Taaz.com

Taaz.com is hair and make-up marketing fun. The site allows you to upload your photos, apply make-up from various companies, and change your hairstyle. I hate the sneaky marketing, but look at me … I’m beautiful!

I'm Beautiful!

Interestingly enough, as I was applying virtual make-up to myself, one of my EC&I 831 students entered my office. It was a tad embarrassing, but all in the name of education.

Video Explaining the Internet from 1995

I find this quite interesting. Parts of this video make me feel like we have come a long way in these past 13 years, while others make me question if things have really changed in any significant way. via Waxy Links.

Lately, I’ve started collecting old VHS tapes about the Internet from the early- to mid-1990s. While most of these are pretty corny — think Gabe and Max’s Internet Thing — they also inadvertently captured pieces of the web that don’t exist anywhere else. The Internet Archive’s earliest snapshots were in late 1996, so anything before that is extremely sparse. The videos, silly as they are, still represent valuable documentation of the early web.

I spent most of the day yesterday working on a workflow to digitize VHS tapes, settling on VCR to MiniDV camera my Macbook Pro with Firewire. These tapes are pretty worn, so the quality’s not great, but that almost adds to their charm.

See many other related videos here.

Is Anonymity a Right?

Last week, I noticed the somewhat comical, but very scary story of Kentucky lawmaker, Tim Couch, who filed a bill this week to make anonymous postings to the Internet illegal. The bill would target website providers who allowed anonymous postings, not those that submit anonymous postings.

If the bill becomes law, the website operator would have to pay if someone was allowed to post anonymously on their site. The fine would be five-hundred dollars for a first offense and one-thousand dollars for each offense after that.

Today, I noticed a post from Fresh Creation highlighting a panel discussion on “Sexual Privacy Online”. The key question, “do you have a right to be anonymous”, is one I have posed to my students in the past. It is a tricky question, and even with a discussion of real problems posed by anonymity, I have yet to be convinced that the right to be anonymous is something we should easily give up. Watch the video and see what you think.

So after watching this, what are your thoughts about anonymity as a right? Are there places that you feel that this should not apply? And if so, how do you decide? Who decides? Watch out for the slippery slope.

“Big Dog” Quadruped Robot

Pretty amazing!

Boston Dynamics has just released a brand new video of their DARPA-funded Big Dog robot. Big Dog, the older brother of the Little Dog robot we covered a while back, is meant to be a “pack mule” for soldiers some day. Behind Big Dog is some pretty cool force-controlled technology. With its quadruped gait it can regain balance if it’s kicked, handle rough terrain like rocks, and climb inclines up to 35 deg.

In this new video, in addition to some footage from previous videos, you can see it handling slippery ice, slopes in deep snow, and demoing its new walking gait. About halfway through is the ice part — this thing is better than I am at regaining balance. There’s also a demo of it carrying a 340 lb load, much heavier than it has managed in the past.

via Automaton.

OneBigTorrent.org

Yet another reason not to watch television.

OneBigTorrent.org is a new place for sharing material that deals with or is relevant to issues of social justice, progressive and radical politics, independent media, ecology. We run a local bittorrent tracker (which we encourage uploaders to use), and we also host torrents from other trackers, as well as ed2K and Magnet links.

Looking through the front page of OneBigTorrent, I immediately saw many videos that interest me. It is nice to have this flavour of content available in one place.

Stephen Downes on Personal Learning

We are all delighted to have had Stephen Downes speak to our EC&I 831 class last Monday, March 11, 2008. Stephen framed his presentation around personal learning and we received a first-hand look at how Stephen manages an immeasurable amount of information through his own customized software approach.

The presentation is available as a recorded Elluminate session, and the slides are available via Slideshare (below).

You can also download the recorded audio podcast (thanks Rob).

Note: In order to be responsive to constructive feedback, we will be releasing all of the presentation audio from EC&I 831 in audio-only, podcast format. Watch for this.

Thanks so much Stephen! You’ve added an invaluable contribution to the course and to the students of EC&I 831.

My 3yr Old And Second Life

EC&I 831 is touring Second Life next Wednesday. I have only recently explored Second Life seriously, and I am looking forward to our tour. Tonight, my daughter came into the room where I was exploring SL. She took over the controls, and within 10 minutes, she pretty much mastered the basics. Take a look.

