Tech Matters`07 (on-site participants only)

Tech Matters`07 allows two-person teams from ten local writing project sites to explore the intersections of technology, teaching, and writing in support of their local site goals. While engaging with a variety of tools and forums, each team also considers strategies for using technology to facilitate the work of its site. Participants engage in a process of inquiry as they consider these technologies both in relation to their local site and in connection with their personal teaching goals.

Highlighted Content:
PodcastCreated/Updatedsort iconPlay the file
Chico, Day 4 49 weeks 4 days ago
Chico, Day 3 49 weeks 5 days ago
TM07 Mini-Grant Discussion 49 weeks 5 days ago
Voices from the Opening Night of TM07 49 weeks 6 days ago
TM07, Day One by Chris Sloan 49 weeks 6 days ago
Teaching Writing in the 21st Century - A Discussion at a NWP Working Meeting 50 weeks 5 days ago
Blog PostAuthorCreated/Updatedsort iconComments
Creating video clips for the nycwp Felicia George49 weeks 3 days ago2
Authority and Wikipedia ... Peter Kittle49 weeks 4 days ago0
True Story Lavon Jonson49 weeks 5 days ago2
Quote of the Day Scott Floyd49 weeks 5 days ago0
TM07 voicethread test Chris Sloan49 weeks 6 days ago0
we've got the pedagogical skills Chris Sloan49 weeks 6 days ago0
Teaching vs. Learning Felicia George49 weeks 6 days ago1
Safe Travels! Karen McComas50 weeks 6 hours ago0

No questions yet -- sorry!

No images yet -- sorry!

Wiki PageAuthorCreated/Updatedsort iconComments
Six Word Epipheries: TM 2007 Karen McComas49 weeks 1 day ago0
MAPS Overview Troy Hicks49 weeks 5 days ago0
Main Page admin49 weeks 5 days ago0

Writing into the Day - Friday - Collaboration

According to Will Richardson and other educators looking at 21st century skills, when today's students enter their post-education professional lives, odds are pretty good that they will be asked to work with others collaboratively to create content for diverse and wide-ranging audiences. This brings to mind the oft-used phrase, "We need to prepare students for their future and not our past."

Pre-Writing Activity: On The Media's story on Wikipedia, "Get Me ReWrite"

  • Discussion: How does the ideas of authorship, authority, "social antibodies," and the capability of newer technologies (such as a wiki) that enable these conditions?

To think more about how collaboration is changing, here is a quote from Tapscott and Williams' recent book, Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything to give you something concrete to think about as we imagine the workplaces of the future:

Google CEO Eric Schmidt says, "When you say 'collaboration,' the average forty-five-year-old thinks they know what you're talking about--teams sitting down, having a nice conversation with nice objectives and a nice attitude. That's what collaboration means to most people."

We're talking about somehting dramatically different. The new promise of collaboration is that with peer production we will harness human skill, ingenuity, and intelligence more efficiently and effectively than anything we have witnessed previously. Sounds like a tall order. But the collective knowledge, capability, and resources embodied within broad horizontal networks of parpticipants can be mobilized to accomplish much more than one firm acting alone. Whether designing an airplane, assembling a motorcylce, or analyzing the human genome, the ability to integrate the talents of dispersed individuals and organizations is becoming the defining competency for managers and firms. And in the years to come, this new mode of peer production will displace traditional corporation hierarchies as the key engine of wealth creation in the economy. (p. 18)

So, our questions for you to consider are these:

  • How do we successfully prepare ourselves, our colleagues, and our students to truly write collaboratively?
  • Rather than simply add on to other's writings, what are other ways that you can genuinely share authorship?
  • What do you know about the technical aspects of wikis and online word processors as it relates to collaboration?

Before you begin writing, please read Educause's "7 Things You Should Know About" Collaborative Editing and Wikis .

Prompt: Share a story, whether it is one of success or failure, about a collaborative writing experience in your classroom, school, district, site, or other work place.

Please create a blog entry to respond to this prompt.

