riema 2008 conf web 2.0

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Dave Fontaine's Web 2.0 presentation for the RIEMA Conference 2008

TRANSCRIPT

What is

Web 2.0?

RIEMA--2008By Dave Fontaine

April 28th, 2008

Agenda•Web 2.0•Blogs•Podcast•Wikis

What is Web 2.0?Aka: •Read/Write Web•Participatory Web

The Read/Only Web The Read/Write Web

What is Web 2.0?

• Powerful resource for educators, but…

• Information moved from publishers to consumers

• Content could not be edited• One-Way Web

• (Web 1.0)

• It is now as easy to create as it is to consume• Anyone can publish, share, and change information online• Two-Way Web

• (Web 2.0)

• This is changing our world!

Web 2.0Web 1.0• Restricted participation

• Needed html programming skills

• Knowledge sharing went one-way

• Interactive/Participatory• As simple as using a word processor• Maximizes the “Collective Intelligence” of a group; benefits increase with the # of users

What is a Blog?-Web site that can be easily updated.

-Watch clip

What can a ‘blog’ be used for?

• A collaborative space• A political soapbox• A breaking-news outlet• A collection of links• Your own private thoughts• Memos to the world

What's the difference between weblogs and "classic" homepages?

• Format, style and content varies greatly.• Currency• Weblogs have a strong component of

dates attached to entries.

What makes a blog useful in education?

• Give and Get feedback.*You can choose whether or not you want to

allow comments (and you can delete anything you don't like).

• Group blogs can be excellent communication tools for small teams, groups, or classes.

• Give your group its own space on the web for sharing news, links, and ideas.

Public or Private• Public weblogs are blogs published

on the internet for all to see.

• Private weblogs are published on the internet but protected.

*Password*Company’s network

The best way tolearn about blogs is toread them.

http://edc921.blogspot.com/

The International Edublog Award Winners

• Best newcomer:Blog of Proximinal Development

• Best designed edublog: D'Arcy Norman Dot Net

• Best library/librarian blog:Never Ending Search

URL’S FROM PREVIOUS SLIDE:

HTTP://WWW.INCSUB.ORG/BLOG/HTTP://WWW.TEACHANDLEARN.CA/BLOG/2008/01/20/LOOKING-FORWARD-TO-EDUCON-20/#COMMENTSHTTP://WWW.DARCYNORMAN.NET/HTTP://WWW.DARCYNORMAN.NET/HTTP://WWW.SCHOOLLIBRARYJOURNAL.COM/BLOG/1340000334.HTML

Finding blogs from

local teachers.

“I have really enjoyed using my blog. It is so user friendly and much easier to update than a web page.  I am proud to say that I have inspired other teachers in my school to create their own, and several have-- including our principal! Parents really like it too-- they feel like it’s a window into their child's day.” --Pam W. (past edc920 participant)

This all sounds intriguing, but will it workin my school?

Blogging Software• Blogger- part of Google, it is fully hosted

and you post and manage your blog from within your web browser.

• LiveJournal- also fully hosted and has many great community features.

• Edublogs- claims to have the largest collection of educational blogs

Blogger.com

www.blogger.com

And more...• Blogger has a variety of ways to easily update your

blog besides the easy-to-use web interface: • Email Posting. • BlogThis! is a button that you can put on your browser

(or via the Google Toolbar) that lets you quickly post to your blog from anywhere on the web.

• Post photos. • There's even a feature, called AudioBlogger, that lets

you call Blogger from any phone and leave a message that is immediately posted to your site as an MP3 audio file. (It's fun at parties.)

End of part 1 of 3

Questions so far?

PODCASTING

DEFINITIONA podcast is a media file that is distributed over the Internet using syndication

feeds, for playback on portable media players and

personal computers.

In simple terms:

• It is a permanent recording • Posted online; and • Can be downloaded anytime

2 Uses for Podcasting:

• Simplest:– Use recordings to

supplement instruction

• More Advanced:– Create your own,

either alone or with the students

Record lessons for students (and parents!) Give students an alternative to PowerPoint! Introduce yourself and explain the classroom management plan. Create a class or even a whole-school radio station. Enable students to submit work in the form of a podcast.

JUST A FEW OPTIONS

MORE OPTIONS… Create audio resources for use by sight-impaired students.Find and use podcasts as part of research projects.Use foreign language podcasts to improve linguistic skills. Use podcasts to gain insight into another country's culture.Enable students to create dynamic presentations.

Let’s TakeA Look

At SomeExamples

Podcast Directories

• Podcast411• Yahoo! Podcasts• iTunes.com

“Using little more than an iPod and a school computer, Gagliolo and her students have been

making podcasts… Avidly discussing their favorite iPod colors and models, while they made

recordings of their poems and bookreports the other day, the fifth-graders bubbled with ideas for future

subjects.‘We could read parts of books, to show why we like them. We could do interviews. If there's a field trip, we could make a recording of it and post it,’ said

Mohamed El-Sayed, 10.”click for Seattle Times article

End of part 2 of 3

Questions so far?

What is a WebQuest?

A WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented lesson format in which most or all the information that learners work with comes from the web.

Part 3 of 3

Wikisan

Introduction

What you will learn

• What a wiki is--• What wikis are good for, and not so

good for--• BRIEFLY view some wikis--• Tips on developing a successful wiki--

What is a wiki?• Wiki = quick (in Hawaiian) • Allows people to collaboratively edit the

content without any computer programming knowledge

• All community members can ‘add to’ or ‘edit’ the work of others--improving it each time.

The most popular wikiLink

Tabula Rasa• Starts as a blank slate• Pages are created and connected by

hyperlinks• No ownership of pages; anyone can

change the work of others

Wiki Components

Discussion area for each page

The most powerful part

List of changes made to all pages

Wikis vs. Blogs• No one owns

content• No specific

organization (hyperlinks)

• Anyone can edit other people’s work

• A person owns their post

• Organized in reverse chron. order

• Only author can edit their own work (others can comment)

Why wiki?• Easy to use• Web-based• Anyone can make changes• Easily searched• Many free and open-source wikis• Flexible

Why not wiki?• Too open (trust issues)• Concerns about ownership of

content• Disorganized• Vandalism and spam

Wikis in Practice

Community wiki

http://daviswiki.org/

Wiki as Courseware

http://wikidave.wikispaces.com/EDC921

How schools can use wikis• Staff Intranet• Collaborative document editing• School Guidebooks• Collaboratively-developed manual• Planning space for professional

development RIBEP Wiki• Knowledgebase for ‘Institutional

Memory’

Planning space for conferences

LINK

My wiki

link

http://wikidave.wikispaces.com

Wiki Tips

How to develop and maintain a successful wiki

Screencasting•Record screen movements

•Save in video format

•Upload to someone else’s server

•Link to it from your blog

Dave FontaineInternet Librarian &

Information SpecialistDaveFontaine1@gmail.com

Questions?

Additional ResourcesList of websites with general information about podcasting, what are they and how to set them uphttp://www.shambles.net/pages/learning/ict/podcast/.

List of podcasts related to educationhttp://www.shambles.net/pages/learning/infolit/edupodcast/.

List of podcast directorieshttp://www.shambles.net/pages/learning/infolit/podcastdir/.http://www.epnweb.org

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