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Here are posterous posts filed under glogster...

mrfisher says...

http://mrjfisher.edu.glogster.com/Mr-Fishers-Favourite-Poetry/

Filed under: Glogster

Tim says...

When I'm not swimming in the turgid waters of middle school discipline as the Dean of Students, I'm wearing that other swimming cap I deal with -- Technology Integration Specialist. As I told another colleague, our students are digital natives who swim in technology with ease. They perform the backstroke, breaststroke, and crawl with the zero effort; we, on the other hand, swim as though we have a large rock tied to one foot. The trick is practice -- never stop swimming, because to stop will mean to drowned. Part of my job is exploring and experimenting with technology, so I can continue to swim with the digital natives, even if it takes me longer to swim a lap.

Today's lap involved swimming with Glogster again. I came up with this work to share. I hope people enjoy it, the actual focus was not on the content itself, but rather the experience of using the tool. Glogster allows for hours of creativity and messing around, which can be shaped into hours of educational material, if used correctly and with some teacher creativity. One of KIS's art teachers, Sarah Digges, is using it as a reflection tool in the artistic process.

Often times teachers come to me asking for advice about technology and the best advice I can and do give is "Don't be afraid to jump into the deep end of the pool with those digital natives." You will find that the laughs you hear from them are not because of your inept skills, but because of their joy in sharing and learning with you.

Filed under: glogster

Tim says...

This is a suggestion... Wait! No, this is a command to immediately drop everything and anything you are doing and check out Prezi and Glogster. I'm serious here. Why are you still reading? Get to it! Both sites are unbelievable and incredibly interactive.

Prezi allows you to develop presentations vastly superior to PowerPoint or Keynote with the added advantage of being stored online so you can edit or present from anywhere with any computer as long as you have Internet access. Prezi allows movement -- zooming and panning, lines and pathways, text boxes, photos, and video clips. The layout is on a giant canvas that you design and control. The final products are visually stunning and make a powerful impact on audiences. Students will love the freedom to explore and experiment placing items on a giant canvas and having the presentation move around to each new location. Teachers who want to get their students attention should try this website.

Glogster is a powerful blogging tool. It also provides a canvas for the artistically inclined to place graphics, text boxes, images, audio files, video players, and links in creative and original ways. You can use a template or build your own from the ground up. (What? Virtual ground, I guess... My metaphors are cliche dangerously outdated.) However, unlike Prezi, the idea here is to post and have visitors, rather than use it for presentations. But now that I'm thinking of it, Glogster could be used for a presentation tool as well. I plan to use it as a blogging platform for my classes in the future, because I will be able to teach elements of layout and design at the same time. Plus, the students will love the freedom of having text, audio, and video to share their thoughts.

Regardless, both websites offer ample opportunities to explore self expression through technology and I hope that educators will start using these tools with their students. One of the joys of working overseas in a private school is the freedom to experiment and grow as an educator. I'm proud of my administration for not falling into the trap of slapping handcuffs on the technology by making silly rules and blocking websites. Teachers need to fight for the right to use these technologies in the classroom and it is high time that the unions back home step up to the plate with teachers and demand the administrators and school boards fund and allow technology in the classroom. Anything less is criminal.

   
Click here to download:
Prezi_and_Glogster.zip (1121 KB)

Filed under: glogster

JCuerva says...

http://www.glogster.com/edu

Filed under: glogster

SueH says...

So I have been offline for a few days -- not away from the computer, just not 'taking calls'. I had to get a unit on Weather  ready for a student who is progressing through Earth Science 11 faster than I can produce good stuff for him. Given the pressure of 1.25 jobs, temporarily living without my partner (he's in Edmonton working on a job that's bringing in nearly $2000 a week!), and getting ready for ILC 2008 in San Jose, I have had to ignore the pile of e-mails, subscriptions, and posts from various groups I've joined that I knew was collecting in my various email boxes in order to put my fingers to the keyboard and churn out engaging material about everyone's favourite topic.

Braving the weather makes us strong.  Talking about the weather gives us something in common.  When I lived in a different city from my family, my Dad used to call me long distance and we would chat about the weather.  When they're done, my students should know what makes the wind blow, what kind a front brings the kind of wind that is threatening to topple the over-heavy trees in my yard as I write,  and how the rain forms.  When their own kids ask "Why is the sky blue, Daddy?" if they can't recall the answer, they should be able to look it up with their kids and understand the explanation. If they catch from me a sense of how interesting the science of weather can be and look at the world with a little more understanding, I'll retire happy.