Writing into the Day - Thursday - Rich and Interactive Information

Will Richardson (p. 77) writes:

Given the fact that the amount of information going online shows no sign of slowing, if they are unable to consistently collect potentially relevant information for their lives and careers and quickly discern what of that information is most useful, they will be at a disadvantage. And, as with the rest of these changes, it's our job to model and teach these skills.

Given what we know about the rate at which information, that is readily available via the internet, grows, what…

  • …challenges do you see in harnessing appropriate and pertinent information for learning?
  • …strategies do you use to help yourself effectively and efficiently manage information?
  • …strategies do you model for your students?
  • …strategies do you highlight in professional development offerings?

 

Writing Into the Day: Wednesday, July 18 - Compelling Communication

Writing Prompt:

From The Horizon Report:
"There is a skills gap between understanding how to use tools for media creation and how to create meaningful content. Although new tools make it increasingly easy to produce multimedia works, students lack essential skills in composition, storytelling, and design. In addition, faculty need curricula that adapt to the pace of change and that teach the skills that will be needed—even though it is not clear what all those skills may be."

What does this mean to us as educators? How do we utilize the tools available to us in purposeful ways? How do we lend our professional expertise to emerging technologies to help with the creation of compelling communication in our lives, our classrooms, and our writing project sites?

Write your response to this in your blog .

Creative Commons images

Paul Allison suggests these sites to get Creative Commons images. Does anyone have any more suggestions for copyright-friendly images?

 

Technology Matters Videocast

Photos from Tech Matters`07

Apprehension and doubt become hopeful future.

Paddle together, white water ahead. Success!

Technological transformation. Swimming, in a wiki.

Like-minded educators grow selves and sites.
Open, close, open, close, brain's full.
Engaging dialogue, brain overload, see light.
One family joining a larger one.
Scooter Floyd cited too many times.
TM07 rocked. Grant work awaits. Crap!
Chico, playing and learning, savvy chapter.
Confusion meets with support. Confidence grows.
ATM IMO TMI, GTG JIT TTYL.
My Yahoo Grows In Stronger Technology.
No comments, no calls, no friends.
No bull, technology really throws you!!!!
Could someone please ID Karen, please!
Becoming our own fountains of inquiry.
Paul gets in the water first.
"Holy Wikis, Batman!" "Courage, Robin, Courage!"
Technology Matters and we know it.
Old protocol, expect, neglect, suspect, reject.
Arm twisting, shoulder tapping, thought inspiring.
TXBWP once was found, now lost.
Ten more pounds, thank you Lizzy!
Popcorn, epiphanies bloom in multi-modal glory.
When a man loves a Wiki

Oh Blog, WI should I Wiki?

Minigrant Development: Saturday, July 21, 2007

Due Date:
07/21/07
Theme: Minigrant Development
8:15 Walk to Taylor Hall
8:30 Announcements
8:45

Morning Prompt -

On Tuesday evening, we asked you to create a metaphor to represent your site. This morning, we'd like to ask you to think ahead to one year from now. Create a metaphor to represent your site at that time.

9:15

Charrette 1:

Group A: Karen, Felicia, Troy

  • Mid-Ohio
  • Northwestern LA
  • Bluebonnet
  • Red Clay
  • Southwest Georgia

Group B: Betty, Peter, Chris

  • Lake Michigan
  • Nebraska
  • PhilWP
  • NWP@Rutgers
  • Crossroads

9:45 Charrette 2
10:15 Break
10:30 Charrette 3
11:00 Charrette 4
11:30 Charrette 5
12:00 LUNCH
1:00 Articulation Time (teams can take this opportunity to consider, discuss, and use the feedback from the morning session to make modifications to their ideas while the feedback is fresh on their minds)
3:00 FUN!
3:30 Exit Slip

Authority and Wikipedia ...

When the question of authority came up in the "On the Media" piece, I immediately thought of this, a comic titled "Wikipedian Protester":

It's from xkcd , a comic for math and computer geeks. Man, do I want one of those signs.

Chico, Day 4


1:59 minutes (2.27 MB)

True Story

Hey--in case you missed it two of the Tech Matters folks had some fun in the fountain on Wednesday evening.

