Bringing the NextGen idea back to basics

5 comments

Posted on 31st December 2006 by Chris in General |nextgenteachers

Ok, I am thinking out loud here.

If this is going to work, why can’t it work easily? Is it really necessary to have all the discussion and back and forth we’ve had? Can’t we just put out a call for young teachers to come together and talk about what we’re doing in the hopes of connecting people?

I see us reaching two distinct groups, 1) the international crowd, both Americans teaching internationally and non-American teachers both here and abroad and 2) new and preservice teachers.

I think this manifests as an audiocast where a few of the folks in the network come together and talk about what we’re up to.

We have also talked about a team blog, and I am leaning towards one that aggregates automatically from our existing blogs (provided the url is already entered into the team blog and it matches a predetermined category) to provide a central place for discussion about the next generation of teaching and learning.

Brought down to this basic level, is it really all that bad? There really is (nor ever was) a formal membership, outside of the loose-knit chit-chatting we’ve done so far, and we would not exclude anyone from the conversation in the form of comments and audiocast participation. The team blog would consist of folks that are a part of the organizing of this network, what Downes calls the community of practice. Would we include folks in the team blog that were over 40? I dunno. Haven’t thought about it yet. Truth is, all the folks I’ve been talking to and hashing this out with happen to be around 30. Is that intentional? No, but I do not think it is coincidence that it happened that way.

Are we promoting divisiveness? I don’t believe so. I think we’re just a bunch of folks eager to share the amazing things going on in this crop of new and young teachers. At least, that’s my heart in this.

I spent a lot of time vision casting this months ago, and it is not wasted time, but it looks to me like that falls under the unity category of groups, which appears to be inconsistent with where we’re headed. I have articulated common values previously, and that will be the binding force.

I am hoping once the other folks get back from vacation in other countries they will chime in.

Networks and Groups in the Next Generations

2 comments

Posted on 30th December 2006 by Chris in General |nextgenteachers

It seems like a lot of the concern regarding the NextGenTeachers idea is about a misconception that we are forming an exclusive group. Allow me to articulate our thinking in more appropriate vocabulary. I am heavily echoing Stephen Downes here, you can watch a video of his thoughts on this matter on Google Video.

We are forming a network with the goal of connecting people in ways that will maximize openness and as a result we will have deeper conversations and result in new perspectives. In a sense, we are looking at a new network topography.

This change in topography is in essence a new configuration of the network that will yield insights that were not possible by using the edublogosphere as it exists today. This is predicated on the idea that collaboration yields different data than would result in individual “work”.

How does this manifest?

I think the first quality we must posess is diversity. Downes speaks to a salad bowl, and if you consider the international nature of our group, diversity is a given.

We are also autonomous, insofar as we have articulated and thought-out values and guiding principles. They are certainly organic and subject to change, and that is in fact one of our ideals.

We are an open group. While we speak to our being young, our goal is to bring educators together to form a personal learning network of all ages. Cathy, a library media specialist has offered to mentor. Can you imagine if our outreach to universities brought an emerging LMS and Cathy together? Not to mention bringing this hypothetical graduate into the conversation as a participative voice? That is the goal. Openness, especially as it relates to context and identity. Part of our identity has to be our openness.

We are connected. We are users of aggregators, Skype, audiocasting, webcasting, and various other forms of communication. The fact that we are so widespread internationally and we have communicated so much already speaks to our commitment to communication.

We are distributed. This can be demonstrated based on our different passions. We belive that out of a sense of the connective, knowledge emerges.

If you watch Stephen’s video, as linked above, you will see that I took this line by line. I did so because this has been a guiding principle for us all along. Our goal was never the traditional “stars and gurus” approach. Truth is, I claim to know very little. I only claim to be on this journey, too. I did articulate a mission statement, or a vision, but only because I was trying to spell it out for the reader, not because I ask folks involved in this to ascribe to it.

I will follow up with more thoughts, and I am curious to see if this helps clear things up a bit.

As always, I only ask that in all of this, you hear my heart.

UPDATE: Here is the graphic I have been using as reference. Used by permission of Mr. Downes, although his work is released under Creative Commons, so permission was requested because it is a screenshot of a video presentation.

Stephen Downes network versus groups

NextGenTeachers

12 comments

Posted on 30th December 2006 by Chris in General |nextgenteachers

Well the cat is out of the bag. Note, if you’re going to read this post, read it carefully before responding. Hear my heart…
This announcement is NOT ready for prime time, but now is needed because we are being challenged over something that exists very much in theory alone. You could say this is an alpha release, but I feel this is needed because on the comments to Bud’s posting we have been referred to as narrow and divisive. That is not our desire nor our approach. I am so sorry to have to announce this under these circumstances, as this was going to be such an exciting announcement, now it feels more like damage control.

