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How 2.0: Building a PLN, Part 2/4
from Academic Aesthetic September 22, 2008
Due to popular demand (2 people asked), here s part 2 of my 4 part series on PLNs. As before, I ve cross-posted it to two locations: Discovery Educator Network s Maryland Blog Teachers 2.0 Audio and text only this time, sorry - I ve been swamped.
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How 2(.0): Personal Learning Networks, 1/4
from Academic Aesthetic August 29, 2008
It occurs to me that I posted this here and here, but totally neglected to put it on my own site. Oh well. If you haven t seen my latest creation yet, here it is. I m hoping to record part 2 (or more, time permitting) this weekend.
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Academic Aesthetic 166: Audio vs Video
from Academic Aesthetic August 11, 2008
Warning: The following podcast contains words which, when placed in a particular order, can be used to convey ideas. People who are set in their ways should listen at their own discretion. So this weekend I actually got caught up on my audio podcasts. This was no small achievement, as I had several gigabytes of downloaded but unplayed podcasts on my hard drive before I went to the DEN National Institute, and while there I didn t really listen to any of them until after I got back home. That being said, I still have 43 video podcasts waiting for me to watch them. There was a time when video podcasting was unheard of, due to a combination of bandwidth, storage, and equipment costs. Times have changed since then, and while audio podcasts still outnumber their video cousins, there seem to be a lot more .mp4 files showing up in my podcatcher these days. Unfortunately for me, my method of experiencing these podcasts hasn t changed much at all. I mostly play them when I m in the car, playing video games, doing dishes, researching art lessons, folding laundry, and playing video games - you know, activities where my eyes are required to be actively engaged in something other than watching video. It s this ability to multi-task that drew me in part to podcasting in the first place. But with video - good video - your attention is demanded. You might still be able to multi-task, but as you can t look at two things as well as one you ll always be missing something. And that s my inspiration for this episode - a comparison of the pros and cons of video and audio formats. Cost Audio podcasts have a much lower entry cost, both for creating them and carrying them on portable devices. I can spend $50 or less and get a half decent mp3 player, but it won t do video at that price. Add to that the fact that all I need is a phone to record an episode and I don t even need a computer with a working microphone to get started. Video podcasts have gotten cheaper over the years (due in no small part to the iPod s video capabilities and competitors desire to give more value for a lower price), with portable video players selling for $100 or less. Recording equipment is coming down in price too, with decent digital video cameras selling for $200 or less. Digital still cameras are actually able to record half decent video nowadays, and let s face it, lots of laptops have built in cameras so you might not even have to buy anything new at all. Work Load Audio is, in my opinion, easier to edit than video. A lot easier. I can very easily remove hums, haws, ers, ums, yawns, and so on without the listener ever knowing those things were in there, provided there are no visual cues. When I cut something out of video using the same process, you notice. Yes, there are ways to cover these things up, but they re not as simple to do as the tried and true select, delete, and move on method of editing audio. Of course I suppose you could always go with the I don t edit my podcasts method that some people have adopted, but I m not willing to go there yet. Multi-Tasking I ve already covered this a little bit. When recording or listening to audio, it s very easy to be doing something else at the same time. With video this is only possible if you don t care much for at least one of the things that s demanding your attention, and I for one don t want to put the extra work into a video podcast if no one s going to watch it. Wow, I m really hammering the video format in this episode, aren t I? With all of these drawbacks, is there any reason to choose video over audio? You bet there is! Multiple Learning Styles Using an audio only format appeals the most to people who learn that way, but some of us (myself included) are visual thinkers. We can still digest information by hearing it, but it s so much easier if you show us as well. And by show, I mean it. Talking heads add very little to a presentation, but you can still insert slides from a PowerPoint, images of examples, and the like to keep your viewer s interests. It s true that many of the video podcasts I ve made myself had that very problem (even if the times I waxed theatric helped a little bit), but I eventually came to realize that my audience wasn t getting much more out of it through the video I was including. That s why I m back to audio only for the most part, saving video for special occasions. I think the only reason I got away with what I was doing was because video podcasts were still somewhat new at the time, and the wow, this is new! factor gave me a bit of an edge. The problem is, newness doesn t last. Now there are people out there that are doing it right. If you ever get a chance to see one of Lawrence Lessig s presentations you ll see what I mean. They re simple, true, but every slide reinforces the message he s trying to convey. A recent presentation on the culture of YouTube (found via Will Richardson) would make another excellent, if a bit long, video podcast. There s a lot of talking heads in it, but the scenes are varied, mixed with images and video from a variety of sources, and even the inserted still images move across the screen in a way to support his message.
