Crucial Thought Rss

Featured Posts

MobiOne Promo Code - app development software One of the highlights of my year thus far has been publishing iOS apps with kids. We've gotten two apps successfully published in the App Store and are working on several more. As of this writing, we have one in review that we hope will be approved soon. I often get asked how we publish apps, since this is not something that is typical...

Read more

Chris selected as K12OnlineConference keynote speaker Each year the K12OnlineConference provides tremendous professional development for free, and entirely online. This year, they have selected me as one of their keynote speakers. I am thrilled to have been chosen and look forward to participating in the conversation. Read the full post announcing all the keynote speakers here.

Read more

Two quick links on Cognitive Load Theory I've been fielding lots of questions lately about Cognitive Load Theory. Here are two quick links that may be useful. First is an article talking about the practical implications of CLT on the design of learning. The second are some "recent" (as of 2003) developments regarding CLT. Happy reading! Update: I clarified the second...

Read more

Practical advice on kids and Android app development After hearing about my students' success developing an Android app, I've gotten several emails asking for more details as to how I practically worked with my kids. Here are some pointers that I offered to the first person that emailed me, perhaps they are of some use to you. Please note that your mileage may vary. It's ok to not be...

Read more

Publishing an App Inventor app to the Android Market As I mentioned earlier, my students and I published an Android app to the Android Market. See those links for more information on the background. This post is decidedly technical. First, once we finished the coding process, we packaged the app for to download to the computer. This is an option in App Inventor. This downloaded an .apk file....

Read more

The personal narrative seems to be the key

Category : General

I just had a good chat with David Jakes in a more personal way. We talked about how I can make my digital storytelling projects better for next year and he was sharing with me that it really is all about the personal connection and personal narrative.

I truly am a man who seeks after relationship with others, so the idea that a personal connection is the key to kids telling better stories really resonates with me.

I will follow up with more thoughts, but this is where my learning is right now.

Thanks, David.

Digital Storytelling session with David Jakes

Category : General

Hi. I’m at Edubloggercon07 here at NECC. Below please find my notes. They are rapidly typed and this is my first attempt at conference blogging so forgive me if they’re no good or need to change in some way. My thoughts are in all caps and were type during the moment.

Creating a competitve student voice with david jakes

jakes.jpg

Perhaps we need a channel where there is less noise than youtube

we are missing a venue where kids can post something and it is taken seriously

four areas of digital storytelling 2.0

1. new tools

joyce mentioned voicethread.com
ispot, jumpcut online video editing

He feels like we’re headed towards browserware and away from desktop-based software.

2. new media

3. new networks

4. new message

brian crosby mentions that teachertube needs a section where students can post student work and then students could comment on it

www.nextvista.org

when you see the ny times with video obituaries, with youtube asking for kids to ask questions of political candidates

joyce valenza is saying that we’re fed up with student presentations created in powerpoint because they don’t look like presentation zen

one of her kids said that the slides need to be for the audience not for the presenter

david was talking about the fox news channel in chicago allowing folks to respond after a process of verification

I WONDER IF THIS IS EVEN NECESSARY. IF WE TEACH OUR KIDS HOW TO ARTICULATE THEIR THOUGHTS ACCURATELY AND TEACH THEM HOW TO THINK THROUGH THESE PROCESSES, THEY WILL LEARN THE NEEDED TECHNOLOGY EITHER JUST-IN-TIME OR BEFOREHAND BASED ON PASSION

slightly heated debate about fair use and the fairy use video

david is asking what the messages are that kids can create, what do kids need to speak on

when we ask kids to tell a story, sometimes it doesn’t turn out the way we’d like

the bottom line is what kind of meaning the students make from this environment

are they using the videos to get at the meanings in their lives

Crucial Thought Podcast – Episode 18

Category : General

Ok so this is the first episode of the podcast since I renamed the blog.

Sorry it’s been so long. Ok, well not really, life gets in the way.

This episode is an interview with Dr. Scott McLeod of Dangerously Irrelevant. He is a PhD and JD and all around impressive guy. He responded to my request for an interview subject and we were able to hook up this morning.

I want to also thank Prof. Larry Gillick for being willing to be interviewed, I apologize that my schedule got so crazy, and I would still like to chat!

Alexander’s Iron Law works nicely here…

Category : General

By the way, Bryan

I’ve been staying at a Courtyard by Marriott and was pleasantly surprised when I fired up the Macbook and found nice, speedy, and above all, free wifi. All for under $150 per night.

Woo hoo!

I am not anti-television, I just don’t watch it

Category : General

So Dan Meyer has got me on the defensive a bit.

I articulated my non-appreciative attitude towards television some time back, and he commented.

His recent post led me to finally articulate a bit more why I feel the way I do towards television. Here is the comment I left on his blog post…


Ok look, the TV thing is a big deal to me. I dislike television, pretty much in whatever form it presents. Oh sure, I spent years watching ER and other amazingly well put-together dramas. I can appreciate amazing cinematography, good script-writing, and the other oft-touted reasons to watch good tv.Truth is, this has nothing to do with my students and what they watch, this is about me and my family.

I do not watch television because I don’t like where my mind goes. If I have a covenant with my eyes, I have to be careful what enters, be it in front of a tv or a computer screen. Both can be dangerous.

