http://www.flickr.com/photos/troutcolor/tags/websitesasgraphs/
The differences between here, the Sandaig Otters and the Sandaig home page are intreguing.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/troutcolor/tags/websitesasgraphs/
The differences between here, the Sandaig Otters and the Sandaig home page are intreguing.
I’ve just listen to the BBC Radio Scotland Podcasters show which featured
Radio Sandaig. The children sounded great, confident and articulate.
Unfortunately (for me) they had cut out my explanations. I can’t say I blame them, but I though I had addressed a couple of points in the show.
Muriel Gray was asking about the benefits of podcasting and it might have been nice if the educational benefits (talking, listening, writing, working together and a big chunk of A Curriculum for Excellence) had been spelled out rather than left to the audience to deduce for themselves.
Near the end of the programme Muriel says ‘I am still not convinced that it is not just boys and their toys’ the group she talked to at Sandaig was more girls than boys, one of my aims this year was to increase the number of boys taking part!
Some of the other podcasters (Daily Source Code , tartanpodcast etc) made great points in favour of podcasting generally.
If you missed the show you can listen on line, for a while at least.
Grazr above is reading in an opml I exported from Vienna, my desktop feedreader.
Make me realise, 1. I need to tidy up Vienna and 2. I should know a bit about OPML.
Loosely connected blue-sky
I (or the guinness) was talking to Will about some sort of feed that would connect a podcast with a set of audio comments, noting the time on the original podcast where the comments are, you could then jump to the interesting/contensious point on the podcast. This would need a networked mp3 player with an interesting interface and a load of bandwidth. Podcasts would then become browse-able in the same way as blogs. The mp3 player would of course record, upload and link your comments.
This looks really well put together May 9th Edublogs Workshop Handout from bits & bytes blog, via edublogs.org
At the Masterclass New Technology we should people how to upload files to the Internet Archive via a web browser using windows. It is quite a clunky process.
Much easier is to use the CcPublisher
ccPublisher is a tool that does two things: it will help you tag your audio and video files with information about your license and it allows you to upload Creative Commons-licensed audio and video works to the Internet Archive for free hosting. You also have the option of publishing the licensed and tagged audio works on your own site.
I made a movie of using the tool to ccpublisher_mac1.mov upload a mp3 Quicktime file 3.3 MB stored on the Internet Archive
BBC Radio Scotland: Podcasters
Mon 29 May, 11:30 – 12:00 30 mins
Muriel Gray unpicks fact from fiction behind the latest buzzword, and finds out how Scottish podcasters are sending home-made radio programmes across the world.
Don’t miss it!
You can listen BBC Radio Player
Or on the Radio: 92.4-94.7 FM or 810 MW
Originally uploaded by Edublogger.
Great photo, it looks like I am saying something interesting to Will.
After yesterday’s blogfest from Ewan, David and Andrew, I am afraid I need to join in today.
Intro guy is talking about one to one for Edinburgh teachers!
Will:
Biggest learning experience – blogging..
Not about Technology about imagination (someone was talking about Imagination and will yesterday)
Mashup: amine of Ellen Feiss (sp): Osaka as Ellen Feiss
increase on web of chances to use imagination.
One Billion folk online now. 10 billion pages.
1,000,000,000,000 links (US trillion)
RW Web: Old web consumption, new web Web 2.0 writable.
Turning point.
5 minutes from now all in the room can be bloggers. I new blog a second. %) still there after 3 months.
Roll of blogger is to link ideas (maybe)
Showing a http://www.touchgraph.com/ of the netword surrounding his blog, looks like a great tool.
http://www.creativecommons.org (first of 3 I know about)
12 million kids online.
13 year old podcasting in September 2004!
Will is showing Sandaig Otters!
Linking to Curriculum for Excellence.
The Read/Write Web just might change the world.
Closed to Open content model. Free content – web goodness. MIT OpenCourseWare
Talking about wikis, creating text books.
Rip mix and learn (buzzwords galore) Teacher as DJ!
Long distance mentors.
Sometime to anytime learning.
Working alone to working together.
Kid with essay on wikipedia.
We should be editing wikipedia.
Hand it in vs Publish it (hmm, quality control)
RSS, furl etc.
Children find own teachers. Bring primary sources into classroom (new roll of teacher)
Need to model publishing, editing ect. Danger of children publishing and believing it is private.
Great exciting talk, Ewan, David type a lot faster than me so probably a good idea to get over there.
Maybe not as good as being there but:
Augmented reality 23, May, 2006 edublogger
Alan’s on a roll 23, May, 2006 edublogger
Blogs and podcasts… for the last time 23, May, 2006 edublogger
Alan November at eLive! 23, May, 2006 edublogger
eLive 2006 – Alan November Keynote 23, May, 2006 David
eLive – keynote 1 – Alan November 23, May, 2006 ab
ScotEduBlog Meetup 19, May, 2006 edublogger
eLive 2006 ACfE meets SSDN 23, May, 2006 David
eLiveCast! 23, May, 2006 edublogger
and a first time blogger:
plenty to chew on.
I am really looking forward to tomorrow .
Exciting Stuff.
Over at eLive! Scotland seems to have got the blogging buzz at last.
Last year at SETT I tried to blog some stuff from the floor, borrowing machines at random stalls.
Today I am sitting in my classroom (I’ve a student in, and she is having a crit) reading elive as it happens. I guess wifi has arrived at the Scots Edu conference world.
Alan november is keynoting.