All my students work on individual learning packages, and even in this high pressure week, I didn't have the heart to hand out the 'copy-memorize-dump out on the test' stuff that makes up most of the learning packages that we use. Weather  I had to rewrite!  I finished it a few hours ago, and then let the deluge of emails flow out of the ether & onto my desktop.  It was kind of like watching the scene in Miracle on 34th Street when the bags of letters to Santa are dumped out on the judge's bench.  The most important items -- mostly education blogs and lists about tools and interesting initiatives -- have been sorted and filed. Family and friends have been replied to. The rest can wait.

In the meantime, the most interesting tools I came across today are listed below. Remember to click the pics.

GLOGSTER wants us to 'poster ourselves' -- a 'dumb' slogan but a great looking result.

 

Free video help for homework and test prep -- even for math -- but nothing on weather (boohoo!).  Some of these videos are a little young for my 15-17 year olds, but they're worth a look.

WEBINSIPIRATION  is a visual thinking tool that makes it easy to collaborate on and share documents by inviting others to contribute, post comments, and view changes.

For the budding composers in my class and new users can sign up free -- the drawback is that you have to subscribe ($$) to get a fully functioning version.

THE ART ZONE  -- interactive art that you can make online from the National Gallery of Art

I'm looking for a new way to communicate with my students -- especially when I have to be away from school or when I have new tools to share --  so I'm considering 2 possibilities:

 

    Grou.ps  -- where I can create a community site by choosing the modules I want -- it sounds a bit like Squidoo but with interactive capabilities.

 

   Offers me microblogging for education -- my students & I can share notes, links, and files to foster communication inside and outside of the classroom.

I want to thank shareski for his Interesting Quotes  series in Flickr.  I have to say I really don't get Twitter.  I can't imagine (a) having the time or (b) really caring enough to wonder what strangers are doing 24/7, but this poster and Angela Maiers' blogpost on the subject have me curious -- which is a big step.  Twitter's in my November 'to do' lineup.

Last spring when I was first looking for free, downloadable software that I could use to build interesting learning packages for the kids, I came across Freepath -- a multimedia packaging tool.  I can collect all the materials I use --  text files, PDF's, videos, sound files, and Powerpoints, and more -- and sequence them in a single playlist for a lesson or a presentation.  I managed to get my school district to allow my school to download Freepath to the our computer on a trial basis -- and now I'm in the process of working out how I can take the last step away from textbook-based learning into developing learning packages that will look something like this.  


By storing my playlist files online at myFreepath, I can make them available to the students who will be able to download them at home or bring their thumbdrives to school to be loaded.  I'll be able to invite other teachers to share my files and collaborate to improve them or build new ones.  

 

 

When I sign off here, I have to work on a list of questions sent by Dave of myFreepath.  The list reads a little like the final exams I took back when I was in 'teacher training' some 35 years ago. Many years ago a friend and co-department member at the time, Nancy Demwell, told me that she believed all teachers ought to be able to articulate the fundamental principles upon which their work was built. Few of us ever have to unless we're interviewing for a new job or want to move up the ladder into administration.

I think Nancy felt teachers fell into 2 groups: those whose work is infused with a well-articulated vision and those who fly by the seat of their pants.  The latter will certainly keep up with content requirements, familiarize themselves with new trends, and discipline as they saw fit at the time,  but their work lacks a greater coherence and meaning and has little lasting impact on the lives of their students.  She believed that answers to questions such as "Why are you a teacher?"  reveal a lot about whether the individual was a deeper thinker or "was good with people and wanted to good things for kids" -- a vague kind of response she thought was particularly flakey.  

So with Nancy on my mind, I am going to tackle Dave's questions. It's an interesting exercise especially given that I'm a year or 18 months at most away from retirement. I suspect with all this new passion for my work bubbling up again, my colleagues may be taking bets on whether I'll really going to leave or not.

Take a look at these and see what you come up with. Please send me your responses.

 QUESTIONS (courtesy Dave at myFreepath & edited a little by me):


(1) What is the core of your perception of the integration of new tools into the classroom? 

(2) How do you balance the need for "leading edge" tools with the normal time requirements of your program?


(3) In your blog, you discuss the idea of 'blended learning'; what does this teaching model look like?

 
(4) How do you see social media impacting students in the 21st century? How does it impact teachers and where do you see the intersection?

(5) How might Freepath fit into your classroom? 

Here's an exclusive discount offer for the readers of the Big Returns blog to encourage you to attend ILC 2008.  Until Oct. 6, you can get a $40 discount on conference registration fees with the special promotional code ORG40. 

Debra and I are presenting on Wednesday morning at 10:30 -- concurrent session 7. if you can make it, please be sure to introduce yourself. Lou Douros from Freepath will be there as well.

Filed under: Glogster