Sunday, May 31, 2009

Let's Talk About You, Not Me

Isn't it amazing that the changes journalism is undergoing, well, they could easily be perceived as the changes education needs to go through? Consider this quote:
You will not only have to reinvent journalism, you will also have to reinvent the conversation about journalism, making it less internal to the profession, and more interactive with the rest of society.
Source: Nicholas Lemann via Clay Shirky
Or, as Dr. Scott McLeod highlights in his inclusion of a quote from Seth Godin, “It doesn’t matter. It’s not about you. It’s about them. If they don’t see the meaningfulness and relevance of what you’re offering, it’s your fault, not theirs.” These two quotes highlight not only the need for a fresh conversation that reflects the diversity of those you connect with, but also the necessity of making those connections.

In my recently submitted article, I share what I perceive is my frustration with school districts who fail to embrace social media tools to share what's going on in their own districts. As Scott has pointed out, it's always about the school district. But that was when parents had no recourse except to band together. Now, a committed parent or group of employees can make themselves heard in ways that are more penetrating and damaging to the made-up fairy tale of what constitutes the District's version of events.

In a time when anyone can contribute a story, it's no longer about press releases, sound bytes, and capturing the evening news. Now, using social media tools like Twitter, TwitPic, parents are capturing the news time through their actions.








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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Stages of PLN


Source: Jeff Utecht


Thanks to Once a Teacher blog post, I stumbled upon this video of Networked Student (youtube video) and this image of the Stages of a PLN. Wow!








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What Color Is Your Aura?



For fun, I decided to take a quiz via Facebook...not sure I agree with the results completely, but hey, it was for fun. My results appear above.

Update: For fun, and validity checking, I decided to take another What Color is Your Aura quiz...different results!
What Color Is Your Aura?
Your Result: Blue

You are quiet, cool, and calm. You love your solitude and have no trouble standing alone. Blues are sensitive, truthful, spiritual, and intuitive--they often show signs of clairvoyance and ESP. They are the professors, detectives, and spiritual mediums of the world.

Yellow
Green
Brown
Pink
Violet
Red
Orange
What Color Is Your Aura?
Quiz Created on GoToQuiz







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Reaching for the Heart: 5 Tips for School District Communications




...the irresistible nature of truth, that all it asks, and all it wants is the liberty of appearing...It is error only, and not truth, that shrinks from inquiry.
--Thomas Paine, author of Common Sense (1776)

"Jesus Figueroa tells trustees: 'My hair is not hurting anybody. My hair causes no students to be held back in their eduation.'" So reads the almost 140 character tweet sent by SA Express News writer, Michelle de la Rosa (http://twitter.com/mmdelarosa), who often covers local San Antonio school issues using Twitter.com, a social media tool. The challenge to Figueroa's long hair reaches a school district's school board (in San Antonio, Tx), only to see an eventual capitulation by that Board, "Unanimous board vote to grant Figueroa special dispensation from grooming policy. He gets to keep long hair and stay in regular classroom." (Read the rest of the story online at http://tinyurl.com/dfu7bp). Even if you cannot attend the Board Meeting, you are transported there, following electronic bread crumbs, or "tweets."

Several districts, like Schertz-Cibolo-Universal City ISD and Kerrville ISD, embraced the use of Twitter--a micro-blogging tool--during the alleged Swine Flu Epidemic (a list of Texas Twitterers appears online at http://mguhlin.wikispaces.com/txtwits). In the past, school districts have perceived media attention as invariably negative, rejoicing whenever positive stories can be had. Press releases, strategic presentations to special community groups and advocates are only a small part of what is possible. In fact, those approaches may even be superfluous to what is really possible with social media tools.

Yet, time and again, school districts step back from encouraging their staff, students and parents from using social media. Failure to embrace these tools leaves school districts open to attacks, but times are changing--parents are fighting back using social media. "Activist parents now have," points out Dr. Scott McLeod, "a bevy of new tools and strategies to help facilitate their agendas and they are not afraid to use them. School organizations are going to have to get used to this new state of affairs in which parent activism and criticism are more public, permanent, and far-reaching."

This article is about how school districts can use social media tools and connect with the global audience, circumventing the traditional media to get the real story out there. As such, this article focuses on 3 points and offers a few tips for using social media:

  1. Refining our perception of what constitutes "Communications and PR" in a highly connected world
  2. The power of story to unlock what makes your heart beat and overcome the Knowing-Doing Gap, which approaches the question of why knowledge of what needs to be done frequently fails to result in action. (Pfeffer and Sutton, The Knowing-Doing Gap, 2000 as cited in Dennis Sparks article, Reach for the Heart as Well as the Mind, online via free trial at http://tinyurl.com/m36a29).
  3. How social media can be used to share your story.

REFINING OUR PERCEPTIONS AND ATTITUDES
"Seek out change," advises a noted journalist, Jeff Jarvis. He goes on to point out that in addition to seeking out change, organizations need to find the opportunities in that change, as well as deal with the hard problems it brings instead of side-stepping them. In virtual space, if you're not sharing content, if you are silent, your absence signals your unwillingness to embrace the hard problems. In an online world, silence is failure.