What I am announcing today is the creation of a group of educators whose mission can be articulated as follows:

Next Generation Teachers is a global network of educators
sharing thoughts around the tools of today and the students of tomorrow.

Here is the backstory, please hear my heart in this…

Some months ago, I got into several conversations with a couple recent graduates of anytown USA higher education teacher training programs. They were left feeling dissatisfied with the amount of instruction they had received regarding technology and its use in k12 education. Is it the purpose of higher ed to teach this? I don’t know. Let’s set that aside.

So we talked about blogging, podcasting, wikis, tagging and the like. Our conversation took us to Moodle and beyond. But more than that, it occurred to me that there might be a need to connect graduates of teacher-training programs to the world of educational technology that we experience every day in our aggregators. I want these folks to know of the wealth of resources out there in the form of amazing teachers, authors, consultants, speakers, and the like that can influence the future of education.

I want them to know there is another way.

I don’t want anyone to fall into the trap of thinking education has to be done the same way it always has been. I want them to rage against the system, for the sake of our kids.

I did not attend a formal higher education teacher-training program rather I went through an alternative route that allowed me to teach while taking state board of ed classes on the weekends and during the summer. I noticed that there, too, was a lack of instruction of how to use these amazing new tools to help revolutionize the classroom. Much was taught about how it was always done. Now, there is wisdom there, but there is also room for change.

I want these career-changers to see there is another way.

This leads me to Purpose # 1 of the NextGenTeachers – to connect preservice and new educators to the edtechblogosphere. This is to be accomplished through direct outreach to campuses, flyers, posters, and other strategies. To reach them, and then connect them. NextGenTeachers is not about bringing them into our fold, rather to function as a gateway.

Purpose # 2 deals with the International nature of our group. I will not list the members, because I do not have their consent to do so yet (again, this is much earlier than intended) but suffice it to say that we are scattered around the globe. That is part of the plan! We believe that this world is flattening and that international collaboration is going to be a large part of the future need of our students.

I was a Christian missionary to Peru for some time, and during my research of different missionary agencies I noticed that one major area of work for these agencies was caring for the missionaries. Be it a phone call home, a care package, or pastoral counsel on the ground, caring for people’s hearts was important. Well, NextGenTeachers wants to unite the international teachers out there to bring them into the conversation. Much (the majority?) of the innovation in the EdTech world is coming from the United States and we want to help spread the knowledge to other countries. This outreach will be to Americans teaching internationally, as well as to native teachers in other countries. I suppose I could sum it up by saying,

Purpose # 2 is to connect international teachers to the wealth of wisdom and resources and ensure their voices are heard. Playing with words at one point a few weeks ago I jotted down that “Global collaboration will be a part of many of our students’ careers, the corporate world is not the first place they should experience it.”

Here is more of our thought process. This would have been better worked out, but due to the circumstances, you get the raw idea.

How do we accomplish these goals?

In the interest of transparency, I had a long chat with Dave Cormier about possibly bringing this under the Worldbridges umbrella. That’s in the thought process. I am not sure what they are thinking, and I sure don’t know what we think. It’s just an idea.

One idea would be to sort of follow in the footsteps of the Women of Web 2. Weekly show, etc.

I don’t want to copy them.

I wish I had a better idea of how to accomplish this goal, but as of yet, everything we have talked about has been remarkably familiar to the women of web 2′s ideas. I feel like we’re on the cusp of coming up with new ideas to really get a new thing going, but I am not sure.

Let me address some of the more notable objections.

1. Is another group really necessary? This seems to be Bud’s central objection. Let me iterate that our goal was never to be divisive, and I am a little upset that his commenters would assume that we were without even knowing who I am. I hope my heart comes through on this blog, and I am not one to create walls. I just feel like there are some “natives” out here doing some amazing things! I think it would be a lot of fun for some of us younger teachers to get together and highlight some of the wonderful ideas coming from the next generation.

Our mean age is less than 30, which means we have a lot of teaching years left.

I am not saying we are experts, all I am saying is that this is an amazing group of teachers (and I speak of them, not me) and I want to show the world what they are doing! More than that, I want to show preservice and new teachers that there are some other younger teachers out there doing great stuff.

2. Objection #2 is that creating more groups is divisive and not unifying. I really don’t have a response to this as our group is not intending to draw from the already-there audience. I know this is poorly articulated, but we are intending to serve and draw from a group of folks that is not currently a part of the conversation.