Quote of the Day

During our Articulation time, David Warlick's name came up.  I thought I would share a quote out of the 2nd edition (released a few weeks ago) of his book "Classroom Blogging: A Teacher's Guide to Blogging, Wikis, and Other Tools that are Shaping a New Information Landscape."  I can personally recommend this text as a valuable resource for both personal and instructional needs. And David always seems willing to step in to comment on blogs wherever he is mentioned (your students would love that).  

His quote from the book:

"We should no longer assume the authority of information we encounter, but, instead, prove the authority." 

Good stuff!  Pertinent.   

M - mode (not just media): What are the qualities of the texts in this genre?

M - Part 2 - Semiotic Systems:

  • Lingusitic
  • Spatial
  • Visual
  • Auditory
  • Gestural

A - audience: Who is the intended group, niche, others? Who might stumble across it?

P - purpose: What does the document do? (specific verbs)

S - situation: What do we know about the writer/composer. What do we know about the writing/creation process? What about the infrastructure constraints or possibilities? Resources.

Chico, Day 3


1:36 minutes (1.84 MB)

Creating video clips for the nycwp

Listen to my VoiceThread file of a short descirption of the Writing Project -

 

    Writing Teachers  

 


TM07 Mini-Grant Discussion


11:25 minutes (13.07 MB)

Betty Colum and Felicia George explain the details of the Technology Mini-Grant process.

we've got the pedagogical skills

There is a skills gap between understanding how to use tools for media creation and how to create meaningful content. Although new tools make it increasingly easy to produce multimedia works, students lack essential skills in composition, storytelling, and design. In addition, faculty need curricula that adapt to the pace of change and that teach the skills that will be needed—even though it is not clear what all those skills may be.

Critical Challenges | nmc

My students are adept at posting photos and short messages on MySpace and Facebook; they can text message fluently; they can put together iWeb presentations and PowerPoint shows for their classes. Up until a couple of years ago, there was an emphasis on the tool itself and what resulted was a product that the students didn't value. They just weren't very compelling products. The past year especially I noticed that some of the students were putting a lot more time into their presentations (this time using iWeb tools). The products these students made were more sophisticated, but I can only say that this is true only for some of them, and a minority of them at that. Some of my students are becoming more critical consumers of other students products because theyre watching them so much (on YouTube for instance). And it's true that we faculty need to adapt and teach the skills they need. But that doesn't mean we have to all of the sudden become expert filmmakers, photographers, radio/TV personalities.

The most important skills are the pedagogy that we already have. We already know composition and storytelling; we have a sense of design. We just need to find ways to make these skills more deliberate parts of the curriculum. And you don't have to have a lot of the latest technology or cutting edge skills to do that.

Teaching vs. Learning

From The Horizon Report:
"There is a skills gap between understanding how to use tools for media creation and how to create meaningful content. Although new tools make it increasingly easy to produce multimedia works, students lack essential skills in composition, storytelling, and design. In addition, faculty need curricula that adapt to the pace of change and that teach the skills that will be needed—even though it is not clear what all those skills may be."

What does this mean to us as educators? How do we utilize the tools available to us in purposeful ways? How do we lend our professional expertise to emerging technologies to help with the creation of compelling communication in our lives, our classrooms, and our writing project sites?

My first response to this quote is that I wouldn't assume that all students lack the skills in composition, storytelling and design.  In fact, some students, because of their use of the technology, may have developed some of these skills beyond what their instructors are capable of.  In fact, if we consider that media/technology is contributing to the development of new literacies, then, we as educators, need to first determine how literacies have and are changing and what skills are then needed.  We may not have some of the skills and/or knowledge to model for students yet.  We also need to determine which skills and knowledge hold or have value for the literacies created by technology.

When we talk about creating meaningful content, we need to help students think about audience and purpose just as they would without the technologies.  We need to help students understand revision and that even though they are constantly revising as they compose on the computer, let's say, they still need to reread and reorganize what they've created for final posting.  We need to get in there and do lots of experimenting with the technology ourselves to see which strategies and processes have value for working within particular venues.  As Karen McComas said yesterday, "students bring the technology knowledge, teachers bring pedagogical knowledge."  But, we still need to understand the technology knowledge in order to connect it with the appropriate pedagogical thinking.

