By | June 2, 2008 - 6:23 pm - Posted in Educationau, social networking, Twitter

Looking for ways to explain what social networking, Twitter, podcasting etc is all about?
Commoncraft do a great job of this with simple, cartoon like videos where they manipulate paper cutouts and a voice over using clear, plain English.
Here’s one on social media:

Social Media in Plain English from leelefever on Vimeo.

CommonCraft offer a number of free to use videos from their commoncraft show as well as licensed videos that you can purchase. They do a really great job of explaining concepts that might be complex to some, in a really simple easy to understand manner.

technorati tags: social networking, Twitter,Commoncraft

Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back

Here’s a great article aimed at people working in museums but I am sure it’s just as interesting for anyone working in any cultural institutions or really, anyone with an interest in social networking in general. Written by Nina Simon, ‘How much time does Web 2.0 take‘ looks at what you might be able to accomplish through social networking based on the amount of time you can devote to it per week. Have a read and work out if you are a participant, a content provider or a community director. There are some great suggestions in here on how you could promote your institution online and help those seeking information or trying to discover you.

Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back

The Home Office in the UK has just release a report entitled ‘Good practice guidance for the providers of social networking and other user interactive services 2008‘. It’s probably a must read for providers of social networking services and many others. Educators and parents should all find something of interest in it. Part 1 of the report provides some background information on social networking and some of the potential dangers for younger people such as bullying, self-harm and other threats. Part 2 makes some recommendations for good practice while Part 3 provides some safety tips. Although a UK report, the Australian Communications and Media Authority had a role in its development so those of us in Australia should at least have a read to see where ACMA’s current thinking is on this really important issue.

technorati tags: social networking

Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back

It seems these types of calls are still appearing quite regularly. This BBC article reports on a Professional Association of Teachers conference in Scotland. There is a desire here not just to ban sites such as YouTube in schools, but to shut them down. Locally we have seen a number of States banning sites such as YouTube etc from use within schools for a number of reasons.
The problem in this case is cyber-bullying, both of students and teachers. In response to the problem, the demand seems to be to shut all such sites down, at least in the short term. It is not clear whether a (long term) solution was discussed.
Clearly the problem is not the sites themselves so shutting them down isn’t going to stop bullying from happening in the broader context. A spokesperson from the Beatbullying charity goes on to say:

“”Calls for social networking sites like YouTube to be closed because of cyberbullying are as intelligent as calls for schools to be closed because of bullying.

…Cyberbullying is flourishing for two reasons. First, society is not adequately preventing bullying behaviour…
…And secondly, it seems to be easier to type something hateful to a school friend rather than say it to their face…” “

Sadly, history and society is riddled with examples of individuals/groups using technologies to hurt others. Banning those technologies is a response but doesn’t address the cause of the problems though.
This is a really difficult issue - we can see so many positive examples from appropriate (there’s a value laden term) use of social networking sites but put yourself in the victims (students, teachers, families etc) perspective and try to see how they feel too.

Cheers,
Jerry.

technorati tags: cyber-bullying, YouTube,Social Networking

Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back

By a | June 8, 2007 - 12:16 am - Posted in Educationau, Web 2.0, social networking, e-portfolio, google

ePortfolios have been around for a long time now and the range and diversity of ePortfolio implementations is, well, staggering. There are a lot of commercial software offerings and most eLearning platforms seem to have a portfolio component. Large numbers of schools, training organisations and higher education organisations have developed their own and some of the larger ones have multiple eportfolio implementations. Some of these are great, particularly while you are engaged with that institution. Some allow you access to your/their portfolio (of you) for a long time after you leave, although who actually owns ‘your’ portfolio could be problematic.

It could be, and is often, argued that many of these ‘formal’ eportfolios do not meet all the requirements of their user base. Take a look at the rich information hundreds of thousands of Internet users are pouring into social networking services daily. Many Internet users would be quite comfortable with the notion that their myspace presence or similar service serves them well as their ePortfolio. Blogs make excellent (components of) eportfolios. Linked to your FLickr account, Facebook and dozens of other Web 2.0 services, you can create a very compelling Eportfolio of yourself. Which of these services should you or could you use? You might be able to find out information about me through Facebook, pageflakes, Windows Live spaces, several personal blogs, flickr, our company blog, Zoominfo, maybe even a myspace account, my EuroPass resume, and any one of dozens of Web 2.0 services I have reviewed over the last 12 months or so. None of these presences have been populated by me to serve as an ePortfolio but it is entirely reasonable that they could have.
Some services, such as ZoomInfo aren’t even maintained by me and are at best, very incomplete, at worst, wildly inaccurate. If I do a ‘vanity’ search on Google, I can find references to me on other services too, along with papers, presentations that I have delivered at conferences and all sorts of other ‘portfolio’ related information. Fortunately (?) for me, I have a relatively uncommon name. However, what if my name were ‘John Smith’, a reasonably common Western name. Trying to sift through Internet content that is ‘me’ would be a nightmare - even coupled with location and time based information it could still be very difficult.
Another problem for me is that I only seem to have existed for a few years - at least on the Internet. For those of us young enough to have grown up in the Internet era this may not be so much of a problem but many of us have done some pretty interesting stuff, that would be valuable for potential employers to know about, a long time before we started publishing it on the Web. I guess that is just another illustration of the radical change we are undergoing as a result of the Web - some of us existed prior to this change as well as existing during it.
For a portfolio service to be valuable to me, I need to be able to store, or refer/link to all sorts of content that may reside locally or on a wide variety of services. I need to be confident that the content will be available and accessible for a long period of time. I would like to present this content, or parts of it, in any number of formats/layouts to different audiences at different periods of time. It is about me so I would like to have some naive notion that I have a semblance of control over what it contains, how it looks, who can see different parts of it and when. Importantly, I would also like to refer to authenticated information about my achievements from time to time. An example would be proof that I completed a degree at a specific University. Of course, this is just one component of an eportfolio. In addition to providing evidence, artefacts, etc, I may also like to use it as a learning tool which means I would like a range of other services to be aggregated, or available at a single place of my convenience using whatever device I feel like at whatever time. I may like to reflect on what I am learning and other experiences or use my portfolio for planning too. This brings to mind a number of tools that I am using at the moment with Google’s increasingly large range of services.
So where does this leave me. To date I have a number of great services that I would like to incorporate into my ePortfolio space but I would also love to be able to link in authenticated, validated content from education/training organisations as proof of some of my achievements.

Cheers.

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Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back

By a | June 5, 2007 - 4:22 am - Posted in Educationau, Web 2.0, social networking, Twitter

Technology plays a large part in the work I do and while I have made a commitment to try and blog about technology and its application relation to our work it is interesting to see just how difficult this can be at times. There are some quite natural constraints for work blogging which in essence, reduces the number of things that I might like to blog about considerably. Then there are time constraints - I am putting this post together while eating lunch. Sometimes it seems that I have been so occupied in day to day operational tasks that there is just nothing new to comment on. During the first part of my lunch, I came across this interesting article on twopointouch. It provides some really interesting perspectives on blogging. There are some great reasons why people do blog, a pile of barriers/reasons why they don’t, some discussion on microblogging (I’ve joined the Twitter crowd and can see the attraction but haven’t ‘drank the cool-aid’ yet). More interesting to me is the notion of passive blogging - I think I have a lot to say but just don’t have the time etc to devote to blogging it. I am definitely going to follow this up.

Cheers.

Original post by jleeson and software by Elliott Back