Posts tagged tech

thedailywhat:

Shut Up and Take My Money of the Day: PaperTab

Brace yourselves, e-paper tablets are coming. The Human Media Lab at Queen’s University has developed a flexible tablet device known asPaperTab in collaboration with Plastic Logic and Intel Labs that looks and feels just like a sheet of paper, but with a versatile touchscreen, high-resolution display and the second generation Intel® Core i5 processor. Recently unveiled at the International CES in Las Vegas, the tablet could be commercially ready within three to five years, according to researchers at Queen’s University.

Has anyone used the “Send to Kindle” browser extension for Chrome? If you haven’t and you’ve got a kindle — do it! It’s awesome!

Fostering A Culture of Collaboration Among Colleagues

Last year I presented my school administrators with a proposal for change. While our school supports and encourages using technology to promote student learning, we still have a problem. Our tech support mainly comes from ITS or one person with the title “Academic Technology Coordinator”. They provide types of support that are most welcome: when we have trouble with our computers, they are there; when we can’t log on, they fix it; when our printers run out of toner, they’re on the job. But when it comes to trying to re-think formative assessment or incorporate self-directed learning into a project or a whole course of study, they lack the shared vocabulary and pedagogical knowledge which is required to design an effective learning experience for a student at Lawrenceville, a grade 9-12 residential school in central New Jersey.

Armed with geek pride, and with a desire to offer my techspertise to the teaching community, I met with the administration in an effort to help them imagine how we could change my role at the school, whereby I would teach my normal classes, but also  dedicate time and energy to support a few faculty members each term, for the entirety of the term.

The idea was that I would not just act as tech support for them when needed, but I would also help them to clearly identify their goals for student learning, while collaborating with them to generate new ways in which they could use tech effectively to achieve those goals. Having been a teacher at Lawrenceville for five years already, I’ve gained first-hand knowledge of the issues and concerns that we, as an institution, feel are important in better educating our students for life in the 21st century. I also have been a huge proponent of tech in the classroom and have experimented widely in my classes, so I felt I was uniquely qualified to offer this kind of support to other teachers. 

I imagine a teaching & learning community in which we as faculty are collaborating with each other more openly in order to come up with better ways to provide formative assessment, to give timely and effective feedback, to promote self-directed learning, to let students master knowledge and skills by applying them in meaningful, real-world projects or simulations, to foster community and to encourage service to others. The list goes on, but the point is to move our teaching faculty toward a culture, in which the foundations differ from the ones they’re accustomed to: a culture which emerges from the digital world of instant communication, sharing, and knowledge creation.

So often at a big school like Lawrenceville (800 students, 140 faculty) teachers get isolated — pigeonholed into their classrooms and departments, where it can sometimes feel like you’re just trying the same “new” things over and over again. When we overcome the barriers that separate us, when we broaden our networks and start pulling ideas from the outside, we can really begin to see our practice take new form. 

Much to my delight, the administration saw value in the kind of role I was offering to create, so this year I’m filling that role in the new position of Technology Mentor Teacher (although I prefer the title “Networked Learning Coach”). For each term, I team up with different faculty members and work with them throughout the 10 weeks on a single course, through working with them to develop new ways to run their courses or working with them on individual assignments and projects.

This fall I’ve teamed up with the III Form Science team, which consists of a group of science department faculty who teach the year-long sophomore science course (traditionally: chemistry). Two of our teachers are piloting the course with the iPad, so I’ve been working with one of them on choosing apps and designing ways for the students to collaborate across tools like Google Drive, Notability and Edmodo.

In another discipline, History, I’ve been working with one teacher to design a research assignment focused around a wiki. The research centers around an open question: How did we move from a world of empires to a modern world of nation states? Combining this kind of open-ended question with a collaborative knowledge curation tool gives students both a means to collect and present descriptive data, but also to assess the quality of that data and analyze it in response to the question. Our goal was to move away from the traditional history essay, and provide a different way for students to experience data collection, assessment, and analysis (key aspects of the research process).

Last year I worked with the same history teacher on a similar project; she wanted to create a more meaningful means for the students to present their work. We thought that expanding their potential audience through a website would both motivate and engage the students. Upon reflection afterward, we realized that while the project design was sound, we didn’t fully take into account how websites organize information differently than essays. Most of the student pages ended up looking just like history essays. So we went back to the drawing board with the question: how do we change both the format of the presentation and the expectations for the research process to give students a new academic experience that takes advantage of collaboration tools, a wider audience, and the pride that comes with making your work public?

