Alphabet Soup

Computer_FrustrationWhen I was posting the podcast in the last entry I stumbled into a familiar problem for me. I’ve made several different types of recordings and posted them in different ways, but never a podcast. So I did it the way I thought I should and it DIDN’T WORK. Tried another way with the same results.

OK, I’m a digitizen, I can Google directions. Great…let’s read this…huh? Well, I’ll try a different link…wait a second this is telling me to do something different…OK, I’ll try this…nope. OK this site just wants me to buy something. What do they mean by that? OK, here’s some free software…this should do it…what, this is harder than the directions…AAAAAAHHH DIE DIE DIE!!!!

Ultimately I posted the podcast, and it works, but not exactly the way I want it to.

The thing is I don’t think the direction pages were wrong. The problem is with me. I know a lot about technology, including some fairly advanced topics, but there are HUGE GAPS in my knowledge.
It’s like I understand tech from A to Z (that’s probably overstating it…more like A to Q), but I never learned C, F, H, I, M, and P. Like most in my generation I’ve learned by doing (and usually not reading directions), so there’s no system to my knowledge.

The problems with my “system” are many. Many times I am ultimately successful in doing what I want, but it’s not the best or more efficient way. Likewise my stumbling around approach often makes it hard for me to remember how I did it when I try the next time (too often someone asks me to show them how to do something and I can’t unless I sit at a machine and dither for a bit). By “bleeping” over the unknown terms and concepts, I’m also blocking my progress.

Sometimes I wish I could take a beginner’s class. I’d be the person in the back of the room continually muttering, “Doh, why didn’t I think of that!”

I don’t think I’m alone in this. The nature of the web has encouraged autodidacts. Many of the students we teach will be in the same boat. So while we will be able to assume a great deal of tech knowledge and proficiency in our students, we have to remember that they too probably learned the alphabet with some letters missing.

P.S. While I wrote this entry in a Starbucks, a man sat near me and took out his netbook. We looked at each other and nodded knowingly. This IS the future!

The Right Question

“How do we stop this?”

I’ve been thinking about this post for a long time.

Living in a changing time is scary, particularly for those of us who were grounded in the previous era. Every challenge to the status quo by new technologies immediately brings out the inner “grumpy old man.” I’m never sure which change will be the one which brings down Western civilizations and all that I hold dear, so my first reaction is to shout “Get off of my lawn!”

I am ashamed to report that about 20 years ago I went on a rant in a department meeting about how computers were going to ruin the whole nature of teaching, so we couldn’t let our students compose essays and papers on them. I was completely right and completely wrong at the same time. I was asking “How do we stop this?”

I still have this gut reaction as the classroom and school setting continues to evolve; however, I’ve tried to change the question. Instead of asking “How do we stop this?” I try to ask instead

“What does this mean?”

What does it mean, that students have cell phones with them all the time?

What does it mean, that we find so many examples of students copying material from web sources?

What does it mean, that students communicate via social networking sites?

What does it mean, that students send inappropriate instant and text messages?

“What does this mean?” is non-judgmental. It makes no value assumptions about the resources or the students who use them. The question opens me to information and allows me to address causes rather than effects.

Tech 20 Session 13

An Introduction to Social Networking Sites: I Don’t Have Space in My Life for Myspace, and I Can’t Face Facebook

May 15, 2009

Like them or hate them, social network pages like Facebook and Myspace have become a widespread method of meeting and communicating for students and for adults.  As teachers we don’t have to have our own Facebook pages, but it is important that we understnd this phenomenon so we can separate the hype and the hysteria from the reality and so we can give students and parents appropriate adbvice and direction direction.

Video of This Presentation

Tech 20 Session 13 from Greg Dhuyvetter on Vimeo.

PowerPoint Slides from This Presentation

 

Further Links May Be Found at:  www.delicious.com/gdhuyvetter/socialnetwork

 


Tech 20 Session 12

Online Notebooks:  Now Where Did I See That?

May 7, 2009

This week we’re tying things together.  Taking the example of term paper preparation, I tried to show how search, social bookmarking, and social notbooking tooks are the essential building blocks of information management.  We looked at three tools: Ubernote, a relatively simple and plain vanilla system, Evernote, a very robust commercial product, and Zoho notebook, a full featured product with a weak clipping system.

PowerPoint Slides

Video

Tech 20 Session 12 from Greg Dhuyvetter on Vimeo.

Notebook from Greg Dhuyvetter on Vimeo.

Additional resources can be found at: www.delicious.com/gdhuyvetter/notebooks

Tech 20 Bonus Edition

Not a full presenttation, but I  heard a great podcast yesterday from Cnet’s The Real Deal discussing multiple-location computing.  

Listen to it here

images-17

 

 

 

 

 

Many of the tools we have discussed at the Tech 20 sessions (including some from the coming week’s session) are mentioned here.
It’s a great way to continue thinking about anytime/anywhere computing.

Enjoy!

Tech 20 Session 11

Google Earth:  Take the Picture Again, My Eyes Were Closed!

April 30, 2009

Google Earth is a desktop/web application that is incredible now, and will be the canvas on which teachers will build amazing new functions and capabilities.  Like many tools, it’s easy to be intimidated by the huge number of tools available, so it is worthwhile to play with the program using tools one by one to find out what is useful and what is not.

Coupled with the built in functions is the huge and growing library of free downloadable layers that plug in to the program.  Searching Google or using one of the sites listed on the Delicious page can yield a library of options.

To take this even further, there are great projects that students or you can do with the tools of Google Earth, again a Google search and some of the pages I’ve listed will allow you to see what other teachers in all subject areas are doing with Google earth.

PowerPoint Slides

Tech 20 Session 11   

Video

Tech 20 Session 11 from Greg Dhuyvetter on Vimeo.

Additional Resources may be found at www.delicious.com/gdhuyvetter/googleearth

Tech 20 Session 10

Alternate Browsers: Why You Would and Wouldn’t Want to Use Them

April 23, 2009

I almost always pick my topics before I think I want to say about them (actually I write the titles first). It seemed that computer literate  people should know about different browser options, but I had to think a long time to figure out why this was important to me and to others.  

We are moving from an OS-centric world to a browser-centric one.  More and more of our work is done online.  Therefore the choice of browser is as key or more than the choice of a computer.  The browser is where we work, where we read and where we connect with others…it should be a comfortable fit,

This session discussed the strengths and weaknesses of the big three operating systems.

PowerPoint Slides

                  

 

Video
My apologies, the video for this week is one of the worst I’ve done.  I’m barely in the frame at all, but it’s possible that you may enjoy this better.

Tech 20 Session 10 from Greg Dhuyvetter on Vimeo.

Additional Resources may be found at www.delicious.com/gdhuyvetter/browsers