Now hopefully, technical issues aside, my Graduate students will be able to pick it up as quickly.

Authentic Learning Environments

I recently received an email this morning from a network administrator in Kansas who read my article, Safety and Social Networking. His critique follows.

Dr. Couros,

I would like to compliment you on your recent article in “Technology and Learning” covering safety and social networking. It was very informative and enlightening, and it is of great concern to all school districts.

However, I do take issue with the inflated language we use in today’s EdSpeak. I particularly take issue with the use of the term “Authentic.” Its usual use today seems to be as a meaningless term used only to add supposed validity to some term or concept. For example, in your article you write about how social networks can, “Create authentic 21st-century learning environments.” In defining what exactly this means, could you please give me an example of what an “Un-Authentic 21st-century learning environment” would be?

First of all, thanks for writing. I appreciate the feedback, and I think that you have raised an important concern. I myself am a critic of what you identify as “edspeak”. Educational jargon is prevalent in our language. In fact, I was informed that a friend of mine recently used the Educational Jargon Generator to successfully apply for proposal funding. The jargon is sometimes powerful, but more often empty and meaningless.

When deciding how to respond, I first thought about simply sending a link to a photo that I had taken recently.

Welcome to the Machine

We could start with our entire educational model as being one ripe with inauthentic learning experiences. In many cases still, students are “given” third-hand information while sitting at desks, learning skills though textbooks rather than through experience. Cognitive apprenticeship models, differentiated instruction, and other potentially more “authentic” learning experiences are viewed by teachers and administrators as impossible to implement, sustain or assess.

However, I think your critique deserves a better explanation. So, I turned to my Twitter network. Here are some of the responses.

Jeff wanted to help, but his school seemed to block Flickr.

Picture 2.pdf (1 page)

Kelly shares several examples of non-authentic learning.

Untitled 3

Here are a few other responses from Twitter:

Un-authentic English teachers at my school yesterday came to Library and picked out the books that students would use for research. (gwwand)

For me, authentic would be students learning and CREATING with technology. Unauthentic would use a laptop and projector to present a Powerpoint as the lesson or using computer to type tests or look things up but never let kids touch – too busy is excuse. (Holtsman and here)

Students sitting in a classroom just watching a teacher do a simulation with a projector or pretty much anything on the Smartboard. (marsenault)

“Un-authentic learning environment?” um … Pick a school, any school. Odds are good that’ll be the example you need. (nlowell)

My husband works for a private company with consultants in India. He uses tools IM tools and video conferencing all the time and has to keep track of time around the globe. Authentic learning should address these changes in business around the globe. (njtechteacher and here)

Rob Wall also responded via email with a terrific, well-worded response.

Perhaps these are jargon terms, but like jargon in other areas, like
the sciences, they do have very specific meaning.

First – “authentic” means genuine as opposed to artificial, contrived
or imitative. In traditional schooling, many experiences are
contrived. We tell students to write for their audience, yet the
audience for whom they are writing is just the teacher or perhaps
their class. An authentic audience is an audience beyond the teacher,
class or even the school. It is a heterogeneous audience as one would
write for if one wrote in a newspaper or magazine article. It is an
audience that chooses to read what is being written instead of a group
that is chosen by the writer or a teacher.

Similarly, we often speak of authentic learning. This is a type of
learning that is meant to have relevance beyond the context of the
classroom and past the final exam. It is learning that gives the
learner skills and knowledge that will support them in their role as a
worker, as a citizen and as a human being.

As for the other adjective “21st” century, again this is perhaps
jargon, but it has a meaning within the study of learning, education
and pedagogy. It denotes a practice or belief in sharp contradiction
to some of those of the 19th and 20th century. Much of the practice of
education as it occurs in public schools today is based on the goals
of 19th century society, namely the instruction necessary to
participate in a society based on an industrial economy. The basis of
the economy, in North America, Europe and some other parts of the
world, in the 21st is not production of goods in a factory but the
production and use of intellectual property. Trying to produce workers
and managers for an economy that no longer exists is delusional. We
need schools that prepare students for this century.

