Sunday, March 30, 2008

Week 9: Thing #22: eBooks, audio books


When I first visited the World eBook Fair site, I saw that there was a handful of free books available, but that a subscription fee was required to join the site and gain access to the entire catalog of digitized books.

I decided instead to make a contribution to Project Gutenberg and see what I could find for free. I should have understood that the books on Project Gutenberg would be those where there is no existing copyright, i.e. older books. In fact, this seems to be true. Among those authors with works on Project Gutenberg are the following: James Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, John Locke, the Roman historian Livy, and Jack London. The following children's authors were not available at Project Gutenberg: Natalie Babbitt, Kathleen Krull, Lois Lowry, or Shel Silverstein.

I downloaded a version of Jack London's Call of the Wild from a mirror site as a compressed file. The book opened as a txt file. Although I accessed the full text of the book, the appearance of the text was dated looking, reminding me of early Internet files before graphics. I don't think Project Gutenberg is going to replace the regular text versions of books any time soon, but it is a great, convenient research tool.

I tried to download an audio book, The Kabul Beauty School, from my regional library system. I was able to access a brief two-minute introductory reading of the book, a beautiful reading. To get the entire book, I needed to download the Overdrive Media Console, which I did, and also upgrade Windows Media Player, which I could not do on account of security on the school laptop I was using. Also, I could not discover whether and where the file was locate on my laptop. So with the equipment I currently have and the security restrictions on some of it, the use of audio books and e-books would not be that easy. I am sure that if I had more time, and if I got some technical help, I would be able to get the file I downloaded.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Week 9: Thing #21 Podcasts

I just downloaded the Story Corps podcast to my Bloglines list and am delighted to notice that my Blogroll automatically updates itself!

I am thrilled to have this particular feed as I enjoy listening to Story Corps segments on NPR. After looking at a number of the podcast directories and not finding anything that I really wanted to have automatically downloaded to my computer, I recalled that WBUR (Boston University radio) offers podcasts. I made several attempts at subscribing from that site and finally went directly to the Story Corps website where I was able to add the feed without difficulty.

I do not have an mp3 player and so have not tried transferring and editing podcast files.

I located and read several beginning tutorials on podcasts. I need to read further and look for examples of how schools have used them, including how and where podcast links are placed on the school website.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Week 9: Thing #20 YouTube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM Information R/evolution

Kansas State University assistant professor, Michael Wesch, has created several thought-provoking videos about Web 2.0. These videos are available on YouTube. Several of his titles are the The Machine is Us/ing Us, linked from Library 2.0 website, The Information R/evolution, and A Vision of Students Today.

I found Wesch’s video presentations powerful and love the availability that YouTube provides.

Using the image of a restless cursor on a digital page throughout much of The Machine is Us/ing Us, Wesch asserts that the Web 2.0 revolution challenges us to rethink everything, including copyright, identity, authorship, privacy, commerce, love, family, and even ourselves.

In another video called Information R/evolution Wesch, who teaches Digital Ethnography, claims that the Web 2.0 revolution has changed the rules of order, of how we think about and organize information. Wesch refers to David Weinberger’s book, Everything is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder (Chapter 1 is available on Weinberger’s blog), to illustrate the inefficiencies of ordering things in the physical realm and the tremendous flexibility and accessibility of “third order organization,” the use of tags in the digital realm.

In Information R/evolution Wesch also refers to Clay Shirky’s fascinating online essay, Ontology is Overrrated: Categories, Links, and Tags on Shirky's Writings about the Internet site. Here again Wesch, via Shirky, asserts that the alternate organization system – tags and the aggregating of tags – does a better job of allowing users to create value from one another than previous, hierarchical structures such as search directories permit. It’s a powerful message whose truth is demonstrated by the explosion of the Web as a means of communicating through 2.0 applications such as YouTube, blogs, and Flickr.

I loved being able to see these brilliant videos on YouTube and then follow up the references that interested me.

These videos have been used effectively in various ways in my school as professional development resources.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Week 8: Thing #19 Library Thing


Adding books to Library Thing as I read them will be a great way to remember titles I want to recommend to students at my school.

Library Thing is pretty interesting. It's fairly easy to add books. I did find that, for those titles which contain common words, it's better to look up the exact ISBN on Amazon rather than doing a title search, which can yield far too many results to look through. For example, when I wanted to find the book, Millions by Frank Cottrell, and entered that title by name, I got 1700 hits, including books that had the word millions anywhere within the title.