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Academic Aesthetic 165: Twitter vs Plurk
from Academic Aesthetic August 06, 2008
Warning: If you re sick of hearing about micro-blogs like Twitter, Pownce, Jaiku, and Plurk, today s podcast might not be for you. Those of you who ve been listening for a while (at least since show 128) may recall how enthusiastic I was over a website called Twitter. I found micro-blogging to be incredibly addictive in spite of its 140 character limit because the conversations were worthwhile. I quickly established a PLN (or Personal Learning Network) of fellow educators and thoroughly enjoyed the learning (and joking around) that ensued. Then Jaiku came along, and I hoped with all my heart that the people in my PLN would all jump ship and move over to there. Alas, while some did, most didn t bother, so I eventually abandoned Jaiku and reluctantly returned to Twitter. Fast forward to the creation of Pownce, and history repeats itself. I loved Pownce for many reasons, most of which I won t go over here. It s coolest feature however was the ability to have threaded conversations. Reading through the posts of everyone I m following on Twitter is like standing in the middle of a crowded room. You hear snippets, but not always a complete conversation. Ok, usually not. The problem was while I would often see people responding to other Twitter-ers, I wouldn t see what was being responded to unless I was also following that other person. Through the creative use of putting @ in front of user names I could find that individual, but if they were prolific with their tweets then it would still be hard to follow the conversation. And remember, it was conversations that made Twitter cool in the first place. The best way to solve this seemed to be following everyone that everyone else in my PLN followed, but there is a physical and mental limit to how many people I can follow so I merely replaced one problem with another. I still think Pownce is among the best micro-blog formats out there, but the only times my PLN moved over there were when Twitter was down. Granted, that meant they were there a lot, but never to stay. Most conversations on Pownce could be summarized as follows: Oh, Twitter s down again. Is Twitter up yet? No. It s so annoying that it s down so often. I know! I m about ready to - hey, it s back up! And that s the last I would see of them on Pownce until the the next Twitter outage. So once again, I abandoned a better service for Twitter. As much as I liked Pownce, I had to stay with my PLN. And then came Plurk. Plurk has a few annoying things about it, most notably a lack of text messaging support and a right-to-left scrolling timeline, but every post can receive threaded responses so my main problem with Twitter is already solved. Plurk also has something called karma. This has nothing to do with reincarnation, it s simply a score for how well you re interacting with others. I m not too certain about the algorithm used, but I do know that your score goes up more for posting only a few plurks that generate responses from others than it does from posting 1,000 plurks and getting few, if any, responses. Your karma can go up as you gain followers, but the method I ve seen on Twitter of going through and following hundreds of people in an attempt to get them to follow you in return will actually hurt your score. That s something cool that I didn t expect to see in a micro-blog. In my opinion one of the cancers of Web 2.0 sites has been the large number of people who treat it as simply a game where whomever has the most followers wins. I d first heard of this happening on MySpace when a friend complained that her brother had more friends than she did, even though he didn t really know most of them and she knew all of hers. (I think she wanted me to create an account so her score would go up by one I still didn t.) I ve since seen this problem on Facebook, Twitter, Jaiku, Youtube, and even to a limited extent on Pownce. But I ve yet to se it on Plurk. They ve essentially replaced one score, your number of followers, with another score, karma. There are still ways to game the system, I m sure, but I m not getting 20 friend requests a day from people who are already following over 1,000 others on this service, and I like it better that way. (I often block those people when I see them on Twitter.) On top of that, Plurk s karma score encourages more meaningful conversation than Twitter did. Posts itemizing everything you re doing from minute to minute can actually lower your score, as you won t get many responses to Hey, I just made some hashbrowns. Plurk also has something else: Steve Dembo. Steve s taken a liking to Plurk himself, and as a result many of those in my PLN have either made the switch or are now active in both. My one reason for staying on Twitter is gone. If I check only Plurk I feel that I have a sufficiently large and knowledgeable PLN. Or do I? There are enough people who haven t made the switch to make me wonder, so I did a little three part assessment of my PLNs on both services. Using Ping.fm I posted to both sites simultaneously, setting up a series of hoops to jump through. Round 1: Is this thing on? This was simply to test the waters to see who was not only listening, but willing to respond. I wasn t too surprised that my first response came from someone on Twitter - after all, I have more followers there, so at any given time it s more likely that someone s loading their Twitter client right after I ve posted something. What Twitter