be motivated, carve out some time and listen to the following Seedlings Bit by Bit podcast if you want to hear an example of a administrator and teacher doing both #1 and #2 above. Susan Phillips is the principal of Chets Creek Elementary in Jacksonville, FL and she is walkin' the talk thanks to the encouragement of Melanie Holtsman, a Chet's Creek teacher who's sharing her knowledge. Both of these ladies are the type of teacher/learner Will Richardson refers to when he says,

A big part of my decision making process in terms of who to believe and who to trust stems from how willing a person is to share her ideas, what level of participation she engages in, how ethical or supportive those interactions are, and how relevant she is to my own learning needs.


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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Web 2.0, Education, and Keeping Up With It All (weekly)


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Web 2.0, Education, and Keeping Up With It All (a sharing of bookmarks with excerpts)


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.
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Democracy, Authority and Technology Embracing Educators



Just recently I've had the opportunity to watch the above thought-provoking video from MIT World called "The Future of Work" by Thomas W. Malone (2004). At its conclusion, I found myself thinking about the popular post Wake Up and Smell the New Epistemology by T. Clydedale. Two of Clydesdale's statements below have really sent me thinking about my own knowledge acquisition as a professional educator and my view of authority/management because of it. The first quote is from a student referring to today's generation of digital learners, and the second is Clydesdale's suggestion as to how we should respond to this new shift in authority and knowledge.

It is imperative that someone studying this generation realize that we have the world at our fingertips — and the world has been at our fingertips for our entire lives. I think this access to information seriously undermines this generation's view of authority, especially traditional scholastic authority.

The onus is on us to better convey the value that a robust intellectual life adds to the public good. And we need to begin by respecting our students (and the wider public) not just as persons but as the arbiters of knowledge that they have become.

Now widen this idea, and replace the word "students" in the last quote with "technology-embracing educators". This new access to information has made me see authority and management differently within my own profession, teaching. Because of this new access to information I question, research, and examine issues and answers much, much more. With this powerful access to information, I can see that not all districts have the proclivity to "block 'em all" when it comes to Internet filtering (which by the way, Wes Fryer has just started a very intriguing effort at Unmasking the Digital Truth in hopes of sorting some of this all out). Not all districts out there shudder at the thought of students using blogs, or wikis or social networks or Skype. With this powerful access to information via my digital PLN, I've come to realize that there are some pretty remarkable, progressive Web 2.0 projects being successfully developed and that they are actually embraced and desired by admin, parents and educators.

Malone shares in "The Future of Work" that the decreasing cost of communication via new Internet/technologies makes the idea of democracy more tangible and more sought after for the masses - and not just society in general, but also in the workplace. Are we seeing this to be true in our own profession, as well? Will the democratizing effect of Web 2.0 radically change education just as it now is changing so many aspects of our culture? Will the top-down authority we so often see in our profession give way to a more democratic, participatory culture of educators, parents, students, admin and community at large?

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New Technologies of Literacy



Web 2.0 refers to a perceived or proposed generation of Internet-based services - such as social networking sites, wikis, communication tools, and folksonomies - that emphasize Internet-based sharing among users. Wikipedia




The continuously changing technologies of literacy mean that we must help children learn how to learn new technologies of literacy. In fact, the ability to learn continuously changing technologies for literacy may be a more critical target than learning any particular technology of literacy itself.
Donald J. Leu, Jr., The New Literacies
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A picture is worth...


It's very difficult to get others to realize this. A picture is worth...but maybe a picture and text are worth more. If you are just starting on this journey, be warned that it is a bumpy one. It takes others a while to see the "whole picture" and I have to remind myself they'll piece it together at their own pace.