The more things change, the more they stay the same. 

TM07 voicethread test

Here's a VoiceThread slideshow celebrating the artistry of TM07's opening night "WP as metaphor" low-tech exposition. Performance artist Paul Oh's work is featured.

TM07, Day One by Chris Sloan


6:52 minutes (7.85 MB)

Voices from the Opening Night of TM07


13:27 minutes (12.32 MB)

In this podcast, I capture some of the voices of TM07 as we prepare for our first dinner together and then move through the "Building a Metaphor for Your Site" activity. (Pardon some of the recording problems as I am getting used to my new Sansa Express MP3 Player/Digital Voice Recorder.)

First, I attempt to interview Karen McComas and Paul Allison, and try to find out what Tech Matters is and what it means to them. Then, Peter Kittle, our gracious host, reminds us that we are talking about "geek stuff with like-minded idiots," at least the facilitation team. For Paul, he talks about community and connection. And Karen reminds us of the transformative powers of TM.

After dinner, we began the activity, led by Chris Sloan and Betty Collum. I first talk to Susan Martens-Baker and Cyndi Dwyer about their ear of corn, who discuss the "golden corny goodness" that is Nebraska, ready to pop out.

I then move over to John Bishop and Paige Cole, who did a very (very) interpretive piece offinger painting. They describe it better than I ever could.

Next, we moved into articulation groups, and I met with Amanda and Garth Cornwell from Lake Michigan as well as Cheryl Canada and Terri Godby from Mid-Ohio. We were asked to come up with our gist (that, gist, G-I-S-T) statement. Amanda discussed how LMWP is on the verge of some changes while Cheryl and Terri discuss how they feel their site is still invisible to local teachers, hidden behind a mask.

Finally, we took a few minutes to interview our teammates and ask questions about things that resonated with them in the larger discussions as well as what they want to explore during the week of TM. So, I was able to listen in with Lavon Jonson and Sonja Mack from Crossroads. They talked about the idea of a statewide tech network in Michigan and finding out more about the many tools that people were talking about.

This was a great introduction to the group and provided a fun start to a busy week. We are looking forward to begining bright and early tomorrow, some earlier than others.

Compelling Communication: Wed., July 18, 2007

Due Date:
07/18/07
8:15 - 8:30
Walk to Taylor Hall
8:30-8:45 Announcements
8:45-9:15

Writing Prompt:

From The Horizon Report:
"There is a skills gap between understanding how to use tools for media creation and how to create meaningful content. Although new tools make it increasingly easy to produce multimedia works, students lack essential skills in composition, storytelling, and design. In addition, faculty need curricula that adapt to the pace of change and that teach the skills that will be needed—even though it is not clear what all those skills may be."

What does this mean to us as educators? How do we utilize the tools available to us in purposeful ways? How do we lend our professional expertise to emerging technologies to help with the creation of compelling communication in our lives, our classrooms, and our writing project sites?

Write your response in your blog.

9:15 - 10:15
EIUTL* (Case Study)

Multimodal Writing

The purpose of this case study is to examine how the transformation of a course assignment from an essay genre to a multimodal format increased students' focus on creating compelling communication.

  • Digital documents in a college writing class
    • Technologies used:
      • blogger.com
      • gabcast.com
      • various image capturing devices
        • digital cameras
        • cellphones
        • camcorders
      • various movie production software
        • MovieMaker
        • iMovie
        • Pinnacle
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:30
Case Study: Site Development
The purpose of this case study is to show examples of how different WP sites represent themselves online, and to have participants begin storyboarding their own as a communication strategy.
11:30-11:45 MAPS
11:45-12:45
Lunch
12:45-2:00 Articulation Time
2:00-2:15
Break
2:15-4:00

Birds of a Feather

Mini Grants: Betty Collum and Felicia George

Minigrant Review Process

NCWP Minigrant Application

UCLA 2006 Minigrant Proposal

Documenting TM07

4:00-4:30 Exit Slip

Safe Travels!

