Saturday, February 14, 2009

Using Video To Communicate To Your Class

Are you looking for a different way to post your assignments?  I wasn't but I have started playing with an option that I think will be beneficial in the long run.

I use Moodle for my course management.  It is simple, clean, and effective.  While it has been useful, i figured there should be a better way of posting assignments, giving instructions for a class that I would have to miss, or supplementing the content to be covered in class.

Homework


I have started using YouTube's quick capture feature to fill this gap.  See my first post below.  Not only can the students comment on the video to ask questions but by keeping the video broadcasts in a central location, it is simple to find assignments or instructions that the teacher wants to send out to the students.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HERTERyPZhU

Lectures


Another use of video I have been thinking about comes from the fact that I teach AP World History.  One of the challenges I face is the fact that I want to do too much in class.  I believe that getting students to practice the art of examining documents or debating theories is much more powerful than listening to a lecture.  The idea is simple, screen cast my lectures and post them on Vimeo the night before class.  Have the students watch the lecture for homework.  Then use class time to create lessons based upon historical discussion or investigation based upon the ideas introduced in the video lecture.

We'll see how this turns out but as I try to reexamine how my students learn and how to best use my classroom time, it's worth a try.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Net Generation Education Project

My World Civilizations II class and I were recently selected to particpate in the Net Generation Education Project organized by Vicki Davis and Julie Lindsay.

My class will work with schools from around the world as we will examing Don Tapscott's book, Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing Your World and the 2009 Horizon Report in order to determine what the future of education will look like.

We will be using multiple platforms, including a Ning, a Wiki, a Google Group to communicate with the other schools and discuss the ideas behind our final product: a video on what education should look like.  This video is to be part of Tapscott's Net Generation Education Challenge competition in which the winning entry will receive $10,000 in scholarship money.

The project begins this weekend, my students and I are excited to particpate and I will make sure to update the blog and let you know how it is going.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Technology Is Not The Solution

It might be a strange title for a post coming from a Director of Academic Technology but...

I just read an article in the San Francisco Chronicle, "Technology not the panacea for education", written by Todd Oppenheimer, author of The Flickering Mind: Saving Education from the False Promise of Technology. I found it using my education Alltop page, a free news aggregation website.

Oppenheimer is on target for the most part.  Throwing technology at a school will not improve education, teaching technology skills will not prepare our students for the challenges that lay ahead.  He calls the use of technology, "Education's WMD".

He goes on to quote a report from Information Technology Association of America on what students to learn in school.
Know something about the problems that need to be solved.

The concept is absolutely correct.  Students do not need to be taught how to use a word processor or for schools to purchase expensive content management systems.  That being said, technology CAN help students learn how to solve challenging problems and support the writing and reasoning skills Oppenheimer so strongly emphasizes in his article.

While technology is not a panacea and must be used with curriculum designed to support
writing and reasoning; reliable work habits; the capacity for concentration and face-to-face communication; a sense of history, cultural anthropology...[and] higher math and science

it can provide a wealth of knowledge and opportunities that will develop and support these skills.

Money for education should be invested in building or redesigning schools and curriculum that can develop the skills Oppenheimer mentions.  But, we would be foolish not to utilize the free or inexpensive technologies like Alltop, Skype, or Delicious, to only name a few that will only bolster that learning process.

Photo Credit:  Matthew Clark Photography & Design

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

The New Liberal Arts

I was learning more about a presentation on activism in the Middle East to be put on by the Berkman Center at Harvard next Monday when I saw another post on the Digital Natives website about the "New Liberal Arts".  After talking with my boss over the past few months about the idea of the New Humanities, created by Rutgers and now Stanford, this entry caught my eye.  A group called Snarkmarket posed the question, "What are the new liberal arts?"

This then prompted the group to open the idea up to the world for feed back and the idea is now turning into a book.  Snarkmarket is looking for your opinions on what the new liberal arts should include:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtLVFWXF_UQ&eurl=http://snarkmarket.com/blog/snarkives/books_writing_such/a_snarkmarket_book_project_the_new_liberal_arts/&feature=player_embedded

Our students are digital natives who live in a very different world.  We must adapt our curriculum to support the skills and thought processes that they will require in the 21st century.

With that in mind, I ask you to support Snarkmarket and their book in one of two ways:


  1. Make a pitch for a new liberal art. It can be something you know lots about, or something you wish you knew lots about. It can be general or specific. It can be anything. Leave your first draft as a comment on this post, and don’t worry about thinking it all the way through. Don’t worry about length, either. If we decide to include your pitch in the book, we’ll work all of that out. ( click here to add your new liberal art)

  2. Help promote the project. Even if pitching a new liberal art isn’t your speed, someone in your network might have a great idea. So blog this post; Twitter it; email it to your two nerdiest friends. Here’s a shortened link, if it’s helpful: http://is.gd/i4lG



Photo Credit: quinn.anya