didn t have was staying power. Responses there tapered off after only 6 responses out of 273 followers. Plurk, on the other hand, had 18 different people respond out of a much smaller pool of 68 followers, some of them responding more than once. These numbers included some people who were unbiased and used both services, and therefore responded using both services. It should be noted that when I posted the round 1 results, at least two people on Twitter complained and more than one person on Plurk thought the result was very unexpected. Round 1 Winner: Plurk Round 2: I have a question. (a: Work b: Play) One of the reasons for having a PLN is to use it as a resource when looking for answers. With that in mind, I asked two questions. The first one asked for useful online tutorials for the free, open source Photoshop replacement known as GIMP. Responses were limited to one on each side, but the one from Twitter was to a page that listed multiple tutorial sites, including the one that the Plurk responder provided. My second question was for people to waste my time by letting me know what their favorite web based games were. Chris Craft posted a creative game involving Google searches on Twitter, but on Plurk the same question got me two very well designed Flash games and one reference to building up one s karma score. Oh yeah, and someone complaining that after they read the answers they wasted some of their own time playing those games. On top of that the conversation in that thread continued on Plurk even after I posted the results, hammering in the solid win for Plurk. Round 2 Winner: Tie (a: Twitter, b: Plurk) Round 3: Convince me. For the third and final round I simply asked for people to tell me why their micro-blog of choice was better. I received just one answer on Twitter, though it was concerning Twitter s compatibility with text messaging services so it was a darned good argument. On Plurk I had several responses, ranging from short and sweet to links to full fledged blog posts on the subject. Round 3 Winner: Plurk So there you go, my take on the micro-blog battleground. I don t expect Twitter to go away ay time soon, but apparently I m getting a lot more out of Plurk than Twitter these days. And hey, whether or not you agree with my somewhat subjective results, I d love to hear your opinion in 140 characters or more. You could always leave a comment here, but I d much rather see you write your own blog post or record your own podcast on the subject. If you link back to me when you post it, I ll be sure to see it when I search Technorati or Google.
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Academic Aesthetic 164: DEN NI 08
from Academic Aesthetic July 24, 2008
Academic Aesthetic 164: DEN NI 08 In today s show I interview a bunch of people here at the Discovery Educator Network National Institute for 2008. (I decided to not put the full name in the title.) See how many faces you can recognize. Also, my voice is giving out and I feel sick. Yay for conferences!
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Academic Aesthetic 163: Communication
from Academic Aesthetic July 15, 2008
The following was written back in June, but I ve been sitting on it until now because I wanted to be able to take a step back and look at my writing first before posting. One would think that sleeping until noon would be one of life s simple pleasures afforded to teachers during the summer months. While I ve nothing against prolonged inspection of the backs of my eyelids, I m still dragging myself out of bed at 5:30 AM at least three days a week to help my wife get ready for dialysis. I won t go into any great detail on her medical condition here (that s a subject for a different podcast), but it does leave me with several hours of alone time while she goes through the procedure. On days when I drive her to the dialysis center, gas prices are high enough for it to not make sense for me to drive home and back - making my period of solitude also one where I lack any ability to contact the internet. (UPDATE: I ve since purchased a BlackBerry Curve, so now my addiction to the internet has reached the next level.) Now granted, I ve been incredibly lax in posting things on this site. I could go through lots of excuses, but the one I think I ll stick with is that it s a lot harder for me to do one of these entries when I m not online, even though I feel most inspired when I can t get online. Usually when I m writing out my scripts I ll have three or four tabs open for reference purposes. Either I m responding to someone else s blog post, or linking to another site that further explains a concept, or even looking for just the right picture to insert into the entry. I can t do any of these things without the internet at my fingertips. But here I am in my car, in just such a situation. I can do whatever I want, so long as I only use the software and files in my little magic box. Cloud computing? Ha! That s no good to me here. This very much reminds me of a job interview I went to a few weeks ago. The position was for teaching technology to students and teachers in a Pre-K through 5th grade school, something that on the surface is really right up my alley. Still, I went in with more questions for them than they had for me. And everything I encountered made it look like a dream job come true. The school was fairly new, so there weren t any old computers on the verge of breaking down. The computer lab, the ceiling mounted LCD projectors in every class, the three (THREE!) mobile labs that teachers