12.02.2010

SUNY Ulster students collaborate online internationally! Make comics, have fun!



Here is a wonderful way for students to collaborate internationally with meaning. The lesson plan gets students to look at the media and how they find news..or how news finds them. They read a graphic novel, and learn how comics work, by making their own with PIXTON!

They also have communicated with professors saved through the Scholar Rescue Fund. We have presented the following information at several conferences with Rebecca Smolar from Globalization 101 and the SUNY Global Center
and Levin Institute.

11.09.2010

Love the International collaboration mash up with Social media tools

Globalization 101
November 4, 2010

ORLANDO, Fla. -- In an effort to deepen their understanding of how technology can help different cultures understand each other better, David L. Stoloff last year decided to give his students a taste of peer review -- and outsourcing.

Presenting on Wednesday at the annual Sloan Consortium International Conference on Online Learning, Stoloff, a professor at Eastern Connecticut State University, described an experiment in which he used social media to teach students in a first-year course on educational technology a lesson about how they can use social media to change how they do amateur cross-cultural research on the Web.

Read the following article

10.04.2010

The World is Open! Bonk joined us for a great presentation

We had a great Rondout Ulster Connect event this past Saturday.

Our featured speaker was Dr. Curt Bonk. Here is a clip where he is speaking about "Trends on the Horizon," Dr. Bonk notes future developments in education and their potential impact on teaching. Points covered range from mobile learning and cloud computing to creating Personal Learning Environments.
http://www.youtube.com/TravelinEdMan#p/c/26/n4f8859BQ5g

His book is chock full of great ideas.

9.07.2010

Jonathan Kozol reminds us why teaching is so important and beautiful.

It's the birthday of journalist and activist Jonathan Kozol, (books by this author) born in Boston (1936). He worked as public school teacher in Boston and has written many books about the sad state of public education in this country, and about how segregated our schools still are, all based on his own experiences in classrooms and working in poor neighborhoods. His books include Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools (1991) and Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation (1995), about kids in the Mott Haven neighborhood of the South Bronx. He said: "Of all my books, Amazing Grace means the most to me. It took the most out of me and was the hardest to write, because it was the hardest to live through these experiences. I felt it would initially be seen as discouraging but, ultimately, sensitive readers would see the resilient and transcendent qualities ... that it would be seen as a book about the elegant theology of children."
In his recent book Letters to a Young Teacher (2007), he combines his opinions on vouchers, No Child Left Behind, and racial segregation, with constant reminders about why teaching is so important and beautiful. Courtesy of the Writer's Almanac. 
Kozol said, "Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win."

9.05.2010

Social Networking has a new life as fund raiser

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/05/business/05proto.html
LATE last month, tens of thousands of runners who are registered for this year’s New York City Marathon got an e-mail from Mary Wittenberg, the president and chief executive of New York Road Runners. ...Ed Norton knows that a majority of people who now donate to charity don’t do so online; they write checks. But he and his partners contend that Crowdrise, with its mix of edginess, silliness and good-humored competition, can change that habit, especially for young people.


Crowdrise aims to make raising money for a cause not just easy, but also fun. Setting up a page to support something you care about takes less than a minute. Then, friends and family can be invited to be sponsors by donating any amount of money, large or small. You don’t have to run a marathon. You can volunteer at a soup kitchen or do whatever strikes your fancy. But Ms. Wittenberg, who has already sent her e-mail to 33,000 runners based in the United States and will soon send one to the 27,000 or so based elsewhere, hopes that anyone running in New York on Nov. 7 will use Crowdrise to do it for charity.
Once your Crowdrise page is up, anyone can donate to it and join your team.
Crowdrise isn’t the only site that helps with online fund-raising. There are a handful, with FirstGiving.com among the best known. But Crowdrise is different, its founders and users say, because it seeks to build community in much the way that Facebook does.

