Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

WordPress

April 14, 2008

Create A Blog Using WordPress. First, go to WordPress. Click on “Start Your WordPress Blog,” fill in the forms and follow the directions.

  1. Change Your Password.
  2. Change your site’s theme to match your personality.
  3. Bookmark your URL.
  4. Log out and log back in again – for practice.
  5. Write your first blog entry – introduce yourself, and tell us what you hope to get out of the program.

Things To Do

 

  1. Familiarize yourself with your Dashboard headings and sub-headings. On your Dashboard you’ll see two quick links, to “Write a Post” and “Add a Link.” These are very important to a smooth running blog. As you get more comfortable blogging and modifying your blog, check out the other headings and settings. If you make any cool discoveries, write about them.
  2. Add links to your Blogroll. Go to the “Links” tab, and click “Add Link.” You can put a URL into the form and give it a title. After you’ve finished there will be a link to that URL on your blog. Try adding some of your favorite blogs to your blogroll.
  3. Each time you post you can give your post categories as well. The “Categories” option appears to the right of where you are writing your post. If you click on the word “Categories,” it will show you which categories are available. You can also add your own categories, like “Reviews,” “Reflection,” “Good Sites,” “Travel,” or “Horses.” You can categorize your posts in more than one location.
  4. If you a writing a post about something you found online, such as a web site or a blog post, create a hyperlink to that thing. To do so, copy the link in the address bar of the place you want to link to. Next, highlight the part of your post you want to turn into a hyperlink. Click on the little chain-link icon, paste the address into the “Link” box, and click “save.” Voila, you have a hyperlink in you blog.

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#11 Facebook and MySpace

April 11, 2008

 Set up a Facebook or MySpace page

Facebook Exercise details

MySpace Exercise details

If you’re not comfortable creating a Facebook or MySpace account, for an alternate exercise:

    1. Find 3 articles on these or other social networks.
    2. Blog about your thoughts on these tools and how schools are using them.

#25 Podcasts

April 10, 2008

Myth:

You need to own an iPod to listen to, or view, a podcast.
 

Truth:

You can listen to a podcast on any devise/computer that has the capability to play an MP3 file. You will need an internet connection to download the file initially but you can copy it to a multitude of devises and media for audio playback.

 

 

 

 

Podcasting stands for Portable On Demand Broadcasting. Podcasts were originally audio-only but may now contain still images, video, and chapters identifying major sections or ideas. An iPod is not needed to listen to a Podcast. You can listen to a podcast using any computer connected to the Internet that also has the capability of playing standard MP3 audio files. Once a podcast is downloaded it can be listened to at any time on the computer. Many people also like to copy the podcast to a portable device for playback on the go. Examples of these devises include PDAs (Palm or Pocket PC), iPods, mobile phones, or many other devises that play MP3 files.

According to Wikipedia, a podcast is audio or visual content that is automatically delivered over a network via free subscription. Once subscribed to, podcasts can be regularly distributed over the Internet or within your school’s network and accessed with an iPod, [or any portable MP3 player], laptop, or desktop computer (both Macs and PCs). Podcasts can be produced with the following resources; a standard computer, microphone, free software, and a web site for posting your programming.

The major difference between a Podcast and any other audio file stored on the Internet is that Podcasts can be subscribed to. Podcasts are published as **RSS feeds. Listeners subscribe to these feeds and are notified of new programs by their ***RSS aggregators. The aggregators can be set to download the programs automatically or users can download the podcasts manually.

This article will describe educational uses of podcasts, and inexpensive, easy-to-use hardware and software that can be used to create your own podcasts. A web site has also been developed to go along with this article that will include tutorials and other hardware and software information. http://www.mtsu.edu/podcast.Teaching Ideas

 Educational Podcasting can be used to extend class time, provide review activities, record student work, and much more. You are only limited by your imagination and your ability to provide pedagogical basis for its use. In this section I will provide examples of podcast use in lectures, recording student work, walking tours, online learning, and professional development. Locating podcasts created by others will also be discussed.