actively fought over, the school-wide wi-fi, everything about it looked awesome. Everything, until near the end of my visit when I started asking about wikis, blogs, and podcasts. Oh, they don t do those. In fact, anything that remotely resembles a blog or wiki is actively blocked. The school administration was very forward thinking, but the district had adopted a walled garden approach that would have prevented me from visiting even my own website from school. Contrast this with my current employer, which isn t throwing as much cash into tech programs but is actively encouraging teachers to use resources available to them on the internet - including workshops on blogging, podcasting, and wikiing. Wikiing? Is that a word? Nevermind. Long story short(er), I m not pursuing the job. I only went to the interview because it sprung up at the last moment, and I felt I needed to dust the cobwebs off of the old portfolio. With the way technology is advancing, and the skills that I see successful people using right now, I feel I could do more to prepare kids for the real world with a lab of salvaged computers running linux and my current employer s filtering policy than all the high tech gadgetry in the world but no way to use it properly. Because while the tech is cool, it s really not about the tech. It s about communication. It s about collaboration. And it s about teaching students how to use these things responsibly, because locking kids in their rooms for fear that they ll go to the mall and something scary will happen will not prepare them for when they finally move out and go there themselves. Instead, we should take them there, hold their hands at first, and show them how to react in that environment. Anything else is a disservice to the generation that will be running our nursing homes when we retire.
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Academic Aesthetic 162: Corporate Shill
from Academic Aesthetic July 11, 2008
Today s episode is brought to you by Sound Waves™ announcer voice That s right, in today s modern world there are many kind of waves, but only Sound Waves™ are capable of taking this podcast and transferring the information from your speakers to your ears in a format that you, the listener, can comprehend. Sound Waves™: helping you hear quality audio and this show, too. /announcer voice wait a minute, who wrote this ad, anyway? But seriously, lately I ve been thinking a bit about commercialization on educational websites. It s a topic I ve visited before, though I think it bears revisiting. I don t know exactly why I ve been thinking about it recently. It might be because of some recent large purchases I ve made. It might be because sites like Tips From The Top Floor and Twit.tv are doing pretty well with ads in their podcasts. Perhaps it s because Professor Bob from the History According to Bob podcast is able to sell CDs of things he originally gave away for free on his website, and even the great and powerful David Warlick and Will Richardson sell their books and/or ask for donations to their Starbucks cards on their websites. Maybe its because sites like Makezine.com, Craftzine.com, and DiscoveryEducatorNetwork.com are essentially advertising models for their parent companies - though I ll be the first to tell you that they re brilliant ad models because they draw in visitors with high quality content that makes them worth visiting repeatedly. Or perhaps it s because of some emails I ve seen over the past few months. You may have gotten them too, in fact. I represent [insert company name here] and we d like to pay you to blog about [insert product name here]. We re going to assume that [insert product name here] fits with the general theme of your website because you re a blogger and right now you re probably just happy that someone, anyone, has managed to find your little corner of the internet. We re certain that you ll be satisfied with the meager amount of shiny coins in exchange for linking to us repeatedly in your blog post and thus increasing our ranking on Google, even though it will most likely destroy your integrity and make you lose the small collection of loyal readers you ve worked so hard to build over the years. Well, they went something like that, at least. I might not have remembered the emails word for word, but I think that s an unbiased representation of what they said. You might even think that this posting would discourage future offers of a similar nature, but I don t think those people actually read the blogs they contact so I m out of luck, there. I ve also gotten at least one offer from someone who wanted to be a guest blogger on my site. It was essentially very much like the previous email, except she offered to take the hard job of writing the post that would destroy my reader base off of my hands. Not all emails from businesses were that bad, however. I ve received at least one offer to sponsor my podcast on a repeated basis with a short audio ad placed in each show, which I politely turned down because while the product was educational in nature I hadn t used it myself and therefore felt uncomfortable promoting it. I even went so far as to hand out some books at this year s MICCA conference, but only because after looking through them I felt they were useful resources. The copies they provided for me to keep as payment were also given away, but that was because I already knew a lot about the subject mater already. I ve toyed now and again with turning my website into a moneymaker, but this was mostly through the addition