Hi All,

 

Just a quick note for those who might still be checking this site. The facilitation team gathered in Chico today and we're eager to meet all of you tomorrow! We're happy to report that the weather is bearable - there's a lovely breeze tonight and it was only in the 90's today! The Hotel Diamond is fabulous and you should expect to be treated warmly when you arrive.

 

Safe travels....Karen

Chico, Califonia

Lots of information, photos, maps about Chico, California -- where we will be for Tech Matters`07.

Friday Agenda: Collaboration

Due Date:
07/20/07
Theme for the Day: Collaboration with Peers, Experts, and Online Communities
7:45- 8:15 Breakfast
8:30- 8:45 Announcements
8:45-9:15

Writing into the Day

According to Will Richardson and other educators looking at 21st century skills, when today's students enter their post-education professional lives, odds are pretty good that they will be asked to work with others collaboratively to create content for diverse and wide-ranging audiences. This brings to mind the oft-used phrase, "We need to prepare students for their future and not our past."

Pre-Writing Activity: On The Media's story on Wikipedia, "Get Me ReWrite"

  • Discussion: How does the ideas of authorship, authority, "social antibodies," and the capability of newer technologies (such as a wiki) that enable these conditions?

To think more about how collaboration is changing, here is a quote from Tapscott and Williams' recent book, Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything to give you something concrete to think about as we imagine the workplaces of the future:

Google CEO Eric Schmidt says, "When you say 'collaboration,' the average forty-five-year-old thinks they know what you're talking about--teams sitting down, having a nice conversation with nice objectives and a nice attitude. That's what collaboration means to most people."

We're talking about somehting dramatically different. The new promise of collaboration is that with peer production we will harness human skill, ingenuity, and intelligence more efficiently and effectively than anything we have witnessed previously. Sounds like a tall order. But the collective knowledge, capability, and resources embodied within broad horizontal networks of parpticipants can be mobilized to accomplish much more than one firm acting alone. Whether designing an airplane, assembling a motorcylce, or analyzing the human genome, the ability to integrate the talents of dispersed individuals and organizations is becoming the defining competency for managers and firms. And in the years to come, this new mode of peer production will displace traditional corporation hierarchies as the key engine of wealth creation in the economy. (p. 18)

So, our questions for you to consider are these:

  • How do we successfully prepare ourselves, our colleagues, and our students to truly write collaboratively?
  • Rather than simply add on to other's writings, what are other ways that you can genuinely share authorship?
  • What do you know about the technical aspects of wikis and online word processors as it relates to collaboration?

Before you begin writing, please read Educause's "7 Things You Should Know About" Collaborative Editing and Wikis .

Prompt: Share a story, whether it is one of success or failure, about a collaborative writing experience in your classroom, school, district, site, or other work place.

9:15-10:15

EIUTL (Case Study)

The purpose of this case study is to showcase how students and teachers collaborated to produce different genres in response to reading.

The purpose of this case study is to support the work of your site and various initiatives at your site or cross sites.

  • Creating your "7 Things" document with Google Docs or Zoho Writer
  • 10:15-10:30 Break
    10:30-11:30

    Site Development Focused Case Study

    Case Study: Site Development

     

    11:45-12:00 MAPS
    11:45-12:45 Lunch
    12:45-2:00 Articulation Time
    2:00-2:15 Break
    2:15-4:00 Birds of a Feather
    4:00-4:15 Exit Slip

    Teaching Writing in the 21st Century - A Discussion at a NWP Working Meeting


    23:41 minutes (16.26 MB)

    (23 min 40 sec) This is a discussion after the opening dinner at the National Writing Project's working meeting, "Teaching Writing in the 21st Century," in Baltimore, Maryland, June 17-19, 2007. Sitting at this table were:

    • Paul Allison, New York City Writing Project
    • Danilo Baylen, NWP at Florida Gulf Coast University
    • Michelle Rogge Gannon, Dakota Writing Project
    • Troy Hicks, Red Cedar Writing Project
    • Bud Hunt, Colorado State University Writing Project
    • Lisa Zawilinski, a member of the New Literacies Research Lab at the University of Connecticut

    We were asked to discuss an article from Language Arts, Vol. 84, No. 1, September 2006, by James Damico with Ruthie Riddle. The title of the article is, "Exploring Freedom and Leaving a Legacy: Enacting New Literacies with Digital Texts in the Elementary Classroom."

