Saturday, September 5, 2009
Endgadget article: Boston prep school nixes all the books in its library, replaces them with 18 e-readers
I just had to share this article with you guys. What do you think? I have mixed feelings. I love the idea of getting the students e-readers, but do we have to get rid of ALL the books? I also enjoy reading people's comments on the article. Share some of yours here!
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Week 1 - Blog Posting #2 - Learning 2.0


Just this morning, I stumbled on this article in Education Week:
Filtering Fixes by Kathleen Kennedy Manzo
District leaders make changes to offer greater online access to students.
In the article, one teacher remarks, "I’m a big advocate for experiential learning, but it’s kind of hard to teach Internet etiquette or rules of how to act and interact online without exposing them to the stuff that’s out there,” Mr. Jenkins said. “It’s hard to teach those things in a vacuum.”(Manzo, 2009) While the article does focus on teaching children responsible internet behavior and learning how to be safe, it does point out the penny-wise, pound-foolish policy of the use of some filters. “We believe that you can’t have goals about kids’ collaborating globally and then block their ability to do that,” said Becky Fisher, the[...]technology coordinator."
The article also shows two interesting tables (shown above this post). Classroom lessons and assignments aren't the only things that suffer at the heavy hand of web filters: in a Twitter message this morning, @wbasinger tweets: "Internet filters and old software make PD [professional development] a real challenge" (twitter.com).
Let's see if any of my sites are unblocked today.
References:
Kennedy Manzo, K (2009, August 31). Filtering Fixes. Education Week, Retrieved 2009, September 2, from http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2009/09/02/02filter_ep.h29.html?tkn=QN[FwPR%2BcQ5C163IrJXxrec3ENEZu1KEL9H9
"wbasinger", (2009, September 1). Twitter.com: @wbasinger. Retrieved September 3, 2009, from Twitter Web site: http://twitter.com/wbasinger/status/3695823916
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Week 1 - Blog Posting #1 - Web 2.0
One bit of information that caught my attention was one small line of text on the Welcome letter. It stated that the district was implementing new web-filtering software, and that we might notice some changes in which sites we could access.
Later that day, I spent some time in the computer lab going through some links on my school pages to make sure everything was accessible through the school network. My link for students to sign up for Zoho.com: blocked. My assignment calendar on Google: blocked. All of my Ning networks (I have three): blocked.
Granted, the technology coordinator assured me that, on request, sites could be unblocked; however, it called to mind echoes of the videos I watched on the FSO prompt for our blog posts. How can we engage our students with new media, and still teach them how to be responsible 'netizens', if we don't even have access?
In this excerpt from Scott McLeod's blog, Dangerously Irrelevant, the author takes an ironic, poetic look at how our hyper-vigilance is exactly what our students don't need:
Don't teach your kids this stuff. Please?
dear parent
teacher
administrator
board member
don't teach your kids to read
for the Web
to scan
RSS
aggregate
synthesize
don't teach your kids to write
online
pen and paper aren't going anywhere
since when do kids need an audience?
no need to hyperlink
make videos
audio
Flash
no connecting, now
no social networking
or online chat
or comments
or PLNs
blogs and twitter?
how self-absorbed
what a bunch of crap
and definitely, absolutely, resolutely, no cell phones
block it all
lock it down
keep it out
it's evil, you know
there's bad stuff out there
gotta keep your children safe
don't you know collaboration is just another word for cheating?
don't you know how much junk is out there?
haven't you ever heard of sexting?
of cyberbullying?
a computer 24-7? no thanks
I don't want them
creating
sharing
thinking
learning
you know they're just going to look at porn
and hook up with predators
we can't trust them
don't do any of it, please
really
'cause I'm doing all of it with my kids
can't wait to see who has a leg up in a decade or two
can you?
(McLeod, 2009)
Sources:
McLeod, S (2009, August 26). Don't teach your kids this stuff, please?. Retrieved September 2, 2009, from Dangerously Irrelevant Web site: http://www.dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2009/08/dont-teach-your-kids-this-stuff-please.html
McLeod, S (2008, January 14). I'd like an idiocy filter, please.. Retrieved September 2, 2009, from Dangerously Irrelevant Web site: http://www.dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2008/01/id-like-an-idio.html