of Google Ads - and those tend to mostly work on the kind of people who aren t likely to visit this website. Over the years they ve been on and off of the site, but in all that time I still haven t earned enough for them to cut me a single check. To be perfectly honest, even if they did pay me all of my earnings right now it would be a drop in the bucket compared to what I ve paid for domain name registration, hosting (my hosting is cheap, but not free), and equipment. I ve also included Amazon affiliate links in posts from time to time, but those have made even less revenue than the Google Ads - mainly because I ve only ever done that for products I ve owned, and zero minus the price of said products equals a negative number. I m not saying this to complain, mind you, but to prove a point that I m not blogging or podcasting for the money. If I was, then I would have quit a long time ago. I do this because it s fun, and I enjoy it when I can become part of a conversation that is truly global in nature. And then the bills come in, and I begin to think about how I can supplement my teacher s salary. So, (and I hate to admit this,) I m going to try a little revenue building experiment. No, I m not going to be embedding ads in every podcast. Nor will I be placing flash banners where you get to shoot chickens or pick the next president all over the site either. I m going to try something a little more low key than that. On my site I m creating a new page. That page will have links to things where if you buy them I might get a buck or two sent my way. Maybe. I think. If you don t like seeing ads on education themed sites, then don t go to that page. If you don t mind, and throwing me a bone is something you might consider doing, well then you can go and check it out. My intention is to only become a corporate shill for products I ve owned/used and enjoyed myself, so while I may be destroying my integrity here it shouldn t burn quite so bad. And who knows - maybe I ll end up writing a book and promoting it there, eventually retiring from teaching to run around the world giving lectures and working as a freelance consultant. or, maybe I ll just make enough to pay some of my server costs.
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Academic Aesthetic 160: Flickr Video
from Academic Aesthetic May 13, 2008
Wow, 160 that s almost a milestone, isn t it? I suppose I should take the time to try out something new then, huh? In any case, here s a quick rundown on my opinions concerning Flickr s decision to host videos: Flickr s video hosting is to most online videos as Twitter is to most blog posts. 90 seconds is very short. If you edit well, 90 seconds can be enough. (Remember, most commercials are 60 seconds or less.) The first time I tried to cut one of my ramblings down to a minute and a half, it wasn t easy. I say in the video that I cut 10 minutes of footage out to make it fit. I was exaggerating. It wasn t more than 8 minutes. Honest. Still, editing out everything except the core points took much longer than I thought it would. Flickr Video ≠ YouTube Flickr Video = Neat little toy You can supposedly embed the videos as easily as the photos. Supposedly, because copy/pasting the provided HTML code did nothing but place a blank, black box in this blog entry.
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NOBODIES #124: COCK FIGHT
from Nobodies Podcast May 12, 2008
SHOW SUMMARY: YOU CAN ONLY IMAGINE WITH A TITLE LIKE THAT! CALL US@ 1-229-299-LIMA, COMMENT @ www.nobodiespodcast.com , EMAIL US AT nobodies37@yahoo.com Forums: http://www.freepowerboards.com/nobodies/index.php ~Peace Out~ Shows Mentioned: Eric Tomorrow - www.mediocreshow.com Will - http://erraticast.libsyn.com/ Little Flurry
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Teachers 2.0 Podcast: Podcasts, a Wiki, and Teacher Communities
from Academic Aesthetic May 03, 2008
I have a new podcast up over at Teachers 2.0. You might want to check it out if you re a Teachers 2.0 follower OR happen to like things like Second Life or World of Warcraft. To be honest, I was inspired to record this (or at least the third part of the podcast) after finding out that there s more than one DEN member that plays Warcraft. We have edu-groups on Facebook, Second Life, and almost everywhere else, so why not Warcraft? (Or any other online environment you happen to like.) Comments, of course, are welcome.
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Academic Aesthetic 159: Podcasting Tips and Tricks
from Academic Aesthetic May 01, 2008
I promised to have this uploaded before I crashed for the night - looks like I got to keep my promise. This is the audio from my presentation at this year s MICCA conference. Forgive me if I keep things brief as I m quite wiped by the experience of these past two days. A pdf version of my PowerPoint, including a special bonus slide at the end, is available here. Yes, I really do mention David Warlick that often. It s only because he does so much to help educators. As I explain in the intro, I was able to use Audacity to remove the background noise but not the slight echo. It annoyed me at first but I got used to it I think. I may be wrong about the new version of Audacity having LAME built in, but like I say in the podcast I do prefer iTunes for encoding my mp3 files. I also over planned, and had very little time to do practical demonstrations. Perhaps next time I ll focus on one tool? We ll see. I ve said this a lot, but the wiki is still here. Edits are still encouraged. I m tired. Goodnight.