Richard Schwier, most thoughtfully, adds:

Example: When we ban YouTube and other social tools in classrooms, we are actually reducing the authenticity of the classrooms. Why? Because that is exactly where many of our student go to learn in their “other” lives. Often, they are taught conventional ways of learning about things — nothing wrong with that for the most part — to the exclusion of many new and emerging ways of learning about things — and I think there’s plenty wrong with that. It may be that a better word than “unauthentic” would be “disingenuous”. We pretend we know less than we do about what would make an effective and saturated learning environment for our students.

I stand by my belief that social networks can create authentic learning experiences and have the potential of creating authentic audiences for our children. Schools currently are not set up to do this well. We fear change. We fear technology. We fear connecting to people outside of our communities. We fear letting students take charge of their own learning.

Students are more connected, more wise, and eager to learn than we often give them credit. Yet, we reject their learned communities, their ways of knowing and their existing knowledge. Instead, we try our best to force their adaptation to a world that no longer exists. While the term “authentic” may be problematic or trendy, or could be labeled edspeak, it is the word I used at the time, in the moment of writing that article. This word led to your reaction, your message to me, my appeal to my social network, and to this written blog post.

If this shared process is not an authentic or genuine experience, what label would you give it?

The Anti-Connectivist?

This was recorded last June, but it is new to me. There are actually three separate videos of the same event, along with some materials this “crazy lady” was handing out.

At the local AT&T Store in Santa Barbara this crazy lady came up to us and described a conspiracy that the iPhone is going to destroy our minds.

Part 2, Part 3.

It is a bit strange to watch this as there was something a bit too familiar. In my mind, I edited out the fantastical stories of aliens and conspiracy theories, and somehow I was reminded of a couple of teachers I have worked with over the years. I believe that critique is a fundamental piece when using/adopting any technology. However, critique combined with ignorance can lead to unhealthy paranoia.

Freeluminate

As mentioned previously, I have been using Ustream and Camtwist to mediate my Wednesday night sessions of EC&I 831. In combination with Skype conferencing, you can perform many of the useful functions of the very pricy Elluminate.

What you can do:
– Deliver video and audio via webcam (or other video camera).
– Broadcast timed or manual slideshows.
– Broadcast video files and Flickr sets.
– Broadcast your entire desktop or select pieces.
– Use IRC chat.

What’s missing?:
– Higher quality video broadcasts, web tours, and larger resolution presentations.
– Hands-up features or ways to identify who will communicate next.
– Built-in, “real” screencasting.
– Privacy/password protection.
– Ease of setup for instructors.

We have been using Elluminate on Tuesdays and the Ustream solution on Wednesdays. Elluminate is a stable, dependable tool. However, seeing that many free tools are now available which do many of the things that Ustream can, Elluminate will eventually need to change their pricing structure. To me, their licensing costs are simply outrageous.

The solution I have mentioned is not for everyone. I do not expect everyone to take to it as easily and with as much enthusiasm as I have. However, for those eager to try/learning something new, webcasting with these tools is a lot of fun. Let me know if you need any advice setting it up.

Also, I have put together a short screencast to show you the tools in action. Take a look.

Clarence Fisher Inspires ECI831

Clarence Fisher was our guest presenter in EC&I 831 this week. Clarence was incredibly inspiring and he helped us all better understand how geographical characteristics, particularly remoteness, is no longer a barrier to rich, global learning opportunities.

The recorded Elluminate session is available. The Ustream version is also available below.

Thanks so much Clarence for being a part of our learning experience. I know you have gained many new fans, and we look forward to learning more from you in the future.

THEBLOG WEEMADE

I just came across THEBLOG WEEMADE which is focused on”sharing the artwork and creativity of kids”.

Sample Art

Reasons I like the project:
– Simple interface, and quite easy to submit artwork.
– Moderated submissions (I know because I tried to submit).
– Keeps with my philosophy that student work and creativity should be shared and celebrated with/by others, and not held hostage in classrooms and on bulletin boards.
– A visual archive.
– The no-brainer, RSS.

What it is missing:
– I can’t seem to find any information on the project. Can anyone find an “about” page?
– Lack of visible, appropriate copyleft licenses (e.g., CC).

Neat project, and it wouldn’t take much to create your own version of this for the classroom.