Lectures

The following points were taken from an online article on Podcasting, referenced later in this document. Educational examples were added to the points for clarification purposes. Podcasting lectures provide;

  • The ability to listen to a lecture multiple times: Students can also stop the lecture, “rewind” to a previous part, and start again. Controls also allow the student to skip forward to a specific point in the lecture.
    (Note: Chapters can be added to podcasts that allow students to easily locate the area of the lecture they want to review.)
  • Flexibility in class schedule – students can listen to the Podcast before class and do another activity during class that builds on the material from the lecture. Many professors who do pre-class lectures will ask students to take a quiz on the lecture material during the first 5 or 10 minutes of the class to ensure that students have indeed listened to the pre-class lecture.
  • Increased interaction with the instructor. Instead of focusing on note taking during class, students would have taken notes during the podcast (the pre-class lecture) and will be ready to participate in the in-class activity.
  • Supplement to traditional class notes. When instructors post in-class lectures shortly after class time students can go back over the lecture at home and fill in points that they missed in their written notes.
  • Audio resources for students with disabilities. Students with various disabilities will find podcasts beneficial to their learning.
  • Portability/Multitasking: Student will be able to listen to your lecture at any time or place when they download your podcast to their personal media player.
  • Multitasking (e.g. exercising while listening to lectures). Students can listen to lectures while doing other tasks such driving, exercising, or walking between classes.
  • Beneficial to auditory learners. Online (distance education) students who learn best by hearing may learn course content more quickly when they listen to your podcast rather than when they read your lecture content.

Student Podcasts

Students can work on their own or in groups to create podcasts. These podcasts could serve as the culminating activity for projects. The posted projects can then be used in other class activities such as peer critiquing.

  • Post student compositions (performance of music compositions, recitation or performance of written works)
  • Peer critiquing of student work. Student podcasts can be evaluated by peers using online forms for gathering the postings and displaying them, either privately to the creator of the work, or publicly to the entire class.
  • Record online radio programs
  • Record oral Histories: With an iPod and a voice recorder, students interview relatives about their life histories, and then combine the audio interview with family photos in an iMovie project.

Walking Tours

PodGuides:  Free access to spoken tour guides (PodGuides) for your iPod. You can enjoy detailed spoken descriptions of what you see while visiting the city (museum) of your choice. http://www.podguides.net/

Podcasts in Online Learning

Podcasts can be used in a multitude of ways in the online classroom. Instructors can:

  • Make available podcast downloads of “just-in-time” learning modules
  • Tutor a student via podcast
  • Music lessons – evaluate music performance.
  • Teach a vocal technique
  • Make podcast downloads of practice exams
  • Music dictation practice tests.
  • Vocabulary words/terms
  • Develop a podcast of new vocabulary words for a language course
  • Develop a podcast of musical terms and their correct pronunciations.
  • Develop a podcast of new medical terms for nursing students
  • Give bonus points to the first student to get the right answer to a question that has been podcast and answered correctly.
  • Develop a library tour podcast
  • Create a small set of audio podcasts that can be used for “additional listening”
  • Working with Disabled Student Development, have a number of students and/or faculty provide podcasts to special needs students
  • Use podcasting to reinforce English as a Second Language concepts
  • Podcast short lectures
  • Allow students to create their own podcasts for class
  • Setup a text messaging or RSS to inform your class of new podcasts
  • Develop and reward innovative podcasting uses with an awards ceremony for the most creative, educational use of a podcast
  • Use podcasts to deliver flashy, history digital object content. Writer Bill Carey once stated, “The worst thing about history is teaching kids about dead men and dates. Kids want something flashy.”

This list and other podcasting information can be found at http://www.bsu.edu/library/article/0,1894,163773-11770-35591,00.html

Professional Development Podcasts

Podcasts can also be used for professional development. Educators can easily stay current on educational issues through many of the free web sites dedicated to that purpose.

