Archive for the ‘Kudos’ Category

J. H. House - Technology and Learning’s School Site of the Month

Monday, April 11th, 2005

 Imagine this! I had to read on Will’s blog today about J. H. House being selected as Technology and Learning’s School Site  of the month.

I didn’t know it and what’s worse is I think I have that magazine

somewhere around here or at home. It’s on a stack somewhere to read

once I complete numerous “to-do’s”. (I’d rather be blogging!)

Information overload plus work overload has been hot on my trail these

past few weeks.

It’s  a nice write-up about The Write Weblog and other blogs at the school. Susan

Brooks-Young points out how the school is doing such a good job sharing

information. That school is so special. I’m biased, of course, since I

used to teach there but it’s true that all the good things they are

doing may just be one of the best kept secrets in Georgia! J. H. House

has a great staff and truly wonderful students.  I can’t wait to

share this with the kids and the staff!

I’ve done blogging projects there for the past 3 years. This year it

really is getting in other hands. That’s the exciting part. Next year, Hillary Meeler (she also produces House Highlights

will be running the blogging projects and I will be moving to another

school.  I’ll probably touch base with the principal once a month

but it is a happy/sad occasion. It reminds me how I used to feel when a

school year ended and we sent our terrific fifth graders on to middle

school.

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Patrick’s Passionate Post

Friday, February 25th, 2005

Drum roll for…………………………

Mrs. Smith

Mrs. Roper

Sam DeVore

Nancy McKeand

Kim Peddle

Mr. Kuropatwa

Steve Dembo

Pat Street

Tim Merritt

Joyce Hooper

Many, many thanks for responding to Patrick’s passionate post about passing fifth grade. He has been out on a week long break from school. I can’t wait to see his face when he returns and reads all the encouraging responses. Ahhhhh, the wonder of weblogs! Just think, he has heard from 10 people already! A secretary, a PE teacher, an independent software developer, a teacher in an intensive English program in a small college in Louisiana, an elementary teacher from Minnesota, a Pre-Cal teacher, a director of technology in Chicago, an author, an educational technologist, and a principal. Wow! Now those are just titles, the real message is that behind those titles are people making a difference in the lives of others. (Through weblogs!!!!!) They took the time to comment from their own very unique perspectives to cheer along a very special student. I know Patrick and those words will be carried in his heart for a long time. Where else but weblogs could we get such a cross-section of caring & sharing?
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Yessenia gets her poem published!

Saturday, February 5th, 2005

    I wrote about this on The Write Weblog but I want to share this good news with even more people. Yessenia is one of the fifth grade students who is a part of our blooming webloggers group. She  submitted one of her poems to the Anthology of Poetry

and it has been accepted for publication! 

We are celebrating! We are so proud of her! Yessenia earned a page in

the 2005 edition of

Anthology of Poetry by Young Americans. She was recognized for having

one of the most creative entries. If you have a moment, hop over to her

blog and congratulate her!

Will’s Presentation on RSS

Tuesday, February 1st, 2005

Thanks to Sam DeVore

for setting me up on this site and for rescuing previous posts that

somehow had been lost on our anvil site at GSU. He is a “Manila”

miracle worker. I will now be blogging from this location. Please add

me to your Bloglines list. My RSS feed is :

http://anne2.teachesme.com/xml/rss.xml 

I have had on and off problems on Bloglines with my feed on the anvil

server. I don’t know exactly what the problem was but hopefully it will

be smooth sailing from here on out. We used to quote this phrase to our

kids, “Miss school, miss out!” That’s exactly how I felt when my feed

kept dropping off the radar.

Speaking of RSS, I spent an hour this morning listening to Will Richardson on Learning Times. It was an hour well spent!

It is fitting that I make my first post on my new site about Will Richardson of Web-logg Ed.

He has been my blogging mentor and friend. He is always willing to

share his learning and thoughts and we’re all the better for it!

Will presented yesterday to the Using Weblogs in ESL/EFL Classes group.

His topic was “What is RSS?” Will did a terrific job of introducing

and explaining how it can be used by educators. He talked about the

shift in how we think about information and how this great tool brings

content to the reader. You own it, in terms of how you use it. Will has

a gift of explaining technology in ways readers can understand. Let’s

see if I can do justice to a quick synopsis of what he said. It’s well

worth repeating!

Will commented on the fact that you have full control in RSS. It has two parts:

feeds - the content itself

aggregator - your mailbox

The usefulness of RSS is that you get content if there is something new

to read. You don’t have to travel to each site to check. The

information comes to you.

Next he explained how all you need to know is the address to the feed

and be aware that many other traditional media have created RSS feeds.

Will no longer buys newspapers. All he has to do is collect feeds and

he can create his own custom designed newspaper relevant to his

interests and needs.

He uses Bloglines, a web based aggregator that many other bloggers use,

too. It’s free, it’s easy to subscribe to and all you need to do is

provide an email account and you’re good to go. Will stated that this

has a big effect on how he consumes content. It takes him less time, he

has more content factored in with greater control. Will pointed out

that most websites have RSS feeds on their sites. It is usually a

little orange XML button that takes you to a page where you can find

the feed. When you click on the little orange button you will see a

page with jumbled coding. You don’t have to worry with that. Ignore it.

Just copy the URL and then go back to Bloglines, click the Add button

and paste the URL you copied into the line that says Subscribe. Easy,

huh?

I wanted to give this info for those of you who read my blog who have

just recently starting using Bloglines. It’s a great review. Now, Will

went on to explain how you can use search results via rss and news

search results via rss. Plus, how we all can now not only read what a

colleague writes but also what he reads through tools such as FURL and del.icio.us. You have to listen to his presentation. It’s posted at Learning times at:

http://home.learningtimes.net/learningtimes?go=679449

If you have a LearningTimes username

and password all you have to do is  login and access the

recording. If you are not a member it is easy to

register for free. Just go to http://www.LearningTimes.org

and click “Become a Member”.

Once inside the community area, you can follow this link to access

the recording:

http://home.learningtimes.net/learningtimes?go=679449    

Plus, Will has a RSS Quick Start Guide

on his site that you can download. So kudos to Will and a big thank you

for all you have contributed to the edublogging community.

Hillary Gets It!

Thursday, January 6th, 2005

I am so excited about getting some of the faculty at J. H. House  up and going on blogs this year.

Hillary, the instructional technology specialist, really gets blogging.

I mean REALLY gets it!  When you have a colleague who turns a

corner and understands the joy of blogging, the power of the learning

and also sees future possibilities….well, it doesn’t get much better

than that.  Hillary says Learning to Write is Learning to Think and I couldn’t agree more. This is a great read and if you haven’t added Hillary to your Bloglines list you need to. An excerpt from her blog:

However, the most difficult aspect of writing our students constantly

describe is not plagiarizing.  Why is this so difficult for our young

aspiring writers?  Well, it is just as difficult for me as it is for

them! Since the original author seems to say it so much better, it

seems logical for our students to use their words.  That is where

thinking comes in!  Learning to write is learning to think.  Although

it seems as though we have few original thoughts, we do have our own

original way of viewing things.  We must take into consideration

everything we have done up to this point in our life and use it in

shaping our thoughts.  Then we use those thoughts to analyze,

reject, embrace, and/or argue with the work of others in order to grow

intellectually.

Hillary is sure doing some good thinking and what’s really cool is that she is modeling that thinking for the kids.

And I’m starting to soar again…..
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I challenge you…..

Monday, December 13th, 2004

“Writing is just one area that weblogs can help improve when implemented

in the K-12 curriculum.  I challenge you to design a weblog to help in

other areas of the curriculum.” 

This challenge comes straight from Hillary Meeler of EduBlog Quest. I

love it! Hillary is the Instructional Technology Specialist from J. H.

House. I’ve written about her before. This is her first year in this

particular job and I have been impressed. She was with me this past

Friday at the inservice for the DeKalb teachers. She took notes while I

was talking. It’s so nice to have “jot notes” from sessions. The words

in red signify questions from the teachers in the audience. I got to

thinking about this and thought that this would be a great skill to

teach the kids. They don’t get many opportunities to do something like

this but it would be a good experience. It’s not easy to take notes but

it really helps in so many ways, not the least of which is  sharing it with others. This

DeKalb group began creating blogs on Blogger at the end of the session

and shared lots of good ideas they had for some other blogs they wanted

to create. We look forward to hearing more from them down the road.

Hillary is not only a good teacher and note-taker but she is busy

coming up with ideas for blogs.  She has created a nice new weblog

called House Highlights. It’s going to be an informative and upbeat blog about the happenings at House!  Hillary is making it happen!


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Using LiveJournal for Authentic Communication in EFL Classes

Monday, September 20th, 2004

Aaron has published another excellent article entitled “Using LiveJournal for Authentic Communication in EFL Classes.” He wrote it for the Internet TESL Journal and it describes how he used Livejournal in EFL classes. I like the way he provides a step-by-step guide of what he did. This is so helpful for others who are considering using blogs with their students. He breaks it down into the following manner:

  • Getting Started

  • Collecting Student URLs

  • Customizing Sites

  • Posting, Editing, and Commenting

  • Setting Interests

  • Finding Friends

  • Reading the Friends Page and Responding

  • Community Building

  • Assigning Homework

It is an excellent guide and could be used for all students. So get going! How could you miss with such a great guide?

Aaron points out the importance of the teacher making sure potentially interested readers commt to helping EFL learners. I responded to one group of his students. I am going to try to do more of that in the future. I know we all get swamped but if we all tried to do a little more in this area it could really make a difference. In fact, I need to go back to the student blogs and see if they are still blogging and pick back up on the conversation. That’s on my ‘to-do’ list.

Aaron also explains how using Bloglines to subscribe to student RSS feeds can save time and be very useful for the teacher.

Go read his entire article, get your students blogging and then write it up so we can all learn from each other.Thanks Aaron, for sharing your good work!


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As Fergus says, joy and more joy!

Wednesday, September 15th, 2004

Peter Ford points us to Rugby Playing Chris and Frankie & Fergus. They are his former students who are still blogging! That is so cool. I know my heart would be happy if I see some of my former elementary students blogging a little ways down the road. Kudos to Peter and his former students!
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Kudos to Bloglines!

Wednesday, July 7th, 2004

I’ve been waiting for the birthday surprise and it’s a whopper! I love the new look of Bloglines and they have added a lot of new features.  The clip blog feature is really cool!

From Bloglines:

Bloglines Clip Blogs
- The easiest way to create a blog
- Fully integrated with all your Bloglines news feeds
- One-click blogging from any Web page
- Subscribe to friends’ Clip Blogs and get notified of updates
- Simply click on the ‘My Blog’ tab to set up your Bloglines Clip Blog
- Best of all, your Clip Blog is completely free — just like the rest of Bloglines!

In addition, Saved Items have been renamed to Clippings, and you can easily move private, clipped items to your public blog and back again.

And oh how we’ve grown: Today Bloglines searches and indexes more than 80 million web articles and receives more than 5 million hits a day.

Then they say thank-you to us for making them a success. Well, I say a huge thank you to them for providing such a wonderful resource! Gotta go create my clip blog! Bloglines rocks!


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Happy Birthday Bloglines!

Thursday, July 1st, 2004

I started the morning checking Bloglines and saw this neat little graphic on their site.The first year has been great! Wow! Wonder what the surprise will be! What a difference they have made in the learning possiblilites for educators!  Accolades to Bloglines!  Thank you for this incredible free service!


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