EdVentures in Technology
teaching, learning and change
April 14, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
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FancyZoom 1.1 - Annotated
tags: blog, html, images, zoom, webdesign, fancyzoom, web
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Designed to view full-size photos and images inline without requiring a separate web page load, FancyZoom’s raison d’être (French for “raisin-determination”) is providing a smooth, clean, truly Mac-like effect, almost like it’s a function of Safari itself.
April 12, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
April 11, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
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RSS « Learning 2.0 @ SIAST - Annotated
This week’s discovery exercises focus on learning about RSS feeds and using Google Reader (a free online newsreader) to bring your feeds together. If there is another online reader that you are more comfortable with, or that you already use, please feel free to use it.
tags: rss, learning-activity, siast
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This week’s discovery exercises focus on learning about RSS feeds and using
Google Reader (a free online newsreader) to bring your feeds together. If there is another online reader that you are more comfortable with, or that you already use, please feel free to use it.
March 31, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
An Outsourced Open Source LMS and a Pot of Gold? | EDUCAUSE CONNECT Annotated
tags: blackboard, lms, lms-project, moodle
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Like many WebCT campuses, SUNY Delhi must select a new LMS and complete migrating to the new system in the next year. The total cost of ownership comparison led us to adopt a remotely hosted open source solution. We’ll examine the facts, figures, and progress of moving from WebCT to Moodle and integrating with Banner.
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Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite
March 30, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
Listen to your maps with Wild Sanctuary | Tech news blog - CNET News.com Annotated
tags: conservation, google-earth, nature, science
Users can explore various sounds, and see their placement and contextual information on the map. What’s interesting about these “soundscapes” is that they can show the difference in an area before and after environmental impact both with visual maps and sound as. Several examples were given show instances where a once lush diversity of animal noises became quiet, following climate change, human settlements, logging, etc.
How to Prevent Another Leonardo da Vinci « Wandering Ink.
tags: curiosity, learning, teaching
eLearn: 10 Web 2.0 Things You Can Do…To Be a More Successful E-learning Professional Annotated
tags: downes, edtech, productivity
The following list was inspired by eLearn Magazine Editor-in-Chief Lisa Neal’s blog post “Ten Things You Can Do in Ten Minutes To Be a More Successful e-learning Professional.” We’d like to offer the “Web 2.0 Edition” of Lisa’s list:
- Listen to a conference presentation. When you run across conference presentations while reading your RSS feeds (EDUCAUSE Connect is a prime source, as is OLDaily), save the conference site as a bookmark and revisit it to hear a presentation.
- Record a 10-minute presentation about something you are working on or learning about, either as audio (use Odeo) or video (use Ustream), and post it on your blog.
- Do a search on the title of your most recent post or on the title of the most recent thing you’ve read or thought about. Don’t just use Google search, use Google Blog Search and Google Image Search, Amazon, del.icio.us, Technorati, Slideshare, or Youtube. Scan the results and if you find something interesting, save it in del.icio.us to read later.
- Write a blog post or article describing something you’ve learned recently. It can be something you’ve read or culled from a meeting, conference notes (which you just capture on the fly using a text editor), or a link you’ve posted to del.icio.us. The trick here is to keep your writing activity to less than 10 minutes—make a point quickly and then click “submit.”
- Tidy your e-portfolio. For example, upload your slides to Slideshare and audio recordings to Odeo and embed the code in your presentation page. Or write a description and link to your latest publication. Or update your project list.
- Create a slide on Zoho. Just do one slide at a time; find an image using the Creative Commons licensed content on Flickr and a short bit of text from a source or yourself. Add this to your stick of prepared slides you use for your next talk or class.
- Find a blogger you currently read in your RSS reader and go to their website. Follow all the links to other blogs in their blogroll or feedroll, or which are referenced in their posts. Well, maybe not all the links, or it will take hours, not ten minutes.
- Write a comment on a blog post, article, or book written by an e-learning researcher or practitioner.
- Go to a website like Engadget, Metafilter, Digg, Mixx, Mashable, or Hotlinks and skip through the items. These sites produce much too much content to follow diligently, but are great for browsing and serendipitous discovery. If you find something interesting, write a short blog post about it or at least a comment.
- Catch up on one of your online games with a colleague—Scrabulous on Facebook or
Backgammon on Yahoo.
Or make a Lolcat. Or watch a Youtube video.
Wikinomics » Blog Archive » Wiki collaboration leads to happiness Annotated
tags: collaboration, fosspreso, wikinomics
Start Slide Show with PicLens Lite
March 22, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
USTREAM.TV Shows: Free LIVE VIDEO, Webcam & Video Chat Rooms, Streaming Broadcast, Stream Video Clips, Internet Radio Cams, Web News Events, Watch .TV
tags: streaming-video, ustream, webvideo
A vision of the mobile, connected college experience - Today in Abilene, Texas » Moving at the Speed of Creativity Annotated
tags: college, edtech, higher-ed, iphone, university
The video is a carefully formatted and scripted production, but still quite impressive as a vision for utilizing mobile technologies in transformative ways for learning. I was particularly interested in the comments made by ACU instructors in the video. Students were provided with choices right in class, which they responded to as polls on their iPhone right away. Students self-selected a hybrid version of a class which included both online discussions and face-to-face meetings, or a more traditional seminar-style class that met entirely face-to-face. Students were encouraged to use their iPhone as a digital voice recorder to conduct interviews, as well as take photographs for a class project. I especially picked up on the comment, by one of the students, that most of the course lectures were provided in advance of class so the face-to-face time could be utilized for discussions and interaction. This is a vision of
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21st century blended learning
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, powered by ubiquitous student access to iPhones as well as professors adapting their pedagogic approaches to instruction in ways which appropriately leverage the transformative learning potential of mobile devices.
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Top News - Schools respond to iPhone’s popularity Annotated
tags: college, edtech, higher-ed, iphone, university
Campus officials roll out programs to take advantage of the iPhone’s potential as a converged, mobile learning device
January 11, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
bFree - Blackboard Course Extraction Tool Annotated
tags: bb, bfree, blackboard, unc
Use bFree to open a Blackboard™ course archive file and display an outline of the course. Preview and extract individual content items, or extract any or all content as an independent web site that mimics the original Blackboard™ course.
January 5, 2008 at 12:30 pm · Filed under Diigo Links
World’s Smallest Projector Set for Launch - News and Analysis by PC Magazine Annotated
Dubbed SHOW, the lensless PicoP projector is designed for home and business use, and uses tiny lasers to shoot a WVGA (848 by 480, roughly DVD resolution) image on virtually any surface that isn’t a dark color or textured.
EC&I 831
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