TILT–Teachers Improving Learning with Technology This is actually a video weblog, and has some great information and examples of movies to use with students. Now uses Google Video to make video available (Upload link: https://upload.video.google.com/). You can download the files from Google Video to your iPod or play them on your computer using QuickTime Pro on the Mac or the Google downloadable player in Windows http://video.google.com/playerdownload.html.
http://tilttv.blogspot.com/

Educational Weblogs: Technology resources for educators using weblogs, blogware, collaborative tools, RSS and Podcasting, web services and digital tools at home, school, university and community. http://educational.blogs.com/   

EPN–Education Podcast Network: The Education Podcast Network is an effort to bring together into one place, the wide range of podcast programming that may be helpful to teachers looking for content to teach with and about, and to explore issues of teaching and learning in the 21st century. http://epnweb.org/

Educational Podcasting Links

Locating Podcasts Created by Others

You will need to use a Podcast Compatible RSS aggregator to locate and subscribe to Podcasts. iTunes – www.apple.com/itunes is one well known example of such an aggregator. You can find a large list of aggregators (podcatchers) at Wikipedia- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcatchers.

Examples:

  • Bloglines – http://www.bloglines.com
  • Podcast Alley – http://podcastalley.com/
  • iTunes – Download and Install iTunes and then click on the Podcast link in the music store. (Download iTunes – http://www.apple.com/itunes/)
  • Education Podcast Network – http://epnweb.org/
  • Podcast.net – http://www.podcast.net/
  • Also found at the Norristown, PA link.
    • NASA Podcasts – In English or Spanish. (see Norristown, PA link)
    • Gettysburg Address at American Rhetoric: 5000 full text, audio and video versions of public speeches, sermons, local proceeding, etc. 200 short audio clips form well-know speeches, etc. 80 Hollywood movie speeches.
    • Apples collection of educator-created lesson plans to use as idea starters for using iPod in the classroom.
    • Child Development Laboratory – Listening: what children learn as they are listening
    • Living On Earth – PBS radio show about environmental issues

From Educational Podcasting: http://mtsu32.mtsu.edu:11206/

#23 You Tube and Teacher Tube

April 10, 2008

 

 

 Discover YouTube and a few sites that allow users to upload and share videos

Hello again! I am very excited for those of you who are about to discover YouTube and it’s companion site for teachers TeacherTube, video hosting and sharing websites, for the first time. And for those who have already spent more time than you care to admit exploring YouTube, you now have permission to indulge some more and to check out TeacherTube.

Before we get started, here’s a little background information. Online video has improved by leaps and bounds in the last few years – there’s more of it, but the quality is much higher (bigger screen sizes, fewer pauses when watching). This change is largely about improvements in technology – digital video cameras are much more common (including on standard digitial cameras and mobile phones), high-speed internet access is more common (important for watching videos but also for uploading them to the internet), video editing software has become far less expensive (often free online or pre-installed on newly purchased computers), and online storage (server space) has dropped dramatically in price.

That last one, the price of online storage, has been revolutionary – without it, companies like YouTube and Google video would not be able to host videos from millions of users without charging them a cent. Note: Google video hosts longer videos than YouTube which has 10 minute cap. The (relative) ease of creating video, uploading it to the web, and storing it in an easy-to-access environment is starting to have an impact on the way our society gets its news. Anyone with a digital camera can capture a news event on their mobile phone video camera and save it to an online video account.

YouTube is a popular video hosting & sharing service founded in 2005, and bought by Google in 2006. There are other places to find videos on the internet, but YouTube has become the most popular. Without installing software or even setting up an account, you can view videos and embed them on your blog or website (they don’t have to be yours – you can embed any video you find on YouTube). For those who register for a free account, YouTube provides additional features turning it into a social networking service.