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NOBODIES #123 BOY BANDS
from Nobodies Podcast April 21, 2008
Show Summary: Spank me, What show is this? The nice vote, the boy band debate, funeral vultures, myth busters, mailing a meat baby, kelli-ism's, big loser challenge. CALL US@ 1-229-299-LIMA, COMMENT @ www.nobodiespodcast.com , EMAIL US AT nobodies37@yahoo.com Shows Mentioned: Eric Tomorrow - www.mediocreshow.com Vomitus Prime - www.vomitusprime.com Peg Leg Pete - http://thelittledonkeyshow.libsyn.com/ Kari Nintendo Freak - http://nocent.podshow.com Eric Tomorrow - www.mediocreshow.com Nobilis - http://storiesonline.net/auth/nobilisLittle Flurry
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Academic Aesthetic 157
from Academic Aesthetic April 08, 2008
In this podcast I m looking for a few good podcasters. I ll be presenting a session at MICCA called Podcasting Tips and Tricks. As I ve done before (*cough* Edublogging 101 *cough*), I ve created a wiki rather than print out a bunch of dead tree copies. I think I have it fleshed out enough for a 45 minute presentation, but it could always use more work - that s where you come in. If you re someone who s learned something while creating podcasts, or even if you just know of a good resource or how-to guide, why not go over to my wiki and add it in? Even if you do nothing more than add a link to someone else s wiki on podcasting, it ll still be a big help.
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Academic Aesthetic 156
from Academic Aesthetic April 03, 2008
I ve been inspired! More on the inspiration later, but first two things: Yesterday on a whim (since it has nothing to do with my usual ed/tech/art ramblings) I posted a blog entry that included 20 things about myself but one of them was a lie. I invited readers to guess which one is false, and at the time I m writing this 4 people have made their guesses but no one s gotten it right, yet. If you feel like playing along, you can go here. Next up, I m cross-posting this on Teachers 2.0 strictly for item three on today s agenda. Teachers 2.0 is a much larger community, as evidenced in more than one significant way, and I really want to hear people s feedback. You can comment here or there, although to be honest more people might read your response if you post it there. -=-=-=-=- Ok, on to the heart of today s episode. In the past I ve expressed mixed feelings about high stakes standardized testing. I feel that our goal as educators should be to prepare students to be successful in the real world, and that teaching to the test (which seems to be an inevitable outcome of this kind of assessment) does not do this - especially if and when the test itself is not assessing skills that will be required in the real world. People in the U.S. reading this now may immediately think of NCLB, but I was teaching before that legislation passed I recall high stakes assessment being disproportionately emphasized back then, too. Now in the past every time I expressed this opinion, I added that while I dislike tests like this I feel I can t complain too much because it s difficult to think of another way to compare schools from year to year across a district, county, or nation without some sort of one-size-fits-all non-subjective bar with which we can measure student achievement. But the other day, I put two and two together. What s our goal again? To prepare students for the real world. So how should we assess them? How about by looking at how they perform in the real world, or at least in response to real world situations. What if, instead of subjecting our students to tests that stress out everyone involved, we created some form of rubric to evaluate how they do after they stop calling themselves students? The rubric could include things like salary, job satisfaction, and any one of a number of variables that we apply to ourselves when we ask ourselves if we think we ve been successful. Of course if we adopted this system there would still be some problems. True assessment would not be able to be measured until they were no longer our students, thus keeping us from correcting discrepancies that a well written standardized test may have caught. Maybe a combination of the two? I don t know. I m not saying this is the perfect solution. I m not even saying I ve thought this completely through yet, but it is something I ve been mulling over, and I d love to hear your opinion on the whole thing. What have I overlooked? Why would or wouldn t this type of assessment be a good idea? If it was your job to create the real life rubric, what would be the core variables worth measuring? Inquiring minds want to know.