A feature that seems very good is the Local feature. I discovered some great events at public libraries near Boston, not exactly local for me, living near Worcester, but possible.

I finally added the Library Thing widget to this blog page. It's a neat idea, especially for a school library web page, to have a widget that has a selection of books that are actually in one's own collection in Library Thing.

Week 8: Thing #18 Zoho Writer...a second try

A Look at Zoho Writer

I'm logged in on a Dell laptop now, and using Internet Explorer. There's whole range of "very friendly" tools available in Zoho Writer, including various symbols used in webpage generators. Zoho Writer may be an easier way for me to create/modify pages for the Ednets server that my district uses for web hosting, easier than remembering to open each page, originally created in MSWord, as a web document.

The comments tool is neat! A great way to give editorial ¶ comments.

But I am having some difficulty inserting an image. I tried several times to browse for an image saved on my desktop before realizing that while I am using Zoho Writer, I'm out on the web. I'll see if I can find a web-based image that's o.k. for me to link to.

Still couldn't insert a picture. I am sure I'll be able to discover how to do this in Zoho Forums. I added a tag, though, a handy feature if one has many documents, covering a range of topics.

Will see if I can post this document to my blog.cool

Technorati Tags ,

Week 8: Thing #18 Zoho Writer

Lots of helpful information on the Zoho FAQ page. I am not sure that Zoho Writer will work well on my Mac, running Firefox 1.0.6. Firefox requirement for Zoho is 2.0+. But I'll only know if I try it.

The tags feature is here in Zoho Writer, too. I selected the word "Zoho" and pressed the "tag" button. Nothing appeared to happen, but perhaps it did.

Not sure exactly how to save this brief Zoho document. I can't see how to EXPORT it to my desktop for saving. There is no EXPORT tab. I'll have to try this on a pc.
. . . . .

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Week 7: Thing #17 Sand Box idea

Check out my idea for the use of wikis at http://calcurriculum.pbwiki.com/Wikis

It's also pasted here.

Idea #55: Teachers on various committees preparing for an NEASC (New England Association of Schools and Colleges) school accreditation visit -- or a similar accreditation process -- could use a wiki to share ideas and collaboratively create and edit the report of their group, whether it be Resources for Learning, Community Connections, Assessments, Mission Statement, or another group. It's often very hard for teachers to find the time to get together for such extended projects.

Week 7: Thing #16 Wikis



Wikis can provide a place where students collaborate online and display the new content they create. This type of activity comes closest to what I would like to do or encourage at my school. It’s a use of the Internet that is freely available and offers exciting possibilities for learners and teachers.

In the links given at the CSLA 2.0 page I did not see many examples of wikis used in this way. Only one, The English 10 Literature Wiki, offered a partial example. The page was created by the instructor, and all of the archived versions were posted by the same person, the instructor. Perhaps because of privacy issues, the assignment wikis created by groups of students in response to the directions given on the main page were not available.

The very best examples of wikis used very well by students for creating and sharing content is at Noble & Greenough School in Dedham, Massachusetts. I had the chance to see some of this work during the 2006 & 2007 tech conferences offered by Nobles faculty, but could not get into that portion of their site now. Nobles must have an intranet on which all this work exists. The potential for students to continue to learn and create content after they leave the classroom is so exciting, and Nobles operates this way every day.

I think the primary thing it takes is a vision. Joyce Valenza has spoken of such activity in a recent podcast on EdTechTalk, but I did not see examples on her teacherlibrarian wiki.

image source: http://web.educastur.princast.es/proyectos/cuate/blog/wp-images/wiki.gif

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Week 6: Thing # 15 Comments on Web 2.0 Perspectives


Thoughts on Web 2.0 perspectives

Icebergs by Rick Anderson, Director of Acquisitions, U Nevada, Reno

Straight talk, tough talk. Anderson is working at university level, where huge collections may no longer be necessary. Commercial databases like EBSCO and NexisLexis probably make a good portion of what was stored in physical format in the past unnecessary in the university and high school setting.

At upper elementary/middle school level we certainly have reduced our back issues of magazine holdings. Our reference collection has moved in the direction of digital resources, but not altogether, and I don’t expect it will ever completely.

What should comprise a library collection? What should we still be teaching? Parts of a newspaper? How to locate a city in an atlas? How to use a print encyclopedia? Are these relics of a bygone print age? Or do they still have a place in an already overloaded curriculum? Important questions: What do we teach? What resources are best for the job and why? What can we do to empower the learner?