Our classrooms, our schools, our school districts are defined by the stories we tell about them. Traditional media spend little time on these positive stories. They are drawn to the conflict, the fear, and what constitutes the real story. And, their failure to recognize that the audience is no longer listening, but also, creating content that they are more apt to pay attention to using social media, has had a profound impact on newspaper sales. People know that they can find the truth that is real, authentic, openly shared and transparent via new venues.

While staff freedom of expression via social media is tightly controlled by District Communication Departments because the stories aren't as positive as the slick flyer or press release says it is, muzzling the one group of advocates, who really know what is happening in schools, has severe consequences. Imagine the San Antonio, Tx district with a student with long hair. How could the school district have managed information sharing differently with the Community? To do the work of district communications requires a different attitude and/perspective. That's why in my school district, I have a page of videos (http://itls.saisd.net/lead)--created in spite of the teacher resistance that we are "tooting our own horn"--that describe some of our initiatives and celebrate student work. As an educator, I do not want my word to be the last word on what is going on in my school district. I want that last word to be spoken by an innovative teacher, a student's voice developing a project, a parent sharing what the work of education means to their child.

As a citizen-journalist, as a person who has embraced social media as a way to share the exciting actions being taken by educators around me, I also see an important need for K-12 educators to tell "their" story, sharing what is happening at their schools, in their classrooms, in the offices, as openly and transparently as possible. My bias is that I believe that most educators live in fear of speaking up, fear of losing their jobs, being censured, being called into their supervisor's office or at Human Resources and asked, with the force of temporal power lurking behind each word, "So, tell us. What do you really believe and why should we continue to employ you if you're going to say this about us?" Instead, anyone with with the temerity to be transparent about the work they are doing should be celebrated and applauded.

Sharing is THE threat,” shared Mark Pesce at a recent conference (Source: http://tinyurl.com/6bgkj2). One of the key points of his talk was that in his ”honest and human act of sharing, any of the pretensions to control, the limitations, or power are revealed as completely collapsed and impotent.” As school district leaders struggle to lead, it is clear that though each of us has a phone that grants access to powerful, disruptive technologies, we choose not to use them. While students share ideas and information about everything under the sun, leaders are unable to have real conversations about critical issues.

THE POWER OF STORY

"All the education in the world is worthless," writes an 18 year old blogger at the A Boundless World blog (http://tinyurl.com/qt5a4q), "if you never unlock what makes your heart beat." He goes on to share in a must-read article about schools and education, that grades don't guarantee success. Instead, that passion, determination and positive attitude equal success. These are ideas that are emerging from the masses of K-12 and adult learners who work in our systems. Their expectations for what education, what school should be like, are changing dramatically from where we have been. That story of passion captures readers and raises a question for Communications Directors in school districts--if your readers have infinite choices available to access information, why would they want to read your dry, boring, canned version of what happened when they can sign on via a Twitter stream and read what happened as it happened with none of the gory details left out?

These changing expectations have implications, not only for the educators that work or administer learning occurring in classrooms, but also for school district administrators who feel the pressure to represent change to a wider audience as positive, enabling, and encouraging. The problem is, press releases, powerpoint presentations to select groups, traditional media interviews that provide the video/sound byte that will be broadcast on YouTube...are often ineffective. At a TASA 2009 Midwinters Conference, the presenters of a workshop on using social media pointed out that, "Traditional communication tools have a limited life and as such are limited relationships. Even public meetings…a meeting tonight about school boundaries is limited to that room right there." (Listen to a podcast of this presentation here - http://tinyurl.com/blgljw).

While the presenters have not achieved the pinnacle of social media control (which presents a paradox), transforming the underlying organization in ways that tap into the full power of social media, I applaud the way they’ve been transparent about their efforts. The question I’m left with isn't, “How can we can better navigate this process in school organizations?” but rather, how can we trust and empower our educational community to share the compelling stories that are a part of every day work?

SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS - SPREADING THE CULTURE VIRUS

"While you’ve been hiring consultants to create a slick corporate intranet, establishing policies about who gets to post what, and creating a chain of command to ensure that only appropriate and approved materials show up on your...home page," points out Seth Godin in his book Meatball Sundae, "your engineers, scientists, researchers -- ...even the marketing folks -- have been creating little Web sites for their own use." Meatball Sundae is a book I urge every school district communications staff member to read since it gets at the heart of the problem school districts face. You can't take advantage of social media unless you re-align your core approach to storytelling and sharing ideas/information to the new tools available. One way to accomplish that is to think of social media as a "culture virus," a term coined by Jim Stogdill in a presentation on open source software and government.

Jim suggests that a culture virus has the potential to carry community, transparency, and collaboration across the various, traditionally impermeable boundaries - with community participation as the carrier. That is, the more you activate the community, the greater the spread of the virus. Why would you want to spread such a virus? The benefits to a school district would include culture emergence as "community participants find their perspectives, their worldviews and psychographic profiles spliced in with those community norms--things like transparency, collaboration, and a strong bias toward meaningful participation."

While there are many social media tools available, here are some core ideas that can get you started in creating content that is engaging and will bring readers back. Think of the use of social media tools at all levels of your organization as a culture virus, a way to empower members to meaningfully participate in the work. Instead of three or four central office administrators trying to control what gets reported in your district, you have an army of people working 24 hours a day sharing what works, what doesn't, what's popular, what's not with a world. No matter what you do, this level of participation will get you noticed and may help bring shipwrecks to the light of day, while providing opportunities for organizational change.

How does any organization achieve the change it desires so that new ideas (e.g. culture virus norms) aren't just being grafted onto an "old-world" thinking (e.g. school district adds a superintendent's blog to their site but it is authored by the communications director and the district lawyer, not the superintendent) organization?

To begin sharing the culture virus, someone--preferably someone in a leadership position--has to embrace the fundamental principles of meaningful participation, increased collaboration and transparency. Then, you have to encourage the use of social media tools. Here are 5 tips for K-12 educators, communication professionals or not, inspired by Social Media Explorer similar blog entry:

  1. Engage Your Audience with Your Content: Content that hasn't been prefabricated, is lifeless and written in third person, but is authentic, transparent, open about success as well as failure will be read by your constituents. Start with a story, including audio, video, avoiding being limited by one format or another (e.g. text, video, audio). Blend all of it in so that you reach more people through a media medium that they are interested in. The multimedia portions--audio and video--can be downloaded and put on iPods and MP3/MP4 players. What a great way for students, community members and staff to find out what is going on from others in their organization. At the risk of being imperfect, here is one example of a blog entry that tries to put some of these points into practice: http://tinyurl.com/lqkjdh and a more traditional eNewsletter approach - http://tinyurl.com/laxjao
  2. Make Content Sharing Easy: Press releases on a web site just do not work anymore. Traditional web sites that can't be subscribed to using RSS feeds or that allow email subscription are dead sites. Many web users just aren't taking the time to come back to your site, instead preferring to subscribe to content that will come to them via Google Reader, Twitter.com updates to their phone, and more. Use a blog (e.g. Wordpress), and add plugins that make it easy for people to share your content with others. Some sharing tools include Delicious.com, Diigo.com, Digg.com, StumbleUpon.com, Facebook.com, and Twitter.com. If you're not familiar with these sites, then know that your audience may already be using them to share content about you that you may not like. The solution isn't to block those sites in schools, but to encourage their appropriate use. Most blog platforms and tools enable you to add easy to share/save tools. To get the result on the blog entry in the link shared in Engage Your Audience with Content, I used a Wordpress Plug in (a list appears here - http://tinyurl.com/queo9t) called Add to Any.
  3. Create a Content Calendar: In your District, there are many wonderful things happening that your community wants to know about. Unfortunately, providing print copies of short articles via email or in print do not allow you to explore everything great that is happening and share it easily. However, online, you have an unlimited number of pages and a global audience. Why not create a content calendar that enables you to map out with a calendar what you will be sharing with others online?
  4. Define and Build Relationships: While it may not be popular to follow your local news reporters via Twitter, it is critical that you do so. It is critical because you can raise their awareness by the engaging content that you are sharing about your school district. While they may want to focus on the negative, you can mitigate the effect of their tweets by building a relationship of trust and integrity through the stories you share about your district, your campus, and your classroom.
  5. Make Offline Available Online: Every speaking engagement, each meeting is an opportunity to share your ideas. Avoid the mistake of creating content solely for online or offline audiences. When you create offline content--a conversation with parents at the morning coffee meet-n-mingle with the principal--take the time to write about it, maybe even debrief a parent in a one on one conversation. "What did you think about our morning coffee meeting? How did it impact you?" Take the time to share what you're doing online.


CONCLUSION
In one of my favorite quotes, Clay Shirky shares (http://tinyurl.com/34a5ts) that "In high-freedom environments, people use social tools for fun. In low-freedom environments they use them for political action." Will you encourage your staff and students to learn how to appropriately use social media tools for fun, or will you be on the receiving end of their use? I suggest that many school districts today are feeling the brunt these tools because they are "low-freedom" environments. It's time to change. Shall we begin together?



Afterword: I've wanted to write the following article for a long time, in fact, ever since I saw the TASA2009 presentation I link to below, as well as noticed school districts enduring the tweeting of local news reporters. The problem isn't the news media's last minute embrace of social media--they need to do something to keep their dying newspapers afloat--but rather, school districts' failure to embrace social media and to empower their own people. It's funny to imagine school districts trying to control the Internet through press releases and well-constructed missives to media and their communities. Why would anyone want to read the official story when they can get the gory details?

This article submitted for publication to TCEA TechEdge Summer edition.








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Friday, May 29, 2009

TxDLA Alamo Area Regional Meeting - Area 20


Join the Texas Distance Learning Association's regional meeting (Area 20 in and around San Antonio, Tx, USA):
Time: June 23, 2009 from 11:30am to 1pm
Location: Adrian Spears Federal Judicial Training Center
Organized By: Helen Torres
Street: 643 East Durango Blvd
City/Town: San Antonio, TX
Contact Info: 486-0390

Event Description:
AARG June 232009 Meeting.pdf


See more details and RSVP on MyTxDLA:
http://texasdla.ning.com/events/event/show?id=2068233%3AEvent%3A10183&xgi=4kWUUAT
Unfortunately, I will be at the Texas CTO meeting in Austin sponsored by COSN. Sigh.







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Moodle on Oracle Database


When someone suggested installing Moodle on Microsoft SQL, I squirmed in my seat. The audience around me grew quiet. Microsoft SQL? Was the person crazy? Who would want to use MS-SQL when MySQL was the much better, free open source solution?

So, I was again surprised when I read Ben Wilkoff's post on running Moodle on Oracle. While I have to ask WHY? there must be someone out there who needs to be able to do it. Better to ensure that Ben's video and instructions--in a GoogleDoc--reach as wide an audience as possible!

The specific system in question is using an Oracle database to work with Moodle. While it has been done before, some of the instructions didn’t ring true for me. I also wanted to be able to provide a step-by-step account of how I have done it and how it can be done.

So, without further ado, here is the Google Doc that gives the step by step account of just how to do it.

And, just to prove that it can be done in 25 minutes or less, I have included a screencast of the entire process that I used to revise the Google Doc and make sure everything works.

I hope it can be of use to you and yours.

Kudos to Ben for sharing!









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Supporting CSHB 4294

Here is a copy of the email I sent to my representative today...I adapted the text from the urging email sent out earlier today via the Technology Education Coordinators' Special Interest Group (TEC-SIG).
As a K-12 educator serving in public school districts as an instructional technology director, I see evidence of neglect and lack of funding in my urban San Antonio school district.

Please give final approval to CSHB 4294 when the bill is called up for concurrence. It is my fervent hope, along with the other educators I represent, that this bill will allow school districts, like mine, to use their textbook fund allotment to purchase innovative, up-to-date instructional materials…and the tools to get those materials into the classroom.

On behalf of our children, please support CSHB 4294 so as to enable greater financial flexibility and local control to access the learning materials, and tools, we know our kids need.

With deep appreciation,

Miguel Guhlin
Want to follow suit?

Contact your lawmakers office today and tell him or her that you support CSHB 4294 and ask them to do the same? You can contact your local lawmaker via the following website: http://www.fyi.legis.state.tx.us/

Thanks to Jennifer Bergland, TexTAN and TCEA for their advocacy!






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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Obama Slashes Ed-Tech Funding AGAIN!


In spite of a COSN News Flash via Twitter sharing that "Breaking News...EETT funds under Economic Recovery Act will flow by July (not Oct ), 2009" I still found this announcement below a bit disappointing!
Earlier this month, the Obama Administration proposed to cut funding for the Enhancing Education Through Technology (EETT) program by 63% for FY10. This would slash funding for EETT from $269.9 million to only $100 million.

We need your help to convince Congress to reject this funding cut. ACT NOW!

As you will recall, the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA) invested $650 million in new education technology funding, to be spent between now and September 30, 2010, because this program is so vital to our children's future.

If Congress agrees to this cut, much of the progress made with the new ARRA dollars - modernizing classrooms, training teachers to use technology and ensuring the technological literacy of our students - will be lost!

ACT NOW! Contact your U.S. Senators and Congressional Representative to oppose the President's proposed cut and support funding EETT at a minimum, its FY09 funding level.
ETAN updates are brought to you by the Consortium for School Networking and the International Society for Technology in Education.








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Multiple Technology Intelligences


Adapted from http://www.medindia.net/news/featured-news/multiple-intelligences.jpg


Playing with ideas is part of the fun with blogging and I love what Tim Holt has done with the old "multiple intelligences" concept. Although it's worthy of more elaboration and explanation--not to mention a graphic design by someone with a higher "animation intelligence" than I (smile)--here is Tim's basic premise:

Types of Multiple Technology Intelligences....

Let me start the list. I suppose that there are others, but let the discussion begin with this list:

  1. Animation Intelligence: Student learn by creating drawings and animations.
  2. Gaming Intelligence: Students learn through simulation, whether creating or playing.
  3. Video Intelligence: Students learn through the creation of multimedia video content such as digital storytelling.
  4. Music Intelligence: Student learn through the creation of music, ringtones, jingles, etc.
  5. Podcasting Intelligence: Student learn through the creation of audio narratives.
  6. Office Intelligence: Students learn best through the use of traditional office-style programs.
  7. Connecting Intelligence: Students learn best through the use of social networking. This also includes video conferencing.

So that is a start. Unlike Gardner, I consider my ideas a collaborative effort that anyone can participate in.

So, what are your Multiple Technology Intelligences
As I look over Tim's list, I feel that "collaborative intelligence"--where one uses technology to collaborate at a distance--is missing. It's so important to be able to connect and collaborate with others. While connecting is all the rage through the use of social networking, collaboration around real life projects is the evolution of that, and a definite MUST for anyone working in the 21st Century. Not having developed this "intelligence" can be a real downer for folks who will have to thrive in a connected world that demands collaboration as a matter of course.

As I review Tim's list, I'm tempted to change it up a little:
  1. Animation Intelligence: Student learn by creating drawings and animations.
  2. Gaming Intelligence: Students learn through simulation, whether creating or playing.
  3. Consolidate what Tim terms as Video,Music and Podcasting intelligence into the following
    Media Intelligence, which might be described as Students learning through the creation of rich media content, such as video (e.g. digital storytelling), music (e.g. music, ringtones, jingles), and podcasting (e.g. audio narratives, as well as enhanced podcasting).
  4. Connecting Intelligence: Students learn best through the use of social networking. This also includes video conferencing.
  5. Collaborative Intelligence: Students learn through the application of technologies that enable collaboration (e.g. Skype, wikis, GoogleDocs) on virtual projects in ways that couldn't be done without these Read/Write Web technologies.
  6. Office Intelligence: Students learn best through the use of traditional standalone software programs (e.g. MS Office, OpenOffice) that focus on enhancing isolated productivity.
For fun, what would you modify?






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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Ideas Made Manifest


Manifest Destiny, http://thousands2thousands.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/manifest-destiny-3.jpg


At a workshop I attended recently, the facilitator asked participants to respond to these 2 questions:
  1. When did you first know you wanted to be a leader?
  2. When did you realize you are a leader?
Since this was a low-tech workshop, I wrote out my responses longhand, enjoying the "old-fashioned" approach to writing, rather than the instant revisions possible with a laptop (which I also happened to have). As a result, I think the writing feels different, less glib, more grandiose. When I shared my ideas with those in my team of two administrators, I decided to read my responses verbatim rather than speak from them like notes, as others did. Of course, I received a completely different response...and that was fun.

As I hate to lose any piece of writing I craft, even imperfect as the writing below, here are my responses to the two questions. What would your responses have been?

When did you first know you wanted to be a leader?

There is an assumption in the question that one knows what a leader is and then decides to pursue that. Often, "leadership" is defined as a position of temporal power, a way of assuming a mantle of management, a way of exerting control over an unruly often chaotic environment rife with emotion and disjointed, unsolved problems.

My goal has ever been to solve problems, to learn how to do so in collaboration with others. In this, I have often been a failure. It is far easier to change oneself--and we know how difficult that can be--than to bring about change that is led. Bolman and Deal refer to the leader as someone who undertakes a hero's journey--a journey of self-knowledge and discovery then returns home, transformed to share a new way of being with others if they so thirst after wisdom.

Your quest as a leader is a "journey to find the treasure of your true self and then [to return] home and give your gift to help transform the kingdom--and in the process your own life.

The quest itself, is replete with dangers and pitfalls, but if offers great rewards: the capacity to be successful in the world, knowledge of the mysteries of the human soul, the opportunity to find your unique gifts in the world, and to live in loving community with other people.

Leaders with soul bring spirit to organizations. Leaders of spirit find their soul's treasure store and offer its gifts to others.
Source: Excerpts from Bolman and Deal's Leading with Soul (1995)
(and no, I didn't include this in my written response...but it's one of my favorite quotes)
Kahlil Gibran describes a teacher as someone who bids you, not to enter the house of your own wisdom, but helps you pass the threshold of your own mind.

My desire to be a leader is not to exert control or power over others, but to have the freedom--and empower others--to explore learning, to pursue the white stag to journey's end, wherever that may be.

When did you realize you are a leader?

In Forrest Gump the movie, Tom Hank's character feels like running (YouTube Link). He is sent by circumstances, dressed in the clothing he has on, the shoes he's wearing, like a prophet of the past sent into the Wilderness to discover God's word like mountain dew, to gather sustenance from the Almighty made manifest, to become filled with the power to journey on. Gump's run draws attention and he soon has a crowd of followers. But Gump has no desire to lead...only a desire to run. No desire to control or change others, only a compulsion to run back-n-forth across America. He is not beholden to any power but instead is realizing his power from the act of being who he is in alignment with the world.

My identity as a leader is that of someone on a journey, and I'm focused on learning, and as best as I can, applying that. It is not my success that involves leadership, but rather, my willingness to share, that results in the perception of leadership.

I am a follower of ideas made manifest.






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Journal of Research on Tech in Education: Who's Teaching Online


My copy of the Summer, 2009 issue of the Journal of Research on Technology in Education arrived this week, and I'm thrilled to get it! Some of the articles appearing this issue include the following:
  1. K-12 Distance Educators at Work: Who's Teaching Online Across the United States
  2. Teachers' Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge and Learning Activity Types: Curriculum-based Technology Integration Reframed
  3. Teachers' Beliefs and Technology Practices: A Mixed-methods Approach
  4. Comparing Self-paced and Cohort-based Online Courses for Teachers
Of the ones listed here, #s 1 and 4 caught my immediate interest as practically relevant. Having read so many articles about items 2 and 3, I must confess to being jaded as to how we could reframe tech integration in any way that would work, or that teacher beliefs and tech practices would actually gel to brush away old, ineffective approaches. However, I'll be reading them anyways...I noticed a highly esteemed colleague, Dr. Judy Harris, was one of the authors of article #2.

Here are my notes on K-12 Distance Educators at Work: Who's Teaching Online Across the United States by Leanna Archambault and Kent Crippen. Again, these are the points that jump out at me, not necessarily the best of the article. Any inaccuracies are mine.

  1. Data suggest that aspects of teaching online, such as the number of classes/students, student motivation, and lack of support, can be overwhelming at times.
  2. Allen and Seaman (2006) developed specific definitions:
    Online - Course where most or all of the content is delivered online. At least 80% of seat time is replaced by online activity.
    Blended/hybrid - Course that blends online and face to face delivery. Between 30 and 79% of the content is delivered online.
    Web-facilitated - Course that uses web-based technology to facilitate a face to face course. Between 1 and 29% of the content is delivered online.
  3. During 2002-2003, approx one third of public school districts (36%) had students enrolled in online distance education courses, 68% of students attended high schools, 29% attended combined or ungraded schools, 2% attended middle or junior high schools and 1% attended elementary schools.
  4. The vast majority of American school districts are providing some form of online learning for their students and more plan to do so within the next 3 years.
  5. An estimated 600K-700K K-12 public school students were engaged in online learning in 2005-2006, and this figure increased approximately 1,030,000 students during the 2007-2008 school year. This represents a 47% increase in enrollments in two years and these figures are expected to increase.
  6. It may be that those involved in teaching online have a stronger interest in issues related to educational technology and that this background better prepares them for teaching in an online environment. Another major area for graduate degrees held was educational leadership/administration.
  7. 54% of respondents stated they were regular full-time teachers, 36% reported they were part-time teachers who also taught either at another online school or in a traditional face to face environment. 6^ reported another role in addition to teaching within their school, such as an administrator, curriculum specialist, instructional designer, or staff developer.
  8. Traditional subjects that were reportedly taught online were evenly distribution among math, science, language arts/reading, social studies and humanities.
  9. Majority of online teachers surveyed reported teaching at the high school level (9-12), followed by middle school grades 6-8, and finally at the elementary level (PK-5).
  10. Specific classes online within the field of English/language arts include American literature, British literature, composition, writing, journalism, publications, mythology, science fiction/fantasy, and creative writing. Math courses were made of pre-algebra, algebra I and II, geometry, precalculus, calc, trig, consumer math. Science and social studies courses also appear....
  11. The ongoing struggle for traditional schools to find qualified math teachers is also felt by online schools.
  12. 80% reported teaching their entire class online with the majority of face to face instruction replaced by online activity.
  13. Hybrid classes with 30-79% of the clas taught online were reported by 7% of online teachers.
  14. 13% indicated that their classes were Web-facilitated with 1-29% of instruction taking place online.
  15. 81% of online teachers reported that their instruction took place asynchronously, as there was no specific time that their students were required to be online to receive instruction.
  16. 12% of online teachers responded that there were certain specific times when their students had to be online to receive brief instruction.
  17. 6% stated that instruction took place synchronously and that their students were required to login at predetermined times to receive complete instruction.
  18. The majority of K-12 online teachers reported having a positive overall experience and shared a number of benefits, including not having to deal with the frustrating aspects of the traditional classroom such as classroom management.
  19. Lack of support, number of errors in curriculum, lack of student discipline to complete assignments at an appropriate time, low pay, difficult programs and lack of technical support, the number of different classes (5) made it difficult to prepare effectively, poor student effort to improve, lack of support from student's schools, no little parent involvement....
  20. Online teachers reported a higher incidence of master's degrees, at 62% vs 41% of traditional teachers. Also 13% of online teachers reported having degrees and certifications beyond or in addition to a master's degree, as opposed to 7% of traditional teachers.
  21. Many major virtual schools....require 3 years of teaching experience in a specific content area as well as state certification and high qualifications.
  22. Updating teacher education programs so that they address not only pedagogical issues in traditional environments, but also aspects of online pedagogy, how classroom management changes in an online setting, and how best to use modern technological tools to convey content and assess student understanding should be the aim of leading and innovative colleges of education.







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Installing Apache on Ubuntu for Moodle


Recently, someone shared this question in the Moodle forum...
Hi. I've been using XAMP to run Moodle, but now I need to migrate to Linux.

I've downloaded the apache at http://neacm.fe.up.pt/pub/apache/httpd/httpd-2.2.11.tar.gz and followed the instructions at http://webdesign.about.com/cs/apache/a/aainstallapache.htm, but I can't find the httpd.conf file. Also when I go to http://localhost/ I get a 'It works!' message instead of the supposed Apache Server page. It seems another server is already running on my computer. Any ideas? I'd appreciate some input to get out of this mess. Thanks in advance.
It reminded me of this post I wrote about installing Apache using XAMPP on UbuntuLinux.

I was running XAMPP for Linux without problems but then when I turned on the laptop today, I couldn't get Apache web server portion of XAMPP to start. Why not?

Apparently, UbuntuLinux' Apache2 server was already running. I tried getting it to stop by nuking the directory but no luck. It must have been the wrong directory (sheepish grin). So, I immediately confessed my ignorance to the world via this tweet:
On UbuntuLinux running Xampp. However, Apache2--unrelated to XAMPP--suddenly is running. "Another web server daemon is already running"
This is like the equivalent of walking into the pantry, being unable to find the oatmeal container, calling out for help to the spouse--who immediately says, "If it was a snake, it would have bit you!"--and then finding the oatmeal 2 seconds before the wife walks into the kitchen, having abandoned her comfortable spot on the couch.

I did a google search on this term:
web server daemon running on ubuntulinux
And found this as the response...

sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 stop

then

sudo /opt/lampp/lampp start
Someone else shared this tutorial on Moodle.org on how to install Apache on Ubuntu...sigh. Geekdom. Ain't it great?
;->







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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

VMWare Fusion for Mac - $39 !!


As a veteran user of VMWare Fusion--a program that allows you to run Windows on Mac computers--I was thrilled to read the following announcement that arrived in my email. I'm currently using VMWare Fusion on my personal Macbook and my district-provided Macbook Pro. Fusion works well on my Macbook, but on the Macbook Pro, it is truly awesome.

Definitely consider buying VMWare Fusion. Please note that I do not receive anything for this endorsement...I already own VMWare Fusion and want to share the info.

For friends and family thinking about getting that new grad a Mac, add VMware Fusion, enabling them to do even more as they venture into the real world.

And now—at a price point that will make new grads throw their hats up with excitement—it’s easier than ever to enable Windows and Mac applications to run side-by-side, without the need to reboot.

With VMware’s academic discount, students and new grads save 50% off the list price of VMware Fusion.

Regular Price: $79.99
Your Price: $39.99

Buy Now

Take advantage of this student discount while your student still qualifies!









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Cut Virtual Schools? Sheesh


Source: Global Kids' Digital media Initiative
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3218/2927594008_9baf8d51ce.jpg


Over the last half year, I've had the opportunity to work with teachers in online professional learning scenarios...without reservation, the experience has been positive and engaging for these educators, as well as for me. In fact, we've touched MORE people via online professional learning than we have in face to face workshops...and that's incredible, considering we've only had a few virtual class offerings.

I know that our children should be receiving the benefits of virtual learning opportunities, which is one of the reasons I'm thrilled at the work being done by the Texas Virtual School Network (TxVSN.org). So, I was surprised at Florida legislators taking money away from virtual schools...

Research at the University of Florida last week concluded what many advocates of online education have long maintained: virtual schools save state governments money.

But what happens when a state government cuts its investment?

The Florida Virtual School had enjoyed tens of millions of new state dollars every year since 2003 as demand for its programs spiked. It's now the fastest growing school system in Florida, but it will suffer a funding cut like no other.

When the Florida Legislature looked to save money in a darkening economy, its members zeroed in on the class-size reduction money paid to the Virtual School -- as much as $19 million. Lawmakers asked:

Why would a school with no classrooms need money to cut crowding?

Without that money, however, the Virtual School's administrators say it's harder to hire enough teachers and develop new courses to accommodate the thousands of new students they attract annually.
Source: Tampa Bay Online via District Administration
Knowing that Texas legislators aren't much smarter--if at all--than Florida politicians, what future will Texas virtual education projects have?







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Monday, May 25, 2009

Boot from USB Flash Drive Using ubuntu Created with Unetbootin

Thanks to Dwight Goodwin for sharing these tips...

Here is a how to video on how to install Puppy Linux using unetbootin. Same steps but point it at the Ubuntu iso file. Also on Ubuntu 9.0 under admin there is a USB install setup. That’s definitely the easiest way

How to video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRB9Px3FBiY&feature=channel_page

Article:

http://classroomnext.blogspot.com/2009/03/puppy-linux-handy-tool-to-have-around.html

And from the blog entry with my modifications for Ubuntu Jaunty:
  1. Download Ubuntu.iso file - http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download
  2. Download UNetbootin which will install the .iso file on the thumbdrive http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin
  3. Run UNetbootin
  4. Point the install at the Ubuntu .iso file
  5. Select the USB drive where you want to install.
I tried this out on an 8gig USB Flash drive without problem, and a colleague did it on 4gig and 8gig. Whether it will work on 1gig, I'm not sure.







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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Policy Adherence Beef with AT&T


Back in February, 2009, I approached my local AT&T store with money burning a hole in my pocket. I'd already tried an older Blackberry (free) and decided that I didn't quite like the interface. Having played around with an iPod Touch (Madmin), I decided that an iPhone would be the way to go.

"Hi, I'd like to buy two iPhones to replace my phone and my daughter's devices."
"I'm sorry, sir," responded the sales clerk, "You won't be able to do that unless you get a new phone line and sign a new contract for two more years."
"Yes," I responded a bit startled, "I just re-upped my contract for 2 years earlier this month and that won't be a problem for my daughter's line."
"Well, sir," responded the sales clerk, "You won't be able to get an iPhone unless you get two new lines."
"That seems a bit crazy, don't you think? I have to pay all that money when I just renewed this month."
"Sir," the clerk responded, "it's AT&T Policy."

After we disconnected (no, I didn't slam the phone down or anything like that...more along the lines of, "I'm going to call AT&T Headquarters to verify this...it just doesn't seem right.") I called AT&T directly.

"Hi, my name is Miguel Guhlin and I'm interested in getting 2 iPhones. I already have an account with AT&T."
"Yes, sir," responded the gung-ho AT&T person with a cheerful enthusiastic voice (boy, I'm going to get somewhere here, I thought), "we'd be happy to help you with that!"
"Ok, I have 2 lines and I want to upgrade my current phone--which I just re-upped for 2 years--and my daughter's line."
"Shouldn't be a problem, we'll get a retro-upgrade for you. I just need to check with my supervisor." A long pause. A dejected voice comes back on the line.
"I'm sorry, sir, my supervisor says I can't upgrade your current line and get you an iPhone. You'd have to cancel your existing line, get a new line and sign that line up for a 2 year contract. The same for your daughter."
"That's crazy!" I insisted, "Are you sure this is right?"
"It's AT&T policy decision, sir. I'm sorry."
"Please make a note in my file that I will be dropping AT&T at my first opportunity and I will NEVER be buying an iPhone from AT&T. That's 4 lines you can say goodbye to." After a short pause, "Thank you for your help and trying, though."

And that's the substance of my policy beef with AT&T. I could care less that AT&T will be getting Google Android G1 later. I'm dropping them and encourage you iPhone fanatics to join me.
;->










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Your Local Paper - Needs More Seasoning?


As an online reader of my local newspaper (no, I'd never pay for it) and subscribed to tweets from local news reporters, I'm wondering if local news wouldn't benefit more from the kind of seasoning that the Tucson Citizen is getting ready to enjoy--citizen journalism. The Citizen's idea for a venture is to model the new site after HuffingtonPost.com, a political blog....

The site is a collection of blogs and bloggers who post news, information, opinion and more on the site everyday. There are dozens, if not hundreds of Tucson bloggers. They add a tremendous amount of knowledge and perspective to the total universe of Tucson.

But each is unique and mostly stand alone. All rely on Google searches, word-of-mouth and a few other modestly effective means to market their work.

Our idea is to offer them the economy and power of scale.
Other plans for the Citizen include holding a bloggers convention, for the purposes of helping connect bloggers with each other, promote online debate and discussion about Tucson for Tucsonans and encourage and teach those who want to jump into blogging but may be intimidated by the depth of the pool (Source: What to Expect from the New Tucson Citizen)

In a quote shared multiple times via Twitter earlier this week, and definitely worth remembering, Morley Safer from 60 Minutes is quoted as having said the following:
I would trust citizen journalism as much as I would trust citizen surgery.
In considering a response to this quote, I found this point to be particularly helpful:
You can't just ask a question. You have to provide a framework that shapes the issue and helps people to come up up with an answer.
via NewsAche
So, considering what a framework for "citizen surgery" would be like, let's ask a few questions. How many people get operated on "just in time" by every day people like you and me (you know, people who aren't doctors)? Consider this argument from Surgery for the Layman:
But no, the medical man must still remain something of a witch-doctor-cum-black magician; a being whose knowledge is on a plane far removed from the understanding of the layman. . .ignorance does, indeed, cause fear.
Source: Surgery for the Layman, 1942
Maybe, folks are missing the point that instant access to "experts" and information makes the impossible, possible.
By attaching a millimeter-sized camera robot to a tether, scientists have designed a way to allow individuals with non-medical backgrounds to perform minimally invasive surgery in almost any location. Unlike room-size and expensive surgical robots, mini in vivo robots are inexpensive and mobile enough to support emergency surgeries almost anywhere, from the battlefield to outer space.
Source: http://www.physorg.com/news121430323.html
If that's not enough, consider EdHeads which allows you to conduct some virtual surgeries.
It sounds like Tucson's "new" approach may be to provide that framework to facilitate their citizens blog, rather than cover a variety of angles on a story without knowing what really engages and share it all online.














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Transparency and Truth


While I'm not entirely convinced that President Obama is living up to his campaign promises of openness and transparency (and, of course, some point out, what politician does?), two items have come across my screen that give the appearance of O&T.

The first is Data.gov, which:


And the second is...

That's right, your federal government has come to YouTube. You may have noticed that President Obama has been posting weekly addresses to the White House YouTube channel since inauguration. Now, there are dozens of official federal YouTube channels where you can access footage from NASA, the State Department, the FBI, the CDC, and more. It's all part of making Washington, D.C., more transparent and accessible than ever before -- and helping you easily navigate government information that's relevant to your life.

The U.S. Government channel is located at youtube.com/usgovernment, a nifty hub that links off to dozens of federal government channels on YouTube, from the Social Security Administration to the Environmental Protection Agency, with others to be added in the coming months. Learn more in this video from the White House New Media office....
via Google Public Policy Blog

I share some of my perspective as two comments on Wes Fryer's blog post entitled Military Bloggers: Operational Security Risks or Information Warriors for Transparency and Truth.






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My new phone...I wish.


Heck, I wish this was my phone. I'm locked into AT&T for a bit longer (1 year) and need to investigate what it will cost me to take my family and leave them for T-Mobile. AfterDawn blog cites these updates to the firmware update to the Google Android G1 phone:
Coming with 1.5 is the addition of an on-screen keyboard. Users will be able to enter text while the phone is in portrait mode instead of having to rotate to landscape mode and open the keyboard. The new update will also add more Home Screen widgets including a widgets for the user's calendar, a music player, and a picture frame.

The addition of video recording, as well as the addition of video playback support for MPEG-4 and 3GP, is a welcome addition for many whose biggest complaint is the lack of video recording using the built-in camera.
What? You think I should get an iPhone? NEVER! I will never get an iPHone and neither will my family. They had their chance to get my money and blew it for "policy" adherence. I immediately remembered why I dropped AT&T so long ago and switched to Cingular, then bemoaned AT&T's acquisition of Cingular. My monthly bill goes up a little at a time...it's a love-hate relationship with AT&T.

Sigh. Let's just hope that after I switched, I won't feel like the person who put this on the back of their vehicle:


Image Source: http://customerevangelists.typepad.com/blog/2006/08/going_mobile_ag.html










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