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Academic Aesthetic 155
from Academic Aesthetic March 17, 2008
Today s show shares some more links, for your listening enjoyment. The Podcasting wikis that were sent to me were great, but not quite what Ineed for my presentation. I won t be reinventing the wheel so much as changing the circumference and tread, I think. Want to make a quick paper CD case? I see this as an art lesson waiting to happen. This story led me to this story. I think it strikes home more for me because I have been stopped by security while taking photos. I lucked out though - the security guard was also an amateur photographer. This Wired article has me questioning the parameters of the study they re discussing. Teachers 2.0 is still looking for a few (more) good writers. Care to join us?
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Academic Aesthetic 154
from Academic Aesthetic March 14, 2008
Three in one week! Am I back on the ball again? We ll see. The new Teachers 2.0 site is looking for a few good writers - ones willing to post somewhat regularly. Still looking for good wikis about podcasting, although suggestions have started to roll in garageflowers suggested this wiki, which is good but not quite what I m looking for. njtechteacher has a large list of podcasting links. That list of links includes this podcasting omnibus by Wes Fryer - great, but too much for my presentation. Bud the Teacher is taking a break from Twitter. So far, so good.
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Academic Aesthetic 153
from Academic Aesthetic March 12, 2008
This episode is a call for help! (No, not THAT call for help ) As I announced on Pownce, this will be my third consecutive year as a presenter at MICCA. In the past I ve used wikis as my handouts, but I m not sure I should create a new one from scratch if there s already a definitive one out there that s ready for use. So my question to you is this: What are some of the better podcasting wikis out there, and should I use one of those for my presentation or make my own? I m leaning away from reinventing the wheel, but I won t mind building one from the ground up if the wikis that exist don t meet my needs. Let me know what you think.
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NOBODIES #120 - Dog Babies
from Nobodies Podcast March 10, 2008
Show Summary: **I fixed the low volume!!** Finals are finally over!!!, Jason is a dog baby killer, voicemails, recycling humans, venting about work, Q CALL US@ 1-229-299-LIMA, COMMENT @ www.nobodiespodcast.com , EMAIL US AT nobodies37@yahoo.com VISIT THE FORUMS AT http://nobodies.forumsplace.com Peace Out Shows Mentioned: Kari Nintendo Freak - http://nocent.podshow.com Brian Polensky - http://www.yamcast.com/ Will - http://erraticast.libsyn.com/ Eric Tomorrow - www.mediocreshow.com Nobilis - http://storiesonline.net/auth/nobilisLittle Flurry Peg Leg Pete - http://thelittledonkeyshow.libsyn.com/ Jon www.totaltalknonsense.com/
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Academic Aesthetic 152
from Academic Aesthetic March 10, 2008
Just audio this time. I have a dentist s appointment tomorrow and I m afraid that I will be unable to speak at all afterwards, or at least not well since my face may or may not be numb. Aaaaaaaaaaaanyway, today s cast shares three links, all taken from this list of del.icio.us links that include the tag teachers20. (The tag was created so that the links could show up automatically in the Teachers2.0 Twitter feed, which is a lot more popular than I am. My creation has usurped me! . oh well. We also have a Ning site, if you re into that.) How to add Chroma key (green screen effects) to a movie for FREE! The Truth About Autism: Scientists Reconsider What They Think They Know Liam s Pictures from Old Books (Thanks, lindiop)
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Academic Aesthetic 151: Old New Media
from Academic Aesthetic February 26, 2008
This is my first podcast recorded MOSTLY using Apple s Photo Booth, a program that can record still pictures or video. It was never actually intended for podcast creation, as I found out the hard way. As much as I loved playing with the software, half the clips I recorded had no audio whatsoever. This phenomenon was totally random, so towards the end I was resorting to recording short bursts and then immediately checking to see how it turned out. Photo Booth may be a fun toy, but from now on I think I ll be using other software for my podcasting needs. Oh, and today s episode has me rambling on about how people are using Twitter and its clones in lieu of recording podcasts and posting blogs. I don t think this is a bad thing, since any message that can be summarized in 140 characters should be presented that way - short, sweet, and to the point. However not every idea can be made so brief, as evidenced here. I think Twitter is a good thing because that means that we can expect blog entries to be reserved for more complex ideas, while posts that show off a new website or tell us what you had to eat can be reserved for another feed entirely.