Although I believe that resources should be as accessible as possible and that we should never stand between the user and the information, I can’t let go of the idea that, at my level anyway, I should be in the business of teaching research. Nor do I believe that speeding up the research process is inherently better than slowing it down. Important thinking does happen as one is pursuing information, exploring, skimming, sorting, selecting. I question the idea that quick access to all the needed information is necessarily an advantage. I have seen too many examples that contradict this idea, resulting in a kind of grab-and-go mentality in some students. Do I think students should be frustrated on purpose? No. Do they need to develop the habit of mind that allows them to persist through the seeking, sorting, and pondering phase, yes, definitely.

I fully agree with the idea of placing as many resources as possible in the user’s preferred environment, accessible anytime. That environment is the web for many, not everyone and not for everything. Whether young readers prefer to read books on their desktops, their handheld Kindle, audio-only via an ipod or other device, or whether they will prefer an old fashioned book remains to be seen.

I do agree with Rick Anderson that unless school libraries are willing to pursue change and constantly assess their missions, they risk becoming irrelevant, and non-existent. Chris Harris would agree with Anderson. At the MSLA annual conference last fall he said it's a lot easier to be on the cutting edge than left behind (my words).

In a New World of Librarianship by Michael Stephens

Michael Stephens’ short essay, In a New World of Librarianship, is inspiring. He has avoided Doug Johnson’s negativism toward peers in the library field, and has chosen instead to state positively what a library needs to be in a 2.0 world. His definition of a library as a “social and emotionally engaging center for learning and experience” reflects balance, passion, and understanding of the changes that must take place in libraries as they evolve in response to society’s demand that technology facilitate human communication.

Stephens lists five traits of Librarians 2.0. These include a focus on the user and the user’s needs, an embrace of 2.0 tools, an avoidance of technology for technology’s sake, and a determination to stay current with research, including using it to spot trends and to plan with. A final trait of Librarians 2.0, according to Stephens, is that Librarians 2.0 “gets” content. He writes that librarians should be involved in the “content conversation” and in guiding users in accessing, using, and, importantly, creating content.

Finally, Michael Stevens describes a 2.0 Librarian as someone who listens to and learns from staff and users, who celebrates successes and learns from failures, and shares them both, takes time and allows staff time to play and learn, and never stops dreaming about how to deliver the best library services.

Steven’s understanding that 2.0 Librarians must be involved with content and in guiding the user in the production of content is critical to the success (and survival) of school librarians in a 2.0 world.

Stephen’s essay about 2.0 libraries being a “social and emotionally engaging center for learning and experience” echos comments made by Joyce Valenza in a podcast from EdTech Talk.com, Women of the Web 2.0 show, 65 aired March 4, 2008. In that program Valenza uses the word “libratory” to define libraries as places where content is created under the guidance of trained staff. She states that students are sometimes considered tech guru’s, but are, in fact, not that good at content creation.

Her comment that “students like to live in [virtual] places that they design and build themselves" connects with Stephen’s idea that user needs should drive the library program.

Steven’s essay provides inspiration and guidance to those of us who wish to be part of the 2.0 world and provide services to students who already live in that world.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Week 6: Thing #14 Technorati


I explored this blog search engine and tried the search for School Library Learning 2.0 first as an advanced search and then in the search box on the Technorati home page. The results were fewer but more relevant for the advanced search --- as expected. 67 vs 1304 posts and 15 vs 24 blogs. I did not see how to search specifically for tags, though I thought that is what the search feature did anyway, ie search for tags.

On some searches I see a list of related tags, but not for the phrase, School Library Learning 2.0. I did see tag clouds on various screens, including the help page. These tag clouds remind me of relevance search features in a beta version of www.altavista.com shortly after Digital Equipment, the developer, sold it. The feature was short lived, but a fascinating and helpful one.

I watched a few UTube videos on Technorati to see if I could learn a little more about this search engine, but did not get any useful information. I suppose if I had a tech company, I might, as one presenter did, want to check to see how many folks were blogging about my company or me, and how many linked to me as a favorite. But right now, I can't see myself doing that.

My experiments with searching various topics on Technorati left me unimpressed. I got some relevant results, but mostly I found the results not worth the time.

I might use Technorati to see what Joyce Valenza or Chris Harris had to say about a particular topic or to check blog reviews if I were contemplating the purchase of equipment or some technical service.