These features include the ability to…

  • create a profile
  • customize your profile with favorites, playlists, and subscriptions to channels & tags
  • upload & tag your videos
  • “friend” other YouTube users
  • send messages, and even broadcast messages to all your YouTube friends
  • rate and add comments to videos

A social site like YouTube democratizes film making, the way that blogs democratize publishing. The videos vary in length, and they run the gamut of subjects. You might find personal ramblings, amateur TV shows, people’s weddings, cute pets, and other personal videos that people upload to share with friends and family. You can also find famous scenes from movies, music performances, comedy bits, videos of Martin Luther King Jr.’s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, the first moon landing, and John F. Kennedy’s “ask not what your country can do for you” speech from his 1961 inaugural address. You might even run across library dominoes. Basically, there is something for everyone, and you can search it just like Google to find something specific. (Of course, like any free site you’ll also find a lot stuff not worth watching, too.)

In a January 2008 Pew Internet Project data memo Lee Rainie reports, “The audience for YouTube and other internet video sites has risen sharply the past year. Nearly half of online adults now say they have visited such sites.”

Here are some examples of  ways schools are using YouTube:

 

Resources:

Other popular video hosting sites:

Wikipedia’s list of video sharing websites.

Exercises:

  • Watch a few (or all) of the clips on this page. Now that you know how to comment, if you like, you can comment on the YouTube or TeacherTube clips.
  • Do some searching around YouTube or TeacherTube yourself and see what the sites have to offer.
  • Browse some of the videos suggested on the YouTube or TeacherTube home pages.
  • Search any topic that interests you and watch the videos that come up. There are lots of music videos to watch. You might try looking for your favorite artist.
  • Find videos tagged “libraries”.
  • Explore TeacherTube & find a video worth adding as an entry in your blog. You can do this by clicking “share” under the video window.
  • Create a blog post about your experience. What did you like or dislike about the site and why did you choose the video that you did? Can you see any features or components of the site that might be interesting if they were applied to library websites? What possibilities can you think of for your organization?

Optional assignment: Sign up for your own YouTube and/or Teachertube account at http://www.youtube.com/signup  or http://www.teachertube.com/signup.php   Create  some playlists, “favorite” some videos, subscribe to some tags, explore & have fun! If you are feeling brave, why not go ahead and share your videos with your friends, family, maybe even us!

Here’s the scoop on creating a video to share on YouTube or TeacherTube: First, you’ll need a device to record your movie. This could be a camcorder, a digital camera, and even a cell phone that has this capability. (For U-32 Folks, the U-32 liibrary staff can help you with this) YouTube or TeacherTube accept a wide range of video file formats such as .WMV, .AVI, .MOV, and .MPG. Then, you’ll copy the movie to your computer and upload it to YouTube or TeacherTube; or you could edit it with software like Windows Movie Maker or iMovie (for Macs) to add titles or special effects before uploading it. For details, visit YouTube’s help center or TeacherTube’s help center and Video Toolbox. This 3 minute video explains it all (and is especially funny if you’ve seen an episode of the 1983-1995 Bob Ross “The Joy of Painting” TV show.)

Fun Extra:
Enjoy some book/library/literary YouTube videos:

 

Web 2.0

April 10, 2008

A few perspectives on Web 2.0, Library 2.0, and the future of libraries and blog your thoughts.

Library 2.0 is the term used to describe a new set of concepts for developing and delivering library services. The name, as you may guess, is an extension of Web2.0 and shares many of its same philosophies and concepts including harnessing the user in both design and implementation of services, embracing constant change as a development cycle over the traditional notion of upgrades, and reworking library services to meet the users in their space, as opposed to ours (libraries).

Many have argued that the notion of Library 2.0 is more than just a term used to describe concepts that merely revolve around the use of technology; it also a term that can be used to describe both physical and mindset changes that are occurring within libraries to make our spaces and services more user-centric and inviting. Others within the profession have asserted that libraries have always been 2.0: collaborative, customer friendly and welcoming. But no matter which side of the debate proponents fall, both sides agree that libraries of tomorrow, even five or ten years from now, will look substantially different from libraries today.

Resources::

OCLC Next Space Newsletter – Web 2.0: Where will the next generation of the web it take libraries?