8.17.2010

"Wave of the Future" Article on Rondout Valley / SUNY Ulster Collaboration

Wave of the Future
Rondout Valley and SUNY Ulster Combine Talents, and Technology


RONDOUT VALLEY – As school budgets become tighter, administrations throughout the country are increasingly looking for creative, cost-effective ways to further the quality of their education, and the capabilities of their teachers. Technology is one such growing avenue for success; there is a steady stream of both computer software, and hardware, being developed to aid both staff and students. Teachers from different levels, and locations, can use those advanced technological innovations to share improved curriculum-shaping strategies. Here in our region, Rondout Valley Central School District and nearby SUNY Ulster have created a partnership program, fittingly called Rondout + Ulster Connect, which addresses exactly these kinds of advancement efforts.


http://www.ellenvillejournal.com/2010/07/29/news/1007296.html

Daily Freeman Article on Rondout Valley school / College collaboration plan.


Rondout Valley schools, college plan collaboration

KYSERIKE — The Rondout Valley school district and Ulster County Community College announced they will unveil more than a dozen joint projects as part of a collaboration designed to look at education from a holistic kindergarten-through-college perspective.

A priority in the effort, which has been called “Rondout + Ulster Connect,” is to ensure students are prepared for college when they graduate, said Michelle Donlon, Rondout’s assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction, who described the initiative as a way to further raise the bar.


http://www.dailyfreeman.com/articles/2010/08/12/news/doc4c63897d9e818387117891.txt

Article in AdvancedWeb on Virtual Nursing @ SUNY Ulster

http://nursing.advanceweb.com/ebook/magazine.aspx?EBK=N05080210#/26/

8.02.2010

$200 Textbook vs. Free. You Do the Math.

NY Times  July 31, 2010


By ASHLEE VANCE

INFURIATING Scott G. McNealy has never been easier. Just bring up math textbooks.
Mr. McNealy, the fiery co-founder and former chief executive of Sun Microsystems, shuns basic math textbooks as bloated monstrosities: their price keeps rising while the core information inside of them stays the same.
“Ten plus 10 has been 20 for a long time,” Mr. McNealy says.
Early this year, Oracle, the database software maker, acquired Sun for $7.4 billion, leaving Mr. McNealy without a job. He has since decided to aim his energy and some money at Curriki, an online hub for free textbooks and other course material that he spearheaded six years ago.
“We are spending $8 billion to $15 billion per year on textbooks” in the United States, Mr. McNealy says. “It seems to me we could put that all online for free.”
The nonprofit Curriki fits into an ever-expanding list of organizations that seek to bring the blunt force of Internet economics to bear on the education market. Even the traditional textbook publishers agree that the days of tweaking a few pages in a book just to sell a new edition are coming to an end.

“Today, we are engaged in a very different dialogue with our customers,” says Wendy Colby, a senior vice president of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. “Our customers are asking us to look at different ways to experiment and to look at different value-based pricing models.”
Mr. McNealy had his own encounter with value-based pricing models while running Sun. The company had thrived as a result of its specialized, pricey technology. And then, in what seemed liked a flash, Sun’s business came undone as a wave of cheaper computers and free, open-source software proved good enough to handle many tasks once done by Sun computers.
At first, Sun fought the open-source set, and then it joined the party by making the source code to its most valuable software available to anyone.
Too little, too late. Sun’s sales continued to decline, making it vulnerable to a takeover.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and other top textbook publishers now face their, forgive me, moment in the sun.
Over the last few years, groups nationwide have adopted the open-source mantra of the software world and started financing open-source books. Experts — often retired teachers or groups of teachers — write these books and allow anyone to distribute them in digital, printed or audio formats. Schools can rearrange the contents of the books to suit their needs and requirements.

But progress with these open-source texts has been slow.

