Archive for the 'voicethread' Category

Online Icebreakers

When you are open to explore what out there, ideas, resources seem to converge. Coincidence, convergence, whatever…The fact is that for the past days I’ve been giving a lot of thought on how to best engage, hook students up front from the beginning of their e-learning journey. I’m devising an online course for Brazilian educators and the point is that if they don’t get excited with the possibilities ahead of them, how could they inspire their own learners? So, I’ve been reading, thinking and exploring a lot and just yesterday I read two interesting blog posts on how to use starters, grabbers, icebreakers in the beginning of a course. It doesn’t mean it needs to be online. How could we use attention grabbers to hook our learners, to have them motivated to take the risk, to collaborate, to inspire them to go beyond?
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:

Brasília on the Web2.0Wednesday


Brasília, my hometown.
I was born in Brasília, I grew up there, I’m raising my kids there.
Brasilia so distant now
Brasilia of unique architecture, a planned city becoming mature in unexpected ways
Brasilia, gastronomic, cultural, bureaucratic, green, concrete in appearance
A city of immigrants built in the 1950s
Inaugurated in 1960.
Brasilia still to become Whatever we want it to be
Brasilia, my hometown which I long for
Brasilia, My beloved city that I’ll always call home.
_____________________________________
Although the album had already been prepared some time ago, I took this chance to mix it and remix it with the great incentive of sharing with my blogger buddies. Here’s my contribution to the fun Web2.0Wednesdays.
In 2006, my students produced a podcast about Brasília that you can listen to here. _____________________________________
I’m currently living in Key West, so here’s the Voicethread I created some time ago for my students about Key West.

Here are some of my Key West photos.
 
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Blogging with Kids Threatened

minilegendsJust when I had a post of the online possibilities for kids and how transformative the read/write Web can be for the little ones in terms of educational benefits for the 21st century and was excited about the new blog coach experience with Graham Wegner, I hear about the alarming news of Al Upton’s blog order of closure by the Department of Education and Children’s Services – South Australia, DECS. They alleged that there was “too much student identifying information”. From the little I’ve seen from Al’s work, mainly through his minilegends voicethread, I could notice how serious of a job he was doing with those kids, enhancing their digital skills so important in this new online order/disorder.
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.
As for personal information, do administrators and parents have any idea of what their kids are saying or doing outside the classroom, in their online personal context? At least in Brazil, many 3rd graders already have their MSN account, Orkut, MySpace, etc, which let them be overexposed. They share photos, personal information, etc. So, isn’t it better if we let them figure out through guidance the limits by which they can be safely surfing the Web? Isn’t there too much media advertisement about the dangers of predators, pedophiles on the Net that is generating this paranoid view of its true dangers? If it were for the dangers of the real world, then should I just shut my kids in the house and no contact with the outside world out of our parent protective bubble? No! We can’t let fear and this collective safety paranoia hinder us from having healthy relationships, educational exchanges that are positive, enriching and might impact on our kids future.
What Al’s experience has shown us is that even in a country who has been evolving so rapidly in e-learning, online pedagogy, educators’ good intentions are still misinterpreted by administrators who probably haven’t even had the chance to be part of online networked social spaces, or parents who don’t understand the pedagogy behind blogging and, in most cases, don’t even grasp the concept of blogging. So, time to invest even more time and energy in establishing the links with these groups in straighter bonds so that they see what’s behind the kids’ online exchanges and perceive the educational blogging potential. Time to change. One way to start could be by reading with care Lorna’s blog “Parents as Partners” to get inspired to catalyze the shifts throughout society, and not only for the kids. Blogging will, then, be back to its honorable place in the educational context. We can’t let it be threatened by the ones who don’t know about it. We, as educators, need to show them the light so that they can see what lies ahead.

Not new, but an idea for Edublogpractice

I’m always eager to share and learn with the groups I’m part of.
So, here’s the challenge: how about adding our voices (audio or text) to this voicethread on edublogpractices that can engage students in blogging. It can be just ideas that haven’t be tested in your classroom yet, or practices that you found worked in your blogging classes.
I started with a very simple one. Listen to it and add yours!

Voicethread on a Special Place

I just finished working on an idea I’ve been mulling over for a while. Today was the day to choose and resize the photos I wanted to include in the voicethread for the Listening Plus online course, think of what I was going to say in each photo and record it. Voicethread is straightforward and with fantastic possibilities for collaboration. I’ve invited the Webheads and the LWcers, members of online Communities of practice I’m part of to add their voices to my Special Place Voicethread. Let’s see what happens. My idea is to have an open learning object that can be useful for different teaching/learning settings, as well as for the online listening course that I’ll be moderating pretty soon.
I’m pretty excited to see what happens!

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