Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Web Content by and for the Masses - New York Times

Here's a good New York Times article (requires free account login) about the trend toward content by and for users on the web. They mention many social software services like Flickr, del.icio.us, Technorati, and Yahoo's newly released My Web 2.0.

Some notable quotations:

"'Sharing will be everywhere,' said Jeff Weiner, a Yahoo senior vice president in charge of the company's search services. 'It's the next chapter of the World Wide Web.'"

'"We are now entering the participation age," Jonathan I. Schwartz, the president and chief operating officer of Sun Microsystems, said on Monday at an industry conference in San Francisco. "The really interesting thing about the network today is that individuals are starting to participate. The endpoints are starting to inform the center."'

'For [Caterina] Fake [one of the founders] of Flickr, however, the business model is still secondary. "We're creating a culture of generosity," she said.'

Experiments with podcasting in Higher Ed

Since we were talking about podcasting yesterday, I thought I would post a link to this. Aaron Campbell, from the East Asian Center, writes about some experiments with podcasting with Hindu poet, Mark White:

"we set out to record conversations, some of which were scripted, while others were freestyle riffs on themes like money, love, work, etc. The script we chose to start off with is called Hiromi’s Trip to Thailand, a 36-episode work written by Mark and used in his EFL classes as part of a guided story series to promote learner-centered conversation. We recorded the first 4 episodes and will be posting them over the next few weeks at English Conversations."

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Podcasts on iTunes

I just downloaded the new version of iTunes this morning and was pleased to see the podcast icon directly under Library.

Delicious Online Professional Development

Here's a nice use of social software for higher ed. Alan Levine at CogDogBlog has started a del.icio.us tag for online professional development for faculty. You can read more about it here. His current list of recommended sites for professional development is here: http://del.icio.us/tag/edpdonline. Here's the good part: you can add to his list by tagging anything you bookmark in del.icio.us with edpdonline.

Monday, June 27, 2005

Blogger images!

TJ just alerted me to this latest development. Blogger now allows you to add photos to your blog! (To give credit where credit is due: This is a black skimmer -- one of my favorite birds -- from http://www.animalpicturesarchive.com/view.php?tid=2&did=103400, and yes it is a public domain picture.)



To add a photo, simply click on the "Add image" button, browse for your photo, and click upload. Then insert text where you want it to go... you can even drag the image around the text box. Very nice!

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Free Photos

Saw a reference to this Robin Good post on the CET blog:

Where To Find Great Free Photographs And Visuals For Your Own Online Articles - Robin Good's Latest News

Thanks, Bryan!

Sakai Project now in 2.0

Here's something else we should keep an eye on:

Sakai Project:

"The Sakai 2.0.0 release is now available. This release includes a Gradebook in addition to an updated version of the Tests and Quizzes tool (Samigo). The existing Sakai tools have been internationalized, allowing translation of Sakai 2.0 into multiple languages. Most of the existing tools now conform to Sakai Style Guide. Sakai 2.0 includes support for web-services to allow the development of tools on languages other than Java.

There are many improvements in the configuration, installation, efficiency and performance in the 2.0 release. The Sakai Kernel has been rewritten for this release, improving configurability and ease of development for Sakai."

Pachyderm 2.0

Just saw a reference to this on a blog I read. I think many of us are aware of Pachyderm, but I thought I would post a link to it here just as a reminder that we need to keep an eye on it.

Pachyderm 2.0: "The Pachyderm 2.0 Project is a partnership led by NMC: The New Media Consortium and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), and funded by the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS). The project brings software development teams and digital library experts from six NMC universities together with counterparts from five major museums to create a new, open source authoring environment for creators of web-based and multimedia learning experiences. The new tool will be based on Pachyderm, the authoring and publishing tool developed by SFMOMA to author its successful series, Making Sense of Modern Art."

Monday, June 13, 2005

Yahoo! Mindset

Looking for information "about" something but keep coming up with sites trying to sell that something? Give Yahoo! Mindset a try. After your search it presents you with a slider that lets you choose where you'd like to fall on the research v. shopping spectrum.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Macromedia - Contribute

TJ and I played around with Macromedia - Contribute a little this afternoon. It has a nice simple WYSIWYG interface for editing static webpages, and it seems to create fairly clean code. It's also cross-platform.