I guess I see our group as having open arms, with one arm extended to the international community specifically, and the other arm reaching towards the preservice/new teachers and bringing them into the conversation, not monopolizing them.

That is Purpose #3, to bring more folks involved in education into the conversation. I don’t see that as wrong or divisive. We are not trying to keep anyone out, rather we are trying to reach the technologically lost and help them understand that it is about the information, not the integration. We want to help them not fall into the trap of setting a yearly goal to integrate more technology and simply automate the already existing process.

We want to spread the revolution.

It is not our revolution, but it is our generation.

A lot of this is rambling, and believe me, this is not how I wanted to announce this. Please hear the cry of my heart to help save more kids from the same old same old. I don’t think the current system can last much longer, and I think that because we are as young as we are, we will be around to see this thing through, for better or for worse.

Also please understand this is still just a theory. The web site that Bud linked to is horrible, and was just for my personal testing. Bud and I had talked about this idea since I am still in a counsel-seeking mode. For the record, I sent emails to some of the major players in the edublogosphere seeking counsel on this, to see if was even a good idea.

I recieved only one response, from Bud Hunt. Just one. I know these folks are busy, I mean it was getting to be Christmastime (I emailed in November).
What I do know is that I have a group of folks excited about helping out! I don’t think we are egotistical in trying to do this, our goal is not to further ourselves. I hope you can hear my heart here.

One final note, we as a group CRAVE accountability. Hence the discussion with Dave Cormier. If there were a major player out there willing to become our “club sponsor” we would ceratainly entertain that. We want to function with complete integrity and not make rookie mistakes. There is much wisdom in much counsel. Hence my many requests for help!

I know I don’t know much, and I would love (and need) some oversight.

Ok, let me have it. I take full responsibility for this group of folks, it was my idea and I will take the heat.

Does this have wings?

Testing an aggregation theory out

0 comments

Posted on 30th December 2006 by Chris in nextgenteachers

Ignore this post. I am working on a theory for aggregation by category instead of tag. You may recall I have been working on this.

Here’s praying (really) that it works!

Fixing more theme bugs

1 comment

Posted on 30th December 2006 by Chris in General

Working on more theme comments. Dan says…

Love the new theme – seems like the blogroll is indented one two many. Other than that, very slick.

Ok, I fixed it. Turns out the problem was that I had all my EdTech feeds in a folder called EdTech Feeds (sheesh). Because it was in a folder it filled out the way you saw it, all indented and such. So I moved all the public feeds to the root folder and rearranged things a bit, and bang, no more creepy indents.

There are more feeds than this in my aggregator, but I wanted to share a selection, not the 150+ all told.

Keep the bugs coming!

Hacking up the new theme

2 comments

Posted on 30th December 2006 by Chris in General

I think the changes I have made since yesterday’s implementation will go further for usability, although there are a couple things I can’t figure out. Here’s what I have done.

First, I hacked up the sidebar, and removed the old manually edited links section and added my bloglines aggregator so if I change it in bloglines, it automatically updates here. Then I added some preferred meta that I like. Of course, I had to place the obligatory wikispaces link.

Next, I just read Ben’s comment so I hacked up a little more. Now there is an additional comment link at the end of each post. Not to mention I had to add my own plugins, the edbloggernews submit and and the edublogosphere submit plugin. I should test to see if they work! Hmmm…

What I cannot figure out is how to add some padding after each of the line items in an ordered list. For example, look at my five things meme post and look how jumbled it looks since there’s no spacing. I tried manually adding
‘s after each line but no dice. I emailed the theme author, we’ll see if he responds. In the meantime, anyone know how to do this in CSS? I don’t see anywhere where ordered lists are defined, that’s the odd part. Unordered lists have a padding below them, at least according to the file. Maybe I need to add a definition for the ordered list.

I am no designer.

So thanks for the help with the new theme!

Do you like the new theme?

5 comments

Posted on 29th December 2006 by Chris in General

For those of you reading this in a newsreader, do me a favor and actually go look at the site. I changed themes and am curious to see if you like it.

I am hunting down a roughly 100 x 50 cool iTunes graphic I’ve seen, it’s the purplish waves radiating from the center. I’d like to use it as my podcast subscribe link, but can’t seem to find the graphic. Perhaps tomorrow will yield better results.

Thank you for your faithfulness to me!

I got tagged by a technospud

4 comments

Posted on 29th December 2006 by Chris in General

Ok, so the 5-things meme has made it’s way to me by way of Jennifer Wagner. Here’s hoping these couple of personal items help you understand more about me!

  1. I am 29 years old, married to a wonderful lady, and have two beautiful daughters. You can see the photo gallery at www.familiacraft.com. I don’t update it too often, because I am running up on Google’s 250 MB limit. I shy away from Flickr due to the public nature. I like that if I don’t tag my photos in Picasa Web Albums, they won’t really show up in a Google search of the site. I don’t mind the world seeing my pictures, but see no need to toss them into the wide open area that is Flickr.
  2. I speak fluent Spanish. My wife is from Peru, where I spent some time as a Christian missionary. She attended the church with which I was ministering, we met and the rest is history. Her English is lacking, but she’s working hard to learn. Believe me when I tell you I understand the whole native/immigrant discussion a lot better than most, because I have been both. While here I am a native and she is an immigrant, but when we travel, boy the tables turn. I have learned SO much about Peruvian culture, but I can never claim to be from there, or be anything but a big blonde immigrant. I don’t even remotely look the part! For the record, my Spanish is good. I mean really good. I speak it like I were a native Spanish-speaker. I push onto my kids the idea that accent is as important as vocabulary knowledge. Are you seeing the parallels between the native/immigrant technology discussion? Interesting, eh?
  3. I have held lots of different jobs in my short life. I dropped out of college at one point to become a firefighter. The fire department sent me to emergency medical technician school, and then I went to work for the county ambulance service. They sent me to school to become a Nationally Registered Emergency Medical Technician – Paramedic. I spent roughly five years answering 911 emergency calls on an ambulance. Because that wasn’t enough, I also found time to become a state police officer so I could help the local law enforcement agencies. With my experience as a firefighter and medic (not to mention bilingual) the agencies were headhunting me. Truth is, I was on a hunt for glory. This is a large part of my testimony. I wanted the hero glory to fill a void in myself that only God could fill. Finally at age 25 I bent my knee to Christ and turned my life over to him. I turned in my badge and gun and resigned from the fire department. I kept the highest paying job and went back to school. I graduated in 2004 with a Bachelor’s in Spanish and took off for South America. Once I got married, I had to find a job with decent benefits to take care of a family (my wife had a daughter, now I have a daughter). My mom is a career math educator, my brother teaches 4th grade, and my sister-in-law teaches middle school special ed. Needless to say, I kept hearing I was a natural teacher. Plus I am quite the self-taught computer geek, so…
  4. I studied acting and singing in high school. I went to a magnet school in South Florida that focused on the arts and I chose the track the centered on acting and singing, entitled Musical Theatre. There I took classes on topics such as Shakespearean English (meant for the accent and understanding of the time) and modern dance. I learned interpretive movement and improv comedy. I’m pretty shy, as I don’t think what I have to say most of the time is all that interesting, but if I get into a performance situation (read: teaching/presenting/etc) I get fluid. I can also do accents from other parts of the world, although not quite as well as I would like.
  5. I still read Archie Comics. It is the only comic book I have ever read, and I never got Jason Lee in Mallrats obsessed with the condition of the books. I used to read them over and over and over again. I can recall going to the grocery store and browsing the checkout line for new issues. Sometimes I could rack up as many as seven, and my mom begrudgingly bought them. I still have quite a collection, although they are in boxes in the garage. I am not as big a fan, partly due to age and partly due to the apparent decrease in morals. Just noticing the front page (which may have changed) notes Betty and Veronica in skimpy clothing. They are perpetual high-schoolers who I think should model appropriate dress, not mimic the halls of most modern high schools. I have episodes of PEP that ended up being the basis for the Archie series. I don’t buy them myself any more, but to this day, whenever I have a birthday or Christmas, my mom always makes sure to include a few issues for me, and I gobble them up.

Silly stuff, personal stuff. There it is.
So now it is my turn to tag, so here is my list.

Aaron Smith

Steve Dembo

Kim Cofino

Jeff Utecht

Doc Searls (my longshot)

Best format for conference presentations?

4 comments

Posted on 28th December 2006 by Chris in General |Presentations

I have been thinking about doing some presenting. 2007 seems to be shaping up as a year to do just that. To that end, I have been thinking about ways to follow up with conference attendees so that the conversation that begins during the presentation does not end once time is up. This was sparked by a webinar I attended with Will Richardson in which he used a wiki to present. I thought about how easy it would be to make changes, encourage discussion, etc. I am not one to blindly copy anyone, so I embarked on my own thought journey, and here are my current thoughts and the various options as I see them…

  1. PowerPoint/OpenOffice Impress/Keynote – The first and most obvious option is the standard laptop/clicker/screen presentation. I could spend lots of time preparing a rockin’ presentation to give with really colorful photos and engaging videos and loud music. It’s no secret, I can put together a snappy presentation. That seems too much like the old school. It seems very unidirectional and does not seem to support follow up. I suppose that if I were so inclined I could post the presentation to slideshare and then incorporate that into a wiki for folks to use as follow up. Still, it seems more like a look-what-I’ve-done-you-comment scenario. Useful, but appropriate in all situations?
  2. Second on the list is the presentation wiki. I have noticed a few folks doing this lately, and it seems like a good idea. I notice, thought, that mostly the one editing the wiki is the owner/presenter, not the crowd. I wonder if that is based on the learning curve that some conference attendees have towards editing a wiki? Or is it the sheer lack of follow up? Or could it be the nature of conversation? The latter is clearly where my thoughts have been because I rarely edit someone else’s wiki. I can not imagine being an attendee at one of David Warlick’s sessions and then editing his co-learner wiki. I know the wiki levels the playing field and that I have as much to say as anyone, but for me that is intimidating. Not only is it imtimidating, but I question the level of interaction. Sure, I get to make an edit of a wiki, but does that really become a part of the conversation? Would anyone know I contributed if all I did is fix something? Would anyone know unless they checked the revisions page? I don’t begrudge the wiki by any stretch, but if the blogosphere is all about the conversation and flow of information, a wiki seems to me still to be centered around one person. I am certainly aware of the discussion page on most wikis, but that seems tangential instead of integrated. Not sure what I really think here, just sort of rambling. As you know from earlier posts, I am a strong supporter of the wiki, but my uses are when there are a number of collaborators, not one person developing content and others just adding bits and pieces. I give kids a blank slate and the work cooperatively. Maybe I am drawing too much of a distinction here, but I see one.
  3. So I keep thinking back to the old days of Moonshae Isles BBS, which ran on Major BBS. I was ten years old, and this was all the 300 baud dial-up rage and there was a game called Fazuul that was text based and fun! We walked through that game together for hours at a time, all the while tying up my own phone line and not really caring because I was forging relationships in a new medium. Thinking back to those memories coupled with thinking about a new semester of teaching Latin has me pondering the use of forums (message boards) for conference presentations. Before you go accusing me of being “so web1.0″ hear me out.

Forums provide a threaded discussion, keeping conversations very linear. Now I am not saying that all conversation needs to be linear by any stretch, but forums would certainly offer a question-and-answer scenario that may prove to be very useful. Now wouldn’t it be something to take the forum and make it the center of the conference presentation? What if a locked, sticky, introductory post was the first to be shown, and then the audience is walked-through the contents. Then imagine if they could go home and walk through it themselves, and then post questions directly below it? I think that may encourage more people to participate as opposed to walking away frustrated.

I am thinking more and more that an internet forum (i.e. phpbb) would be a great way to keep the conversation going. I am thinking of one central forum with different conferences listed as the subtopics. Maybe something like this…

  • NECC 2007
    • Drupal
    • WordPress
  • ETV 2007
    • Blogging
      • WordPress.com
      • Edublogs.org
    • Podcasting
      • Gcast
      • Odeo
    • Wikis
      • Wikispaces
      • Wetpaint
  • SCFLTA 07
    • Blogging
      • etc etc

This just seems to me to be so logical and wonderful. That way if someone from a particular conference had a question about a particular piece of software, they have their own spot to go and post. I would start each conference with a new topic and blank slate. But, if attendeed wanted to, they could jump around and see what other attendees have posted under those respective topics.

Ok, let me have it. Is my logic flawed? Looking at Tim O’Reilly’s definition of web 2.0, it seems like the trusted forum (or fora, as is the correct latin plural) is a solid web 2.0 idea. My installation of phpbb (more on that later) will not be AJAX’ed quite as much as the traditionally referred-to web 2.0 tools like Google’s App Suite, but nonetheless it fulfills the core principles of web 2.0 such as:

  • Control over unique, hard-to-recreate data sources that get richer as more people use them
  • Trusting users as co-developers
  • Harnessing collective intelligence
  • Leveraging the long tail through customer self-service

Oh, and for what it’s worth, I will be able to try the winning tactic out at NECC, on Tuesday, 6/26/2007, 12:30pm– 1:30pm, because I will be presenting in the Open Source Lab. The title of my presentation is Open Source Blogging Solutions for Publishing Student Writing. Needless to say, I am super nervous already!

So, dear reader, which of these tactics do you think bodes best for follow-up conversations?

Another first post on the new host

4 comments

Posted on 27th December 2006 by Chris in General

Ok so the last post showed a nasty database error from my Ultimate Tag Warrior lack of exporting error.

So it should be fixed. Some harsh sql injecting later…

You know I couldn’t sleep with a database error!

You rock if you’re still reading this…

Chris