I’m continuing to work with all these teachers, but so far, the experience has been a positive one both for me and those involved. Sometimes, when you’re trying to re-think your assignments or projects, it just helps having someone to bounce ideas off. For me, I’ve enjoyed the chance to hear how teachers from other disciplines approach their subjects. Each discipline is characterized by it’s own way of seeing the world. The fundamental questions differ for science, for math, for history, for art, for english, etc. This opportunity to work with colleagues across disciplinary boundaries can remind us about the reasons we’re in the classroom in the first place: to help students discover the way in which we humans have come to understand, describe, and question the world we inhabit. 

All that said, I’m left with some new questions recently that maybe some of you can help me out with. I’m looking for tools for teachers in the same course to collaborate and share information about what’s happening in their classrooms. We have many multi-section courses at Lawrenceville, and while each teacher essentially covers the same thing, sometimes they feel they have to go too far out of their way to find out what exactly Ms. X or Mr. Y are doing in their classrooms that might provide them with ideas or insight into how to best construct activities for their own students.

So: what are some great tools or methods you’ve found to promote healthy collaboration among colleagues teaching a shared course?

Anyone have good rubrics for using wikis in a history class? Or can anyone link to wikis that students have made for history classes? I could use some examples.

Sight.

There’s a great young adult science fiction novel from 2002 by MT Anderson called “Feed” about a time when everyone is connected to the internet through an implant in the brain. This is an even more dystopian vision of the future — very similar, but graphically oriented toward an adult audience. Gets you thinking. 

Is that an iphone5 in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?

iPhone 5: The tallest thing to happen to iPhone since iPhone.

Ikea’s Carboard Digital Camera

Where Wireless Speeds of 2.56 Terabytes Per Second Just Happened

futurejournalismproject:

Researchers have harnessed streams of light to transfer massive amounts of data. In a recent test, they hit 2.56 terabytes per second. Simplify the language and that’s about the equivalent of transferring over 67,000 songs per second.

Before getting too giddy, this was an experiment over one meter. Still though, add this to a very interesting, data heavy future.

Via TechSpot:

Researchers at USC, JPL and Tel Aviv University have managed to transfer 2.56 terabits of information by multiplexing 8 x 300Gbps “twisted” streams of visible light into a single beam. The feat exploits a phenomenon which, up until recently, scientists thought may have been impossible to achieve with light: orbital angular momentum (OAM).

OAM, the way a wave can be made to twist around itself, is what makes the team’s discovery particularly exciting. It also makes their findings incredibly useful for wireless data transmission. Making light beams spiral to create an optical vortex is not necessarily a new idea, but putting that phenomenon to work for the transmitting information is something researchers have been striving for.

TechSpot, Scientists hit wireless speeds of 2.56Tbps using light vortex beams.

want. (sans the nuclear family)
soupsoup:

brit:

Want to grow your own veggies but don’t have a sunny backyard? Check out the incredible Kitchen Nano Garden concept by Hyundai. Definitely a gardening gadget straight from The Jetsons. 

Gardening for the 1%

want. (sans the nuclear family)

soupsoup:

brit:

Want to grow your own veggies but don’t have a sunny backyard? Check out the incredible Kitchen Nano Garden concept by Hyundai. Definitely a gardening gadget straight from The Jetsons. 

Gardening for the 1%

11 Chrome Apps worth checking out

  1. Aviary Image Editor
  2. Google Mail Checker
  3. Send to Kindle
  4. Collusion for Chrome
  5. Feedly
  6. Stay Focused
  7. CanIStream.it
  8. Evernote Web Clipper
  9. Pong
  10. Ad Block
  11. Present Me

Whether the digital era improves society is up to its users – that's us

This essay by Danah Boyd is in a similar vein to the one I wrote for yesterday: Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain: Why We Should Examine Our Approach to Networked Living.


Boyd explores a question which she’s been grappling with:

What role does social media play in generating or spreading societal fear?

It’s an interesting read. I’m curious to hear what people think…

?

Yahoo Announces Axis, A New Visual Paradigm In Web Search UI

Interesting. 

We take our search engine experience so much for granted that it can be hard to see with clear eyes. Consider this: The dead-simple process of Googling something actually has three distinct phases. First, you arrive at the URL and type your query. Second, you scan the long list of blue links that are your results. Third, you hopefully find what you need. With their new search app, Axis, Yahoo is claiming to have eliminated one of those steps altogether. The insight lies in making search into a far more visual, rather than text-based, experience. “We’re focusing on the front end,” says Ethan Batraski, Yahoo’s director of product. “And in the last few years, the search experience hasn’t evolved much at all. But search is no longer a destination.”


Ipad keyboard prototype that’s so intuitive, it’s unclear why no one thought of it before.