Downside: there is a cost, but it's not too bad.

Might be something else to consider as a PageMill replacement for some faculty. There is a 30 day demo if you want to try it out.

PeanutButterWiki

A free wiki hosting service:

PeanutButterWiki: What's a wiki?: "On a pbwiki, any visitor with the site's password can edit any page on the site. pbwikis can be made public to allow anyone to read a wiki, while still restricting editing to those who know the wiki's password. But pbwikis are private by default.

Edits are done in plain text and don't require learning fancy or complex codes like HTML. Just start typing! It's also easy to create new pages and make links to pages you've already made."

I just created a wiki to play around with. It's pretty basic, but maybe that's all some folks need.

I'll leave it public for now... and close it down if (when?) it starts getting spammed. Feel free to roam around and try it out.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Nvu

Here's a link to the WYSIWYG editor I was talking about in a meeting earlier today:

Nvu - The Complete Web Authoring System for Linux, Macintosh: "small Nvu screenshot
Nvu features

* Designed for Linux Desktop
* Easy to use
* Powerful
* Ideal for non-programmers
* Open Source
.

Finally! A complete Web Authoring System for Linux Desktop users as well as Microsoft Windows and Macintosh users to rival programs like FrontPage and Dreamweaver.

Nvu (pronounced N-view, for a 'new view') makes managing a web site a snap. Now anyone can create web pages and manage a website with no technical expertise or knowledge of HTML."

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Transforming the Classroom

I liked this little bit at the end of a recent CogDogBlog post:

"Maybe my expectation level for transformation is unreasonably high, but think critically when someone claims a technology is transforming learning. It is not the technology that transforms, it is the action and the process that goes on around it."

If you need more context the whole post is here: How Transformative?.

Time Magazine Wiki Article

A recent article about wikis:

TIME.com: It's a Wiki, Wiki World -- Jun. 06, 2005

Blogging and Pedagogy

I started this post a while ago and never got back to it... It's been sitting in draft mode for a while, and now I've forgotten what else I wanted to say :-). Oh well, here's the post as I left it. Just some thoughts on blogging in the classroom:

Aaron Campbell provides
a thoughtful post about using Weblogs in the classroom in response to a talk from James Farmer.

In his talk Farmer points out an important difference between a blog and a discussion board in an LMS like Blackboard:

"(The LMS)...environment is controlled entirely from above. People go to the source, where they then request a discussion board, which they then put onto students, and so on. It's extremely centralized. However, in a weblog environment, then, it is the actual students and the teachers who are participating, if you will, the 'small pieces' that make up the whole...in a loosely joined way. And this is a very, very significant difference to me. The first environment is centered around the organization, centered around the system; and the second is centered around the individual. And in my opinion, to have a successful communication environment, a successful online environment, one which is motivating, one where networks can form, one where people can communicate easily with each other, it has to be centered around their presence as individuals. And I think weblogs and aggregators can do this."


Campbell goes on to note that students will also have to be trained how to interact in this kind of environment because they are not used to a "learning-centered" approach. They expect a "teacher-centered" environment and "Confusion and anxiety is bound to ensue."

I think all of these points are true and pretty much right. I wonder, though, if students can go too far in the other direction -- I think there's a real danger that they become so "learner-centered" and concerned about their "presence as individuals" that they ignore the other learners around them. Farmer does say this in his presentation, but I'd like to underscore it. It's not enough for students simply to assert their individuality through blogging, they also need to use that individuality... their virtual persona, if you will... as a basis to communicate with others in the class.

Though almost all blogs have a commenting feature, I have to admit that dialogue is easier in a discussion board on a CMS, because you only have to go to one place to see what people are talking about. If everyone in a class has a blog, that's 15-20 different places that a discussion can occur in. Farmer sees aggregators in the class as the cure for this problem -- a way to collect all of the posts in one place (either in their own software or on a class web page that aggregates posts). But that's still a pretty loose form of communication. Barbara Ganley's use of a "Collaborative Mother Blog" like this one seems to be the real way around this problem. Let students all have their own blogs, but also be sure to provide a central place that everyone checks and communicates in reglularly.

NITLE Newsletter: XML, TEI, GIS, Internet2

The NITLE Newsletter just came out, and several of Wheaton College's efforts are mentioned: