Thursday, September 25, 2008

My Bookmarks on Delicious

I've used Delicious before and think it definitely has uses. Problem is breaking habits. I am not at all used to using it or sending kids to it to see my bookmarks. I'd just as soon use moodle, which is a little more controlled and a lot less public.

Still, if you want to see my bookmarks, go to
http://delicious.com/ then click on the "people" link and type my school username.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Image Generators - My "fun" pic

This week was called "play week" and they told us to go explore something fun. I was curious about image generators, so I went to the cartoon site they list in the course and made a few cartoons with captions.

Basically, the site has hundreds of cartoon images with empty captions. You can put a title on the image (above the cartoon) and then fill in the bubble.

I have to say, it was not worth the effort. The site I went to was not ready for prime time. It took forever to load each image, then it took a lot of trial and error to get the image to look right, and if it didn't you couldn't just tweak it you had to START OVER! Then the only way I could actually use the image was to copy it to my hard drive. I could never figure out how to bring it directly from the image generation site straight into my blog. I'm pretty sure it's supposed to be able to do that.

Still, it was kind of fun. If you want to see the results of my work, you can check out my moodle class (Tech Project). I decided to freshen up my page with new images. I like the result and finished all the images, despite the fact that it took so long.

In summary, it was a huge time sink and like I said, not worth the effort. I keep wondering how this might fit into a class. Sure you could have the kids generate an image with a slogan for a project, but does the learning match the amount of time it takes to create the projects? I have mixed feelings about this.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Flickr

I posted some pictures on Flickr. They are photos that my daughter took. She has an eye for photographing plants and flowers up close. (At least, I think she does!) Most of these were taken in Africa at a botanical garden in Cape Town. The plants are mostly indigenous to South Africa.

I can see the value of Flickr in the classroom. The students in 7th grade used it to share photos of their trip to Stone Labs. Each kid uploaded her photos, and other kids could download them for projects, such as the PhotoStory project they were required to do. They all ended up with far more photos to choose from than just their own, including pictures of themselves. (The person behind the camera rarely gets to be in photos, but sharing like this is one way to help insure that people get pictures of themselves.

You could also use it to search for images for projects or movies. I just did a search for Angkor Wat in Cambodia and found over 200,000 photos, mostly gorgeous, that could be used if a student needed some images of this historical temple. Just out of curiosity, I did a search with Google Images for Angkor Wat and also found just over 200,000 images. The difference is that the Google pictures are all on the web and may or may not be available to copy and use. Flickr, on the other hand, is free to copy under the Creative Commons License. This could make a good teaching point for students.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Welcome

Welcome to my blog. I've never thought much about writing publicly, and never had much success writing a personal journal, but I'm participating in an online class that requires this. I will post my reflections about the various assignments we are working on, which area all focused on Web 2.0 tools.

Enjoy!