I finally gave in to Twitter about 2 weeks ago. It is fun, certainly, and I'm getting pointers to interesting resources that I might not otherwise have found. I have yet to be convinced about its value in the classroom, or outside of the classroom, but I'm keeping an open mind.
Here's a post from Steve Wheeler at the University of Plymouth, giving his 10 top uses of Twitter for Teaching. He also has some links to other people who have used Twitter in their teaching.
Thursday, 12 March 2009
Wednesday, 11 March 2009
Mouthwash, vodka and some rice - LoTech solutions from Down Under
Some LoTech solutions and words of wisdom from Paul Boutin at the Sydney Morning Herald for those who have ever had to face the trauma of crashed hard drives, dirty disks or dropping a mobile phone into the toilet (this tip may be particularly relevant to those with children).
Read on here.
Read on here.
Tuesday, 10 March 2009
Behind the scenes - in plain English
Ever wondered how the Common Craft folk (...in plain English) produce their nifty little videos?
Saturday, 7 March 2009
twitter twitter tweet tweet
So many people are talking about it, it's probably now passing rapidly from being 'hip'. Hmm. However, twitter is fun and can actually be used for learning (if you use your imagination!).
Friday, 6 March 2009
tele-vision
Michael Wesch's twitter stream from the "Future of video" provides a link to an old archive movie explaining the wonderful new technology of television. It actually does a great job, but the inherent sexism (wait till the end) is an amazing social commentary.
Monday, 2 March 2009
One Laptop per Child device appears in NUI Galway
Just spotted! A laptop device from the "One Laptop per Child" project, was seen today in the Arts Millennium Building foyer in NUI Galway, just outside the CELT offices.
The owner - an overseas student - gave us a quick demo of the impressive device. He had purchased the laptop for his son, as part of their "Give One Get One" donation scheme at http://amazon.com/xo, which ended on the 31st of December. The device was small and light, with the green rabbit ears facilitating connection to the wifi network available on the ground floor. Three USB ports were visible on the side, along with the speakers, web camera and an SD card slot accessible when the screen was swivelled around. The screen also was adjustable to a backlight-off display setting, to reduce LCD power consumption.
Find out more about this amazing project directly from the OLPC initiative's website directly. As they say themselves, their aim is :
"To create educational opportunities for the world's poorest children by providing each child with a rugged, low-cost, low-power, connected laptop with content and software designed for collaborative, joyful, self-empowered learning. "
tweet, tweet
Gosh, is there anyone not talking about twitter these days? Seems to be all over the press. I guess the uber-geeks will have to look for something new to move onto, now that ordinary riff-raff like me are all a-twittter! Anyway, here's a little presentation at this year's TED (just a couple of weeks ago) from Evan Williams inventor of Blogger and Twitter (oh, and Odeo)......
Thursday, 26 February 2009
Free images!
Flickr Commons is beginning to grow and could end up being a great educational resource. The number of partners is growing
Monday, 23 February 2009
Neurotic, paranoid, delusional? Not me...
A remarkably sad reflection of the level of anti-government paranoia that's rife in the US is the success of this hoax YouTube video which pretends to explain why it is that the government is so keen on everyone switching from analogue to digital television....
Sunday, 22 February 2009
Making music with obsolete technologies
Wire up a Sinclair Spectrum, a dot-matrix printer, an old cassette player to a bank of hard disc drives and what do you get? Well, bizarrely a YouTube sensation, it would seem. A student at Glasgow School of Art did it as a project for one of his courses and it spread and has now been applauded by the band whose music it plays - Radiohead. Weird it is, remember on playback it takes a while for those old Spectrum programs to upload so be patient...
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