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Show 41: Smart in Either Sex
from Into Your Head - Ireland's Silliest Online Radio Show January 26, 2008
NEW OR SILENT LISTENER? If we've never heard from you, please take a few seconds let us know you're listening! It's so much easier to keep producing this stuff when we get a little feedback and listener interaction! You can visit IntoYourHead.com to post in our forum or leave on online voicemail, or drop us an e-mail at IntoYourHead.com Watch our new film - "Congratulations - you've found our website" - right now on the home page of our website at http://IntoYourHead.com! Anyhoo, welcome to the show notes for Into Your Head number 41. TONIGHT'S TOPICS INCLUDE Explaining what a word is, The finest drink known to man, Not real pee, A bit behind about the stocks, Higher than my feet, Weight distribution below the waist, Ologies and Ostics, Syllable snobbery, Two sided spheres, Faulty physics in luminous clocks, Your martyrical editor, When does it stop being "laundry"?, Smart in either sex, Notes about an exclamation, Ignoring gravity, There's no tomorrow, Commuting from the post office, Environmentally friendly urination, How to use this programme, Using extra brain cells, Lord Alfred Tenysson's mess up, Acting on lack of impulse, Unable to present Dilbert, Beeville to Burmese, The A:B divide, Reading about books, The obsceneties of Baptise Vincent Something, Drawing Pontius Pilot as a witch, Two inaccurate "Bowling Greens", Gaffers at the forefront, Contingency plan for cat songs, Therapy in the bathroom, Stairs symmetry isn't fun, Drinking water for the hell of it, A fact about fiction, Listener input in my kitchen, Fake interaction with a dishwasher, Slow porn users. ALSO: Doctress Joanne O'Carroll has another fine lecture for the Into Your Head Adult Learning Programme, including a revolutionary new piano-based concept for road design, and Neal's oldest bear Bowsy brings us his first ever no holds barred audio column, channeled through Joanne. STALK US! lET US KNOW YOU'RE LISTENING Record an online voicemail, post in the guestbook, e-mail us, contribute - Just go to INTOYOURHEAD.COM and click on the "Stalk / Forum" button. Or e-mail us at studio@IntoYourHead.com All music composed on our Madplayer. Additional voices thanks to: Lockjaw (ThePodcastJunkie.com) and Dustin (TipYourHat.com) IntoYourHead.com
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Academic Aesthetic 150
from Academic Aesthetic January 11, 2008
So, here I am two weeks into the new year and I ve yet to get started on my new year s resolution. I thought I was getting ahead of the game by writing up some podcast scripts after Christmas, but now they seem kind of dated and, well, I can t find them. Oh, well. All things considered I have been quite busy. Those who follow my Twitter and Pownce accounts may have noticed I post almost nothing on the weekends - and with the exception of my planning days were I m constantly in front of my computer to fill out all sorts of paperwork, a lack of postings means I have a lot on my plate. But enough of that before this turns into an Oh, I have too much to do, I shouldn t even be recording this right now! podcast. What? It s too late for that? Feh. Moving on, I m really liking Pownce. For those of you not in the know, Pownce is very much like Twitter in that it s a micro-blog format. Both are designed to share small messages, links, and so on with others. Pownce goes further in regards to media sharing and organizing your friend lists. You can actually put, say, all of your friends who are art teachers into one group, math teachers in another, science teachers in another, family in another, and so on, and send links and messages only to those groups that would be interested in that subject. I m sure my sister, for example, doesn t really care about the highlights of last week s faculty meeting. This way, she wouldn t see it. Now Twitter s still in the running. The tools for embedding Twitter into web pages seem more robust than the ones for Pownce, and if you re a text messaging fanatic Twitter will win hands down. But for how I use it, I like Pownce a lot more. I loved it when I first got an invite to sign up, and I was reminded of how much I liked it a couple weekends ago when a huge chunk of the edublogosphere tried it out for a day at Steve Dembo s request. Alas, the following week most of them were all back on Twitter. A social network can have all the features in the world, but it s still nothing without a critical mass of members. Twitter has that, and except for an all-too-brief moment, Pownce doesn t. There are solutions, of course. Apps and websites that post to multiple networks, services that will pull RSS feeds into Twitter, but I m not happy with the apps and I ve already gotten complaints about my Pounce messages being cut short when they re cross posted to Twitter. I m still holding out for more people to make the switch to Pownce, but I know that, just like last time, before long I m going to end up staying where more of my network is rather than continue talking to an (almost) empty space. Social networks are sticky that way.
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