Archive for the ‘Links’ Category

Why Johnny Won’t Post

Friday, August 29th, 2003

via <CIT INFOBITS>

WHY STUDENTS DON’T POST

“Why do some students resist participating in course discussion boards when they know their grade will suffer? How can students with polished social skills come across in online courses as uncooperative and unengaged, with short postings of little substance?” Tim Dotson (in “Why Johnny Won’t Post,” CONVERGE ONLINE, August 27, 2003) provides four categories for students’ failures to post:

logistical (time constraints, difficulty using the tool)

personal (student inhibitions, “discussion board fatigue”)

educational (inexperience with collaboration, inability to

write for the Web)

instructor-related (lack of instructor involvement, lack of

clear requirements for postings).

The author, Tim Dotson, goes on to say:

If students are motivated and capable, perhaps they just need more writing practice, using Web writing style. Web logs (”blogs”) can enhance writing skills. Tools to create this online “diary” are free and easy to use. Blog tools offer more functionality than the discussion board tools provided as part of a course management system, with easy inclusion of photos and other graphics without HTML knowledge. Blogs can be used as part of an online course: for writing practice, student reflection, interaction, resource posting, and a shared class “bulletin board.”

Then he asks this question:

Are your posting requirements carefully designed and pedagogically sound or just an afterthought?

And a quote:

“Students are accustomed to sharing space and time, not ideas, whereas online learning is exactly the opposite.”

In some ways this ties in with my previous post.  This type of discussion is still new and untread territory to many, even those who are pretty proficient with technology.  We need to keep thinking about ways to foster collaboration and sharing of ideas.

Web English Teacher Site

Tuesday, August 19th, 2003

Great link via Ray Schroeder of Educational Technology

Site of the Day: Web English Teacher - techLearning
Brief Description of the Site: Carla Beard thinks of her site as the faculty library or workroom on a global scale and it’s a real find for English and Language Arts teachers. Links include Advanced Placement, Book Reports, Children’s Literature, ESL, Grammar, Mechanics, and Usage, Journalism, Literature, Mythology, Phonics, Poetry, Reading, Shakespeare, Speech, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Writing, and more.


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Links, Mostly Political

Wednesday, August 6th, 2003

This link via elearnspace

(Fairly) New blog: HeadspaceJ - focus is on interaction design, learning, edu/tech. Only thing that is needed is an RSS feed…:).

Another link from Object Learning - RSS: A Love Story

And yesterday I sent some political weblogs plus some political articles about blogging to my friend, Jim Flowers.  I find these very interesting.  Here’s the list I sent him, plus some.

Howard Dean
Blog for America, the official Howard Dean weblog.
http://blog.deanforamerica.com

Tom Watson
http://www.tom-watson.co.uk/

WatchBlog
http://www.watchblog.com/

Gary Hart
http://www.garyhartnews.com/hart/blog/

Richard Allan
http://www.sheffieldhallam.co.uk/blog/

James Mills
http://jamesmills.blogspot.com/

Senator Robert Byrd
http://byrd.senate.gov/index.html

Articles:

Why Politicians Need Weblogs
http://www.bloggerheads.com/politicians.asp

Get Your Senator Blogging
http://www.bloggerheads.com/senator_weblog.asp

Then in Techy Musings I found another interesting post on Politicians and Weblogs.  It’s British politics, but listen to this:

Nobody really is interested in what their MP is doing. It’s a shame, but it’s here that I think that weblogging could come to the rescue. If only every MP felt accountable in some way to their constituencies outside of the election process, in a direct way, they might see how weblogging could help. Explaining what they have been up to on a periodic basis, and explaining how they justify their position.

As you can see, some are not just here in the United States.  If anybody has others, let me know.  I find it interesting to follow to see how these different political figures approach weblogging.

And I just saw this from July 14th on Techy Musings.

Bloggers Take on Parliament

Bloggers were visiting parliament to campaign for more MP’s to run weblogs

 


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To Do List Grows

Friday, May 16th, 2003

James Farmer has put together a nice little handout Educational Weblogs:  Whats and Whys.  Thanks for sharing, James.  I have been collecting handouts like this and hope to assemble all of them together in some type of organized fashion. Another item for my to do list which is becoming a losing battle!  When you have a to do now, to do soon, and hope to do list, what would make you think you could stay sane?  

I keep trying to keep in mind what is a logical progression to help those new to weblogs, and those of us who have bits and pieces of knowledge here and there (that’s me!)   I still need beginner (very beginner) how-to. Has anyone got a very specific step-by-step of how to create an RSS feed?  I have read lots on this but still never sure just where it is that I put the code.

Thanks again, James.  I added your very nice handout to my growing collection! 

 


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ESL on my Mind

Monday, May 12th, 2003

This morning I was reading an article in Language Learning & Technology. This journal seeks to disseminate research to foreign and second language educators in the US and around the world on issues related to technology and language education.

The title of the article was Emerging Technologies - Blogs and Wikis: Environments for On-line Collaboration by Bob Godwin-Jones.. He writes about collaborative opportunities.The article made reference to a blog for CALL created by Jim Duber and Aaron Campbell’s Web logs in ESL classes which I have made reference to in an earlier post) and Campbell’s own blog, the New Tanuki which contains resources for his EFL students and others. Bob Godwin-Jones provides a good overview of blogs, RSS feeds, and wikis plus the potentials these tools offer.

I found one initiative that he wrote about quite interesting. It is blam! and here is what he wrote:

An example of such an initiative is blam!, a template tool for writing and collecting reviews (of books, CDs, etc.). It uses Amazon’s Web services to gather the meta-data for an item, translates it into HTML, including any images and reference links. This is automatically placed into the editing environment, to be added to the writer’s review. The review is then posted to a blog. One could envision such a tool for language lessons posted on the Web. The FLEX (Foreign Language Lesson Exchange) lesson typography at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) is a step in that direction.

I still have not mastered RSS which I want to do and have many other things I need to learn first, but the possiblities scream out here! I’ll come back later and read up on this a little more thoroughly. Has anyone tried using this yet? Any thoughts on it?

I have a keen interest in ESL. The school where I used to teach had a high population of ESL students and we were always striving to meet their language needs. I’ve learned so much from these students. My sister also publishes Topics, an online magazine for learners of English. I love reading the students’ writings and have used their stories with ESL and other children to “broaden their horizons” and to give them ideas for writing. I’ve gotten my sister very interested in weblogs now and we are going to brainstorm a little later this summer on some ideas for collaborative projects.


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Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography

Friday, May 9th, 2003

I found this interesting link via Research Buzz.

New Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography Available

Woohoo! The Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography is

up to version 48! The latest version of the bibliography

presents over 1,850 articles, books, and other sources

concerning scholarly electronic publishing efforts on the

Internet. You can get it in PDF and HTML flavors:

HTML: http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepb.html

PDF: http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepb.pdf


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