    Blogging can make you smarter

    This post quotes a researcher into writing without reference to blogging. I like the way Wesley Fryer connects the old reasons for writing with blogging.

    The more we blog, the more we reflect, the more we think and write about learning and our practices as professional educators, the smarter we're all going to get! Dr. Stephen Krashen, Emeritus Professor at the University of Southern California, confirms this conclusion is supported by educational research! Isn't that cool, as well as affirming?!

    Thursday: Rich and Interactive Information

    Due Date:
    07/19/07
    Theme:
    Rich and Interactive Information: Collect, Select, and Reflect
    7:45-8:15
    Breakfast
    8:15-8:30
    Walk to Taylor Hall
    8:30 - 8:45 Announcements
    8:45 - 9:15

    Will Richardson (p. 77) writes:

    Given the fact that the amount of information going online shows no sign of slowing, if they are unable to consistently collect potentially relevant information for their lives and careers and quickly discern what of that information is most useful, they will be at a disadvantage. And, as with the rest of these changes, it's our job to model and teach these skills.

    Given what we know about the rate at which information, that is readily available via the internet, grows, what…

    • …challenges do you see in harnessing appropriate and pertinent information for learning?
    • …strategies do you use to help yourself effectively and efficiently manage information?
    • …strategies do you model for your students?
    • …strategies do you highlight in professional development offerings?

    9:15 - 10:15

    EIUTL (Case Study)

    The purpose of this case study is to look how educators can use RSS and aggregators to manage information and how the students in the Elgg educational social network incorporate information from RSS into their blogs.


    Technologies used: Google Reader, Google Alerts

     

    10:15 - 10:30
    Break
    10:30 - 11:30

    Site Development Focused Case Study

    11:30 - 11:45
    MAPS
    11:45 - 12:45 LUNCH
    12:45 - 2:00
    Articulation Time
    2:00 - 2:15
    Break
    2:15 - 4:00
    Birds of a Feather: Playtime
    4:00 - 4:30

    Exit Slip

    Homework:

    1. Review Richardson's chapter 4 on wikis and the social networking section in the Horizon Report.
    2. Add your Google Account ID or Gmail Address to the wiki page .
    6:30 - 8:00

    Dinner at

      On Your Own (Chico Street Market around the hotel)

    2007 Horizon Report

    Quoted from the Executive Summary:

    The annual Horizon Report describes the continuing work of the NMC’s Horizon Project, a research-oriented effort that seeks to identify and describe emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, or creative expression within higher education. The 2007 Horizon Report is the fourth edition in this annual series. Again this year, as in years past, the report reflects an ongoing collaboration between the New Media Consortium and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI), an EDUCAUSE program.

    The core of the report describes six areas of emerging technology that will impact higher education within three adoption horizons over the next one to five years. To identify these areas, the project draws on an ongoing conversation among knowledgeable persons in the fields of business, industry, and education; on published resources, current research and practice; and on the expertise of the NMC and ELI communities. Many of the examples under each topic area feature the innovative work of NMC or ELI member institutions. The Horizon Project’s Advisory Board surveys the field to identify significant trends and challenges in higher education, investigates possible topics for the Report, and ultimately directs the selection of the six topics that appear here.

    The focus of the Horizon Project centers on the applications of emerging technologies to teaching, learning, and creative expression, and the format of the Horizon Report reflects that focus. Each topic includes an overview to familiarize readers with the concept or technology at hand, a discussion of the particular relevance of the topic to those activities, and examples of how the technology is being or could be applied. Each description is followed by an annotated list of additional examples and readings which expand on the discussion in the Report.

    Welcome to the TM07 Wiki

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