The difference is the computer screen holds a benefit for my life. There is productivity there. Sure, there is entertainment, but I tend to avoid that as well.

I probably lead a fairly boring life, but I notice that when I let my daughter watch a fair amount of television it is harder for her to play imaginatively in the aftermath. When the TV is nicely turned off, she plays for hours without getting bored. And her props in this life play? Cardboard tubes and a check necklace, and a variety of stuffed animals.

I spent a lot of years on a couch watching television, I have no desire to return to that.

For me, and I reiterate that this is my deal, perhaps my problem, and I don’t impose it on anyone, I just think our society focuses a bit too much on celebrities, hence my blog post on Google Trends.

It’s a personal decision for me as the head of my house. Oh sure, she may watch a movie here and there, but broadcast television (I sure can’t afford cable!) holds the keys to unlocking a Pandora’s box in the heart of my girls I would rather see left untouched.

Just my thing, and it’s totally ok if someone disagrees.

On a side note, I don’t know a thing about adbusters, I just linked the tvturnoffweek.org thinking it was an innocent grassroots campaign to get folks to read books or something. I shoulda known it would be something poltical.

SCASA Presentation and student blogging

Category : General

It’s been a whirlwind couple of days. I drove a few hours to Myrtle Beach, SC for the South Carolina Association of School Administrators conference. I did a presentation about blogging.

I don’t think I am going to present about blogging any more.

There is so much to talk about, and such a wide variety of experience levels walking in the door. You have to discuss everything from which platform to use, whether to allow comments, the legalities, the all-famous AUP, whether to allow comments and what to do if a student cyberbullies from home on your blog, etc etc etc

I am just not sure blogging with students is an all together good idea any more. I have a post in draft that’s been there since the last time I presented on blogging in March, let’s see what it says…


Drafted on March 16, 2007…I have added to it so just know it began then and continues now…

For the last two days I have been presenting on a variety of topics at the SC ETV headquarters for a teacher technology workshop. I presented on blogging, podcasting and wikis. My podcasting session and my wiki sessions were great!

My blogging session was awful.

My fault? Not sure.

Most of the teachers came in interested in having students publish work to the web in the interest of sparking conversation, not as a daily journal. So yes, Jeff, I get it. I understand blogs.

My issue with this whole deal is the lack of an appropriate online tool. Here’s what I mean, and remember, we’re talking STRICTLY about student blogging, not teacher blogging, not admin blogging, nothing else outside of students with a blog as an outlet for writing and conversation.

There are a few ways to pragmatically “do” this blogging thing. I am looking for a broadly implementable idea that can be administered by a teacher who is not super tech-savvy.

1. Blogger. I rule blogger out based on the need for kids to have an email address to sign up. I had a few teachers in my session concerned about that. The next blog button is also notoriously inappropriate.

2. WordPress – Good platform, and clearly my platform of choice. Not too many teachers have any clue how to install something on a shared server, nor do they have shared server space to begin with.

3. WordPress mu – Same issues as WordPress, except now  the teacher has to administer the blogs. Not a bad thing in certain situations, but most classroom teachers do not have the time/expertise/desire to do this.

4. DrupalEd – Good platform and good organization. Same issues of teachers not having sufficient time/knowhow and shared server space.

5. Moodle – probably the best, since it can create a walled garden (which I support only in the context of our increasingly litigious society and frightened administrations) and yet some blog posts can be set to allow the world to read them. Naturally, with such flexibility comes an incredible amount of administrative headaches, not to mention the installation would knock any non tech-savvy teacher out of the running.

But Chris, what about some of the newer web-based tools? Ok, here you go…

6. Class Blogmeister – by far the teacher favorite with the teachers I’ve spoken with. I have heard it’s not being developed any more, and I emailed to try and get a login and never heard back. This is one that could use a team to come along and push development. The design is right in terms of permissions and the like.

7. Imbee.com – I don’t want an entire social network for my kids. Tell me they would not be distracted…

Ok there are others, but I am not sure they offer what I believe to be is the proper mix of teacher involvement and student freedom of expression. This post more than anything is designed to allow me to explain where I am in terms of student blogging. If I choose to do it next year it will be in the context of our Moodle installation.

What do you think?

RefWorks and other bibliography ramblings

Category : Grad School

I really wish I could afford RefWorks. I called them yesterday, basic subscription is $100 plus add-on modules. I still like NoodleTools, and wish BibMe had a few more features. I gave up on Zotero, but maybe it’s time to give it another try. I just like that RefWorks has partners that allow direct exporting.

I am spending way too much time inputting my bibliographies for these long papers, there has to be a better way. BibMe’s search is nice except it hasn’t found a single journal article of mine yet. That doesn’t shock me, since I am using my university’s proxy login to get access to these journals.

Ahh well, back to the grind.

My session blog tag and feeds…

Category : General

If you haven’t seen what Steve Hargadon‘s been up to, go read up

Here is my info, for those curious…

Craft, Chris: ‘Open Source Blogging Solutions for Publishing Student Writing’ in B308 at 12:30 on Tuesday
Tag=n07s845 Blog Posts / Blog RSS / Flickr / Flickr RSS

Technorati Tags: , , ,

links for 2007-06-15

Category : Feeds

links for 2007-06-14

Category : Feeds




bt
plugin by DynamicWP
#