As always, Michelle Martin’s Web2.0Wednesday idea has a perfect timing to what I’ve been mulling over. So, here are a few digital ideas for the classroom we could use to have a grand beginning: Kevin Shadix suggests hooking learners with simple stories. To do that, for example, you could use Slideshare just like he did.
Rupa talks about the use of comics as an attention grabber. You could use ToonDoo, for example, to produce and customize your own comics, or even have your learners produce a comic strip to introduce themselves. Cool! Need to test that.
If they are a Face2Face group, I’d ask to take a photo of their partners and using a mobile, they could send it to a Flickr account (Flickr gives you an email to send photos to) with the title having the name of the person, and some thing curious the photographer found about their peers.
This could also be done using Picwing . Beforehand, just set up an email at picwing that students can send photos to, like classxxx at picwing.com. Then, students can send their photos to this email with their names and a curious fact in the Subject line. Another possibility is to ask them to email a photo of their favorite room, place, city, etc. This would be really fun!
One more idea with photos: students could choose one of the geeks drawn by Extra Life and blog it saying why they chose that specific geek. The photos are copyrighted, but we could get in touch with the artist to see if he could let us use it for educational purposes. I’d love to see this into practice.
Wow, ideas are popping up!
Another one that I tried with a group of moderators in the beginning of the year and it worked well was recording our introductions in Voicethread. We, then, could invite learners to add their intros and ask questions to the instructor.
Here’s what we did:
Well, some ideas that might help me and others! There are tons to add. What’s your idea? We could certainly make a pool of nice web2.0 icebreakers!
Just got this nice idea from Nik Peachy. He suggested the site Yearbookyourself to make up a version of you in old times. Totally fun! Here’s one of the results:




Kids need guidance. At home, they generally don’t get it from parents who sometimes are clueless about the richness of the Web, as well as of its true dangers. So, who better than an educator who’s passionate, engaged in the online community of educators, concerned about developing his kids’ skills for the present “real world” to help the little ones understand the subtleties of the Web? Blogging, voicethreading, this is all part of a reality that cannot be ignored. So, Al was there exploring his students’ voices, passions, drives in the teaching/learning process in a way that was meaningful to them. They were learning from each other and from international partners, blogging coaches. Probably these students would never have had the chance to learn so much about cultural issues, other peoples, and even develop their media literacy skills, ICT and information skills if they hadn’t been exploring together, in class, the wonders of Web 2.0 tools that might impact their lives in terms of advancement of their critical thinking skills, creativity, self-expression.