California and Texas dominate the market for textbooks used in kindergarten through high school, and publishers do all they can to meet these states’ requirements and lock in their millions of students for years.
Both states have only recently established procedures that will let open-source textbooks begin making their way through the arduous approval process. Last year, Texas passed a law promoting the use of open, digital texts and is reviewing material that might be used in schools.
In California, a state board is studying whether open texts meet state requirements. The CK-12 Foundation, a nonprofit financed by another Sun co-founder, Vinod Khosla, has created several texts that have met the board’s criteria.
“In three and a half years, we have developed nine of the core textbooks for high school,” says Neeru Khosla, Mr. Khosla’s wife and the head of CK-12. “If you don’t try this, nothing will change.”
Aneesh Chopra, the federal chief technology officer, promoted an open physics textbook from CK-12 in his previous role as the secretary of technology for Virginia, which included more up-to-date materials than the state’s printed textbooks.
“We still had quotes that said the main component of a television was a cathode ray tube,” Mr. Chopra says. “We had to address the contemporary nature of physics topics.”
Eric Frank, the co-founder of Flat World Knowledge, argues that there is a huge financial opportunity in outflanking the traditional textbook makers. His company homes in on colleges and gives away a free online version of some textbooks. Students can then pay $30 for a black-and-white version to be printed on demand or $60 for a color version, or they can buy an audio copy.
About 55 percent of students buy a book, Mr. Frank said, adding that the leading calculus book from a traditional publisher costs more than $200.
Publishers have started de-emphasizing the textbook in favor of selling a package of supporting materials like teaching aids and training. And companies like Houghton Mifflin have created internal start-ups to embrace technology and capture for themselves some of the emerging online business.
They are responding in much the same way traditional software makers did when open-source arrived, by trying to bundle subscription services around a core product that has been undercut.
Ms. Colby of Houghton Mifflin puts the state of affairs politely: “I think the open-source movement is opening a whole new conversation, and that is what is exciting to us.”
Mr. McNealy wants to make sure there is a free, innovative option available for schools as this shift occurs.
Curriki has made only modest strides, but Mr. McNealy has pledged to inject new life. He wants to borrow from Sun’s software development systems to create an organized framework for collecting educational information.

In addition, he wants the organization to help build systems that can evaluate educational material and monitor student performance. “I want to assess everything,” he says.

MR. McNEALY, however, has found that raising money for Curriki is tougher than he imagined, even though so many people want to lower the cost of education.

“We are growing nicely,” he says, “but there is a whole bunch of stuff on simmer.”

7.10.2010

Marrying 18th-century standards with 21st-century technology.

Last month on the Daily Show, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty predicted the rise of “iCollege,” a Web-based model of higher education that students could download for $199 rather than “haul their keister” to class. Many academics snarled back (“pedagogical dystopia,” one Cornell professor called it), since the idea seems to minimize the role of live student-teacher exchanges. But Pawlenty’s vision already has some lofty adherents. Pennsylvania’s university system is considering making its language courses online only; Indiana recently added an “affordable” Web-based campus; and Yale Law School is sharing resources with the University of the People, a pioneering “global college” that’s tuition-free and totally online.

Now my own school, New York University, is trying to become the first to fully marry 18th-century standards with 21st-century technology. We’re developing interactive video courses with recorded lectures, pop-up definitions of obscure words, and live links to primary sources. Rather than minimize the professor-pupil dialogue, the idea is to free professors from lecture requirements so that they can become broader intellectual curators—modern-day Oxford dons who pull students out of their duct-taped beanbag chairs and into university life for discussion sections, guest lectures, and, especially in New York, real-world exhibits. For more traditional dialogues, of course, office hours are always available.
Conley is dean of social sciences at NYU.
Go to An ‘Icollege’ Makeover In New York
http://www.newsweek.com/2010/07/03/an-icollege-makeover-in-new-york.html 

6.16.2010

Strategies for managing online courses

Here is the intro for a collection of video clips by professors who teach online. Folks have told me these short clips have been very helpful to think about when setting up or teaching an online course for the first time. You can click here to go to youtube and see the series. Enjoy!

2.25.2010

SUNY Learning Network Instructional Design Summit ...watch the livestream

This is a great way to recharge your batteries regarding teaching and learning and all aspects of Instructional design within the SUNY system.
Join Us!
The three ways to tune in are:



The best one for your watching station will be via the channel link page. #1 above.


Adobe has come along with a product to rival Google docs

Buzzword is often compared with Google Docs, so it might be useful to discuss the relationship between them - both the similarities and the differences. The short version goes like this:

Similarities:
Free web apps. Buzzword and Google Docs are both driving the move to on-line applications, and are rapidly gaining popularity and market share.
Comments and Collaboration. Ubiquitous access to your documents enable better collaboration, and both tools have useful commenting functionality to support this.


Buzzword vs. Google Docs

Click: What Millions of People Are Doing Online and Why it Matters

book innerds to look at 
Book to read ...Tancer, a search-engine data miner, takes a look at our culture by evaluating the millions of search queries on the Internet. He crunches the numbers to quantify our desires, our fears, our quest for knowledge, and our aspirations. From porn to prom dresses to politics, the content of our search queries reveals much about our private thoughts that we would not reveal to loved ones, friends, or a stranger taking a survey. His lists include the top “fear of” searches; fear of intimacy and fear of rejection were ranked high, while the fear of public speaking, usually sited as number one, came in at number nine. “How to tie a tie” just beat out “how to have sex” in the how-to category, with “how to levitate” clocking in at number six! For businesses, searches can reveal surprising information that dispels assumptions about customer behavior, such as the seasonality of clothing purchases. Tancer brings humor, clarity, and insight to the trends that are revealed by the ways we seek out and consume information on the Internet. --David Siegfried
more info on Amazon

Heutagogy: we really interact in this class. in my other class the professor just talks and talks and talks ...

When you take on learning you come to own it.

In education, heutagogy, a concept coined by Stewart Hase of Southern Cross University, is the study of self-determined learning. The notion is an expansion and reinterpretation of andragogy, and it is possible to mistake it for the same. However, there are several differences between the two that mark the one from the other.[1]

Heutagogy places specific emphasis on learning how to learn, double loop learning, universal learning opportunities, a non-linear process, and true learner self-direction. So, for example, whereas andragogy focuses on the best ways for people to learn, heutagogy also requires that educational initiatives include the improvement of people's actual learning skills themselves, learning how to learn as well as just learning a given subject itself. Similarly, whereas andragogy focusses on structured education, in heutagogy all learning contexts, both formal and informal, are considered.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heutagogy

Latest info from SUNY Learning Network

2.19.2010

International Online Collaborating mentioned in Campus Technology !

Online Education

Collaborative Learning Across the Miles
American college breaks down the barriers to create online distance learning courses with an exiled Lithuanian university

By Bridget McCrea02/03/10
Establishing ties between domestic and international colleges is one thing, but when the overseas institution has been forced into exile by its home country, the situation becomes a bit more complex.

SUNY Ulster of New York learned this about a year ago when it first collaborated with European Humanities University (EHU). The latter is a Belarusian university that was founded in Minsk in 1992 but was, according to the school, "forcibly closed" by the government in 2004. According to the EHU Web site, the school reopened in Vilnius in 2005 and was granted the status of a Lithuanian university in 2006. Read on...

2.14.2010

Livescribe ! The pen that records what you are writing and saying

Nicoline Kiwiet got a mini-grant to use these Live Scribe pens with her Chemistry class and she brought one by to try. It is a pen with a camera that watches what you write and it has a mic that captures what you are saying. You are instantly recording a short animation Here is a little trial run I did.
http://www.livescribe.com/education/





Met Fun! The Metropolitan Museum of Art has great tools for the online course space and the classroom

The Met has a huge website with a Timeline feature, a Map feature...YOu can store images you like of theirs in your own collection within their site.

2.02.2010

Digital Nation on Frontline...see what has happened to us...


Within a single generation, digital media and the World Wide Web have transformed virtually every aspect of modern culture, from the way we learn and work to the ways in which we socialize and even conduct war. But is the technology moving faster than we can adapt to it? And is our 24/7 wired world causing us to lose as much as we've gained?
Click here to go to the movie

1.29.2010

Social Media Intro For Business Intelligence People

Here is one of many presentations on Social Media found on Slide Share when you type in Social Media...This is the buzz word of the moment.

1.19.2010

Research shows that Blended is best...

Check out this Presentation by Dr. Peter Shea, who works with SUNY Learning Network [SLN]  and conducted a research project where they ran fully online courses, face to face courses and blended courses with similiar subject matter and found the best student outcomes were from Blended courses.

1.18.2010

1.12.2010

Harnessing the Extraordinary Power of Learning Teams†


Using small groups is a good way to introduce active learning into one's teaching. There are, however, significantly different ways of using small groups. This chapter offers a critical analysis of the benefits and challenges of three different ways of using small groups: casual use, cooperative learning, and team-based learning. Read more...