Five Perspectives:

Wikipedia – Library 2.0
Library 2.0 Discussions (list of great references from Wikipedia)

Resources:

  1. Read two or three of the perspectives on Library 2.0 from the list above.
  2. Create a blog post about your thoughts on any one of these? Library 2.0 – It’s many things to many people. What does it mean to you?

#15 Rollyo

April 9, 2008

 Roll your own search tool with Rollyo

Do you have a group of websites that are your favorites? Or a set of online resources that are similar that you frequently use to answer homework or reference questions? Well Rollyo may be the tool for you. Rollyo allows you to create your own search tool for the just the websites you know and trust.

Take a look at some of these search rolls that have been created:

Discovery Exercises:

Explore Rollyo and create an account for yourself.

  • Create a search roll for any subject you like.
  • Create a post in your blog about your experience and link to your search roll. Can you see a potential use for tools like this?
  • OPTIONAL: Add your searchroll to your blog using the “Create a Searchbox” tool.Select…Reference. Search The WebRollyo – You just never know when this little tool might come in handy.Curriculum Connection:
    1. IDEA #1: Ask Dan or Vicky (your friendly U-32 Librarians)  to help you create a Rollyo search tool for a particular unit of study. For example: in History class you can locate websites about castles into a Rollyo search group. In Spanish [or other language] class, countries that speak that particular language are often studied. When you send your students to search the Internet, give them the Rollyo address and let them search within the sites you’ve chosen for them.
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    Classroom MySpace

    April 4, 2008

    Use Myspace for Writing Projects for High School Students

    from: Online blogger:  Mar: June 2, 2007

    While subbing in a Literature class, the students were assigned a project for creating a newspaper based upn the book they were reading. The Book happened to be Romeo and Juliet. I gave them the option to design a myspace layout for one of the characters. The students really loved this format and enjoyed putting renaissance characters in a modern setting. We had a lot of fun with it.

    But I really worried that their regular teacher might not approve. I waliked with trepidation into my next assignment in the school Immediately the secretary told me how much that teacher had enjoyed reading the assignments. Apparently, she plans to use this idea next year.

    The students, she said, not only enjoyed it but seemed to be able to comprehend the story better using a layout that was very familiar to them. They wre able to ‘translate’ the story into that format and demonstrate character traits and relationships, major events, universal themes, conflicts and settings.

    Here is the model we followed. You can use it any assignment about people. The myspace model lends itself to literature, history, current events, social studies, biography, sociology and psychology assignments. It even works with lessons on careers; it’s like a portfolio.

    One reminder: Always remember that we teachers are big on two things ‘detail’ and support from the book, novel or your research. We don’t look favorably on vagueness or generalizaton. We like students to use concrete detail and evidence, like direct quotes. We expect this in any writing assignment.

    Utilizing the myspace homepage design, create a myspace for any character, just as you would for yourself. Ours were done on paper, using pictures cut from magazines. I was surprised at how accurately they drew the myspace layout.

    Use the ‘Friends’area to show character relationships. Use the ‘Add/delete friends’ funciton to demonstrate the changes in realtionships; be sure to indicate the date or timeperiod to show timeline of events. Use the ‘Comment section’ to show other people reacting to the person. This is a great place to bring in relationships, conflicts, direct quotes and plot.

