Archive for the 'twitter' Category

Edublogging with Passion

A friend of mine in Italy, Seth Dickens, has kindly asked me to talk a bit about edublogging. We had planned for an interview, but due to technical issues, we went for a recording.
Edublogging… How many times have I written about it, gave tips, presented, and tried to inspire others? Fact is the ones who endure the first stages of discoveries and experiments are the passionate educators, those who teach with heart and soul, who truly believe in their transformative potential as an educator. These are the ones who, later on, become passionate edubloggers.
The point of my talk was what I’ve been saying from the beginning and what I wrote about in the article “Blogging in the Classroom: It Doesn’t ‘Simply Happen‘ “. Persistence, fearlessness, being passionate and knowing that you have something that will add value to someone are key to make it a successful endeavor.
We make lists of how to be a successful blogger, but formulas are not in the core of Edublogging, conversations are. Conversations don’t mean that you need to get tons of comments. They mean a talk to yourself, commenting on other people’s blogs, and yes, getting comments when your readers feel the urge to interact with you. I sin as a blogger, for I am not consistent as I should be or as would be willing to. However, I’ve decided to let it go, for I have little ones and a husband to care for. I have professional projects and other ways to connect. Nowadays, Twitter is my means of quickly connecting to others, though it’s not a substitute to blogging. Twitter is connection, blogging is reflection + connection. One complementing each other in my circle of learning.

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Through blogging, edublogging my mind pours out, I learn, share, re-shape who I am and how I see things. But, my ultimate question is how could I show that to other educators? Maybe I can’t. Just through their own blogging journey they will learn what passionate blogging is all about, some will just find the excuse for not even giving a try. Blogging is a transformational act one should be willing to undergo. It won’t work if it’s just mechanic, technical. No. It’s humanistic, contextualized, personalized, collective, cultural, intense.
I’ll never forget some memorable posts that show the power of blogging:
Marina’s post - A psychologist talking about her experience about being a clown.
Having Dennis Newson as our class mystery guest
Motivating my adult students to predict a short story by Edgar Allan Poe we read in parts in class.
The rich cultural exchanges my group had with Dennis Oliver’s group in the US due to our International Exchange blog.
Emerson, a quiet adult student in class, surfacing as a wonderful blogger and commenter.
Discussion with Russian students and readers about the Brazilian movie “The City of God”.
Sharing Love Stories
Wow! Just so nice to travel back in the past through blogging. It’s a record of a moment, a state of mind, it shows us and our learners in ways we’d never share in the old brick and mortar classroom in such intense exchange and connection. These are just some of the examples mainly with students in it, but there is the other side of edublogging as a professional and personal development. This is another story and certainly deserves another blog post!

Utterz

I had signed up for Utterz, but haven’t tested it. Today I decided to give it a try from my mobile phone just dialing the number they gave me when I created my account. Clear instructions, recorded message, magic! Already online. It’s an effective way for moblogging. You can make short interviews on the go, record your own thoughts, whatever you can think of.
In addition, you can crosspost it to services including blogs, twitter, Tumblr, youtube (if you happen to have a cell phone with video capabilities), Flickr. Worth giving it a try.
Oh, not to mention the feature of audio discussions, in which you can join a conversation replying to your friend via cellphone.
Here’s my test:

Brazilian Uplifting Music

It all started with a tweet from Robert Squires. He sent me a funny video in YouTube and he said he was into so Brazilian fine tunes and if I had any suggestions…Well, I kept procrastinating, for it’s totally insane to make a playlist of Brazilian music, as there are so many fantastic singers and songs that I couldn’t even count for in a lifetime.
Networking again in the webheads group and I was answering an email from Robert Squires about Ning. Then, I just had an off topic moment telling him I was still thinking about the music playlist. Ronaldo, my great friend and wonderful sax player, replied saying he was in for the list. Great, I thought. Who would be better than Ronaldo for amazing Brazilian tunes. I added a page to the wiki we collaborate, BrazilBridges, and immediately after was Ronaldo there. To prove that passion leaves behind all kinds of procrastination, for I know how busy Ronaldo is right now!
I had a huge to-do list this morning. Forgot everything! Once I connected to last.fm, I spent the morning exploring my new passions and old ones, singing along, remembering, feeling uplifted, thinking how blessed I am to have been born in a country where music is everywhere, is part of our lives. Rythm, fine tunes, talents, wonderful beats…They give us the tone, the essence of who we are. I forgot about the other things I had to do. Happiness on a Friday morning is what counts!
I’m a proud Brazilian who loves these connections, networking, and sharing the best of what we have.
For more, check our BrazilianBridges.
What would you add to my Brazilian beats list?

Twitter Strikes me Again

Just because I was checking Twitter, I came across this very promising tool, which might be totally appealing to learners to mix, remix and create their media. I was just browsing through twitterverse for the EarthCast updates. I stopped at Barbara Ganley’s Tweet. She’s always an inspiration and I just love to check what she’s up to with her students. She was talking about her student production. I went there and was in awe by the visual quality of his poetry production.
No more words needed. Check for yourself. Of course, I signed up in Vuvox!

Related post: The Power of Microblogging 

The Power of Blogging

I was just going through some tweets, when I came across this message by Barbara Ganley,

Though overwhelmed with little things to do for the blogging4educators sessions, I decided to take a look to see what kinds of connections where happening through blogging as this is the main aspect we’ve been discussing and participants are eagerly asking questions about how to foster conversations. What a surprise to find such a deep conversation between the student and the author of a video he was reviewing.

The Power of MicroBlogging

There’s not much time to say here everything I’d like to. Too much going on in our session blogging4educators since today we dropped the curtains and our avid participants were already there chatting, interacting and finding themselves around or getting a little lost.
However, I just wanted to keep it registered here something that I find quite amazing and it’s even more clear to me now. For the past year, I’ve been twittering, not so frequently as I wished, but I’m always there through Skype (I get my twitter updates through my skype account) and learning from others. There’s always a resource, a podcast, a blog mentioned by someone in my network that takes me deeper into subjects that I feel like exploring. No, twittering is not shallow. It establishes human contact with powerful mind connections. I guess nobody has the real notion of how it is impacting other people’s lives. Interesting enough that people that I’ve never seen f2f have been giving so many invaluable insights from this brave new online world. Microblogging has proliferated as microspheres of our daily lives in the personal spectrum, as well as professional. It is faster, dynamic, a living thing. I started with Twitter, signed up for pownce, though never used. And just today I checked Gladys Baya’s Tumblr to realize she’s been posting wonderful things there, little treasures of her own. All of a sudden I get to her own world in a different perspective. I’ve been interacting with her so intensely for the past months in preparation to the blogging4educators, but then I stumble into her Tumblr. Suprise. A chest of Gladys’ bits, different from the ones I’m used to, even more complete. Microblogging is another sphere of one’s many facets.
After the pleasant moment of satisfaction to “see” Gladys through different lens, I came across one of her bits that called my attention, kwout. A very cool application and as user-friendly as any web2.0 should be. Thanks, Gladys, for sharing your Tumblr and your other micro-side! Here’s the result of my test with kwout. Just loved it! Microblogging. Connectivity power in a few sentences, fragments of oneself.
Related post: Twitter Strikes me Again


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