We need to challenge our assumptions and re-imagine the tools we take for granted.

Google Wave: What Might Email Look Like If It Were Invented Today? read more...




Nickelodeon is teaching math, maybe there are pointers in here for older learners

By ELIZABETH JENSEN


Nickelodeon, whose preschool shows focus on teaching social skills as much as letters and numbers, will move squarely into the academic realm, with the introduction of “Team Umizoomi,” which it said is the only preschool series centered entirely on teaching math to children. read more...



NMC Horizon Report is here!


New Media Consortium and Educause jointly puts out an annual report about trends in educational technology and the relevance to Teaching, Learning, or Creative Inquiry.

The technologies featured in each edition of the Horizon Report are embedded within a contemporary

context that reflects the realities of the time, both in the sphere of academia and in the world at large.

AMD Changing the Game......Gaming isn’t just about entertainment anymore.

Developers — including high school students — are now creating games designed both to educate and engage people of all ages on pressing social issues. Global concerns such as poverty, hunger, climate change, and energy consumption have already been addressed in games that help players understand the complexities involved and explore creative solutions.
read more ....

1.10.2010

2010: The Year Ahead for IT in Higher Education

  1. Public Cloud Services Go Private.
  2. The President’s Climate Commitment Meets the Campus Data Center.
  3. Big Science meets Next Generation CyberInfrastructure.
  4. Time to Declare the PC Dead and Embrace the Mobile Platform.
  5. The E-Book Reader Grows up and Goes to Campus.
  6. Social Networking Finds its Niche at College.
  7. Course Management Platform Alternatives Make Major Inroads.
  8. Serious Gaming Gets Serious.
  9. Mobile Security Hits the College Campus.
  10. Open Content meets the Open University and the Vision of the Metaversity.
To those living with the hopeful yet delusional strategy of an early return to the status quo ante, my suggestion is to get use to the so-called “new normal”. To read the rest of Lev'article click here

1.07.2010

Fingertip Knowledge...memorizing is less important that being savvy at accessing lists



From the book, "The World is Open" by Curtis Bonk, He quotes Elliot Masie,
"Have you noticed how much we are memorizing less? It is due to a combination of Fingertip Knowledge and an increased confidence that information can be easily accessed from our devices and networks...

There are serious implications for the lowered expectation of memorization in our instructional designs. How do we recognize that our learners may not and perhaps should not, memorize key information? Rather, we may want them to be able to navigate to the information, which, in some instances, is safer since things may change. In other instances, the information may not be useful until situations arise.

The lowered levels of memorization and the increased use of Fingertip Knowledge have huge implications for how we design and deliver learning activities."

1.05.2010

5 Higher Ed Tech Trends To Watch in 2010 according to Campus Technology


The traditional 1:1, standardized computing is too rigid in today's educational environment, where students are tapping into multiple technologies and switching gears quickly between them....
http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2009/12/09/5-Higher-Ed-Tech-Trends-To-Watch-in-2010.aspx?Page=1 

1. More Interactive Classrooms
2. More Information at Your Fingertips
3. Mashed-Up Technologies
4. Breaking Out of Technology Isolation
5. Capabilities That Go Beyond 1:1

1.04.2010

NY Times article explains why Twitter can actually be quite helpful...


Why Twitter Will Endure, By DAVID CARR
Published: January 1, 2010
So you’re drowning in a sea of information. Perhaps the answer is more information.

I can remember when I first thought seriously about Twitter. Last March, I was at the SXSW conference, a conclave in Austin, Tex., where technology, media and music are mashed up and re-imagined, and, not so coincidentally, where Twitter first rolled out in 2007. As someone who was oversubscribed on Facebook, overwhelmed by the computer-generated RSS feeds of news that came flying at me, and swamped by incoming e-mail messages, the last thing I wanted was one more Web-borne intrusion into my life.

1.02.2010

Nice Website for Charles Dickens enthusiasts

In following the wonderful Masterpiece Theatre series on "Little Dorrit" I found a cornucopia of info on Charles Dickens and the era of his writing in London of the 1840-50's
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/dickens/resources.html