    #10 Social Networks

    April 4, 2008
    Explore Social NetworksAny article or conversation about Web 2.0 will inevitably stress the newly acknowledged primacy of the experience of the Web for the user. And the vehicle for converting the user’s experience from that of a solitary, passive viewer (as in what might be called Web 1.0) to one of rich, dynamic content and broad, interactive participation is social networking.The term is older than you might assume, originating not in the digital age but in the mid-20th century. Coined by sociologists, social networks were defined as ‘a map of the relationships between individuals, indicating the ways in which they are connected through various social familiarities’. Web 2.0 has extended this concept to allow Web users to create their own social networks, sharing experiences and events, communication, news, photographs, music, video, and other content with not only their real-world family and friends but also the virtual world of ‘friends’ on-line with whom they share interests.Defining Online Social Networks
    As with a lot of 2.0 tools, pinning down a definition of a “social network” is difficult — it’s one of those “you’ll know it when you see it” tools! But how do you know what to look for? Here are a few characteristics of social networks:
    • profile pages: when you sign up for an account on a social networking site, your “profile page” becomes your home base. Most social networks allow you to add as much or as little information about yourself as you’d like. Common fields include your name, contact information, interests, and a photograph of yourself. Some social networks allow you to customize your profile page by changing the design, color, or look of the page (MySpace is an example), whereas other social networking sites use the same look & feel for all profile pages (Facebook is an example).
    • “friending”: this is probably the most important characteristic of a social network because finding friends (existing or new) on a social networking site is pretty much the point of being there in the first place! So, most social networks allow you to add another person/profile as a “friend” or a “contact” and your collection of friends becomes your own personal social network (not dissimilar to the way social networks form offline too!). The “friending” aspect of an online social network often accounts for why some social networking sites are popular with specific groups. For example, Facebook began as a social network for college and university students; it has since opened up to allow anyone to join the network, but it still remains most popular with students. Why? Because people go where their friends are!
    • groups: with real life social networks, groups tend to form around common interests, therefore most online social networks allow users to start a group or join a group based on their interests or common goals. Depending on the social networking site, you will probably find a group that represents your interests, regardless of what that interest might be!

    While many 2.0 tools use some of these elements (e.g. “contacts” on Flickr, “friends” on Digg, profile pages on YouTube), most sites that are considered to be online “social networks” have all these elements in common.

    Another way of looking at it then is that “social networks” exist primarily to help people keep in touch personally or professionally. These sites, such as MySpace, Facebook, and Ning, provide users the freedom to add pictures, slideshows, audio and video excerpts, and even custom designs. The other sites concentrate on users’ specific common interests such as video (YouTube), photography (Flickr), music (last.fm), or books (Library Thing). The features offered by these ‘specific’ sites tend to be much more geared toward the nature of their content, and are often not as malleable as their “social network’ cousins.

    Popular Online Social Networks

    • Facebook – most popular with college and university students, Facebook bills itself as ‘a social utility that connects people with friends and others who work, study and live around them. People use Facebook to keep up with friends, upload an unlimited number of photos, share links and videos, and learn more about the people they meet.’ Facebook in fact outstrips even photo-sharing site Flickr in users of its photo section. Originally restricted to university and college students, then expanded to include high-schoolers, Facebook membership is now open to everyone, and hosts over 28 million users. The second-most-visited social networking site in the US, Facebook is the dominant such site in Canada, Norway, South Africa, and much of the Middle East.
    • MySpace – what began as a place for independent bands to promote their concerts and music has turned into the most popular online social network in the English-speaking world! By far the most popular of the social networking sites, boasting over 180 million users, MySpace has entered the ranks of cultural phenomena. Alexa Internet, which gauges Web traffic, lists Myspace is the sixth most popular site on the web, beating Wikipedia, Blogger, Ebay and Flickr. Over 150,000 new Myspace profiles are created daily. MySpace allows you to create a personal website featuring information about yourself and your interests and activities. Page designs may be altered—there are countless Web sites offering custom coding aimed at MySpace users—often to chaotic effect. You can browse, search, invite friends to connect and interact, share film reviews, make comments, post mail and blog entries, post classified ads. You can create or join groups for friends with common interests.
      MySpace has a musical element as well, as many amateur, unsigned, and even well-known bands maintain pages that serve as de facto fan sites, affording communication between bands and their supporters, and featuring up to five tunes to which users can listen (and sometimes download). Myspace allows video and music sharing, online chat, and can be browsed on mobile phones.
      Because Myspace is popular among teenagers and young adults, some libraries have used Myspace to connect with their younger patrons. Read through the Discovery Resources links below to get an idea of what different libraries are doing in Myspace and what librarians are saying about it.
    • NingUnlike the other major social networking services, Ning distinguishes itself by focusing on the creation of groups and offering the user a fully customisable platform on which to ‘create your own social network for anything.’ Employing tags to describe these networks, users find groups with which they have an affinity, with less emphasis than the other sites on finding individual friends.

