Pierce Learning 2.0

Discovery program for exploration and PLAY with new technologies and the social web. Then we’ll figure out how/if they fit in education….

Making it come to you…. April 23, 2008

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Okay – you all can tell me if you get tired of these videos but I think Common Craft does a nice job with giving quick, practical overviews of these technologies (and here’s their advice on how to survive Zombies).  And pay close attention because they are describing your task for this week!

Task #1: Watch the video
Task #2: Sign up for an account with Google Reader or Bloglines.  These are also called “news aggregators” — they collect the news you’re interested in and put it one place for you to read. 
Task #3: Subscribe to this blog and to all the blogs for this group (you can get these over on the right-hand corner and right-click to “copy” the link and paste it into your news aggregator of choice. 

Task #4: Check this at least once a day to see if people are posting anything new (which implies y’all be posting new stuff from time to time – hey, post about signing up for Google Reader or Bloglines — easy or hard?).

Next: We’ll widen our readership and add other blogs.  I have some to suggest and we’ll look at how to find them.  Then we’ll go to online photosharing!

Update: Here’s a recent post of someone comparing Bloglines and Google Reader….

 

Week Two – Dare to Blog! April 10, 2008

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The Common Craft Show creates great, brief videos explaining what some of these technologies are all about. Why are blogs such a big deal?

Activity #1: See what they say in this 3 minute video

 

Activity #2: Start your own blog!
Create your blog using Google’s Blogger.com or WordPress.com (two of the most well-known). After you’ve created your blog and written at least one post, reply-all to the last message I sent the group and tell us the address of your blog. The rest of us will check it out and leave comments. From now on, this is where you will “journal” your learning and tell us about the great stuff you’re learning or find. It’s time for the community to begin!

Blogs can be used for many different types of communication. I’ve used one to share my marathon training experience (several people in this group have read it!) and one for an international trip where it was fun to share our experience with friends and family. Many people use them professionally and they are among the most valuable I read. The library’s blog is to share updates on various items of interest — kind of like an ongoing newsletter.

Yours is starting out as a journal focused on this program. Write about what you’re discovering in the activities, things you notice in the news related to technology, etc.  But please write about anything else as well.  Please don’t feel pressure to write only really interesting things.  Tell us your new brand of toothpaste.  What cute thing did your daughter/dog/nephew recent do?  Have a picture?  Post it!  Don’t be shy!  Write early and write often!

Play around with the designs and widgets you can add to your blog.  Make it your own!

Activity#3: Read the different blogs that people in this group create. Leave them comments and encouragement!

NOTE:  Blogger is a Google product.  To create a blog with them or to leave a comment on a Blogger blog you’ll have to create a Google account.  That’s great cause we’re going to play with lots of Google stuff and you’ll need that (including iGoogle, my favorite thing ever) later.

NOTE #2: This blog is a WordPress blog (Honda).  My marathon blog linked above was a Blogger blog (Toyota).  They offer much of the same functionality and work in similar ways.  Doesn’t matter which one you pick.

Goodness there are a lot of exclaimations points in this post….(I resisted one right there)

 

Week One – Welcome! April 8, 2008

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I’m so glad to welcome you all to the second “Pierce Learning 2.0″ program! I’m going to be finding more about what drew you to this program but my basic assumption is that you’re interested in knowing more about the new technologies out there — both for your own information and because you’re curious about implications they might have for education and your teaching.

Here’s what I’m planning/promising to offer with this program:

  1. A fun exploration of the different technology tools. Because these many of these things are social in nature (that’s why they’re called “social networking” tools) I promise to interact in all of the tools I introduce and any others you find and want to try out.
  2. Support as you work through the exercises. We’re not going to meet as a group in person but I’ll absolutely make house calls or talk you through something on the phone. I also want this group to help each other out.
  3. To try and offer balance and options. You’ll notice that we’ll be playing a LOT with different Google products. They’re doing a lot of cool stuff. But there’s usually another (or many) other freely available technologies that will do the same or similar things. I don’t care which things you use — just that you try!

Here’s what I can’t promise:

  1. A linear experience — I’m going to do my best to create clear activities but there isn’t exactly a logical progression so at times it might be MESSY. That’s okay — that’s kind of what some of this stuff is about anyway — slightly organized chaos.
  2. Same experience for everyone — You will bring different experiences to this program. Some of you may be used to reading blogs and others may still be fuzzy on what a blog is. Some of you will LOVE the photo sharing tools and others will find wikis more exciting. You might think some of things we try have no immediate application to your life. That’s REALLY okay. You might never find a use for certain things — sometimes it really is enough to “get it” even if it doesn’t rock your world.
  3. To be an expert. I’m an enthusiast. But we’re not trying to become experts – just active amateurs.

Here’s what I want from you:

  1. Spirit of Adventure – jump in and try it all
  2. Interact with me and the other participants — that’s the fun of “social technologies”. This is really important!!!!!
  3. Keep up — I’m going to try and keep the activities realistic to our busy lives. I’ll probably have an activity or two that I’d like everyone to try as well as some “extra credit” activities for people with the time and interest to go further. It will be more fun if we’re all kind of doing the same stuff at the same time.
  4. Give me lots and lots of feedback – you guys are the guinea pigs of this program. Tell me along of the way if I’m giving you too much or too little to do. Tell me if I make too many assumptions about what I’m asking you to do (i.e. I ask you to send me a screen shot and you have no idea what that means). This way, it will be a successful program for you and an even better program this Spring!

Whew!!! That’s almost it for now!

Your First Task:
Make a “Comment” at the end of this post (see the green link for “Comments”?). Tell us why you’re interested in participating in this program — what you want to get out of this — or something fun you did over the break.