    Other social networking sites
    Although MySpace dominates the field in the US, Mexico, Australia, and southern Europe, there are other social networking sites that actually have more users internationally than US runner-up Facebook.
    Worldwide, the site with the second-greatest number of users is Google’s Orkut. Most popular in Brazil and South Asia, it is approaching 60 million users. Not far behind Orkut, San Francisco-based Hi5 has 50 million users and is most popular in Central America and the Andean countries, and also Portugal, Tunisia, and Mongolia. Bebo, based in San Francisco as well, is the number one social networking site in Ireland and New Zealand, and has overtaken MySpace in the UK. And Friendster, probably the first social networking site you heard of back a few years ago, is still alive and well and the most popular site in Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines, with nearly 30 million users.
    So if you’d like to bring an international aspect to your social networking, one of these sites is certain to please.

    Resources:

    An example of Myspace used in the classroom.

    Social Networking in Plain English (1:48)- Another fun Common Craft video explaining social networking sites and why they’re so popular.

    Exercises:

    1. With this Thing, we’re looking into some of the most popular generic and specific social networking sites. If you haven’t already, read this page and click on the links.

    2. After reading through everything, what do you think about schoolss using social networking sites?

    3. Post on your blog answering this question and add any other thoughts you might have about social networking in general.

    #14 Web 2.0 list

    April 3, 2008

    Explore any site from the Web 2.0 awards list, play with it, and write a blog post about your findings

    Throughout the course of WCSU 32 Things program we’ve explored just a small sampling of internet technologies and websites that are empowering users with the ability to create and share content. Given time, there are so many more we could explore. Current estimates place the number of Web 2.0 tools at somewhere between 300 & 500 with only a handful emerging as market dominators. And although time will only tell which of these new collaborative social networking and information tools will remain on top, one
    thing is for sure, they’re not going to go away (at least anytime soon).
    For this Thing, participants are asked to select any site from this list of Web 2.0 Awards nominees and explore it. With so many to choose from, it might be handy to first select a category that interests you (like Books or Personal Organization) and then simply select a tool/site to explore. Be careful to select a tool that is Free and that doesn’t require a plug-in or download. The majority of these free, so this shouldn’t be a problem.

    Exercise:

    1. Select any site/tool from the list of Web 2.0 Awards nominees. (If you prefer to select from just the winners, here’s a link to the short list.)
    2. Explore the site you selected.
    3. Create a post about your discovery. What did you like or dislike about the tool? What were the site’s useful features? Could you see any applications for its use in a classroom setting?

    # 13 image generators

    April 3, 2008

    Play around with an online image generator.

    Generators? No, we’re not talking about those gas powered back-up things. The generators we’re talking about allow you to easily manipulate image and graphics to create fun images like these.

    For this discovery exercise, we want you to have even more fun than you’re already having! Find a few fun image or text generators to play around with and write a post in your blog about one of your favorites and the display the result. Adding the image you mocked up to your blog is as simple as copying and pasting code that the page provides. If not, you may just need to right click on the image and then save it to your hard drive before using your blog’s image button to add it to your post.

    Resources:

    The Generator Blog
    Letter James
    FD Toys
    AvatarsYahoo Avatars, Meez, Speech Agents

    Also try searching for online generators, text generators, or image generators

    Exercises:

    1. Play around with some image generators and find one that you like.
    2. Post the result of your discovery process in your blog.

    OPTIONAL: Create an avatar (it’s really fun), save it and export it to your blog. (You can either download the image and then bring it into your blog via Add Image or export it and copy the code and paste it into your blog via “Edit Html” – a bit more techie). Even if you don’t put the avatar on your blog, try creating one – a little virtual you.
     

     

    Note: Be sure to include a link to the image generator itself, so other participants can discover it too.

    So take some time and have fun with this exercise.