Friday, April 22, 2011

Another Day, Another Discovery


This afternoon, Susan Davis and I were putting the finishing touches on a presentation for the Association of Independent Maryland Schools Technology Retreat. We had been collaborating using a Google Docs Presentation and had planned on downloading the finished presentation to a PowerPoint, because once can never be certain of Internet connectivity at a conference.

While trying to open up the presenter's notes feature we stumbled upon the fact that the presentation software in Google Apps has a feature that allows viewers of a presentation to have backchannel discussions automatically displayed while the presentation is flowing. What a wonderful concept! To access this feature, you click on "View together" after you click on "Start Presentation".

Playing with this feature for a few minutes, we discovered that while a presentation is being displayed, a backchannel can be viewed to the right. I love it!

However, this feature also seems to allow any participant to take control of the presentation and see the presenter's notes. Uh-oh, that could be dangerous.

So, from our quick test, we believe that this feature will be great when working in a small, trusted environment. I look forward to playing with this feature more.

If you have any experience working with this feature, please share your experiences.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Conversation

My background, to condense many years into one sentence, is in music and information technology. When I transitioned in 1999 from working in the corporate IT world to working as a technology director for an independent school, schools at that time primarily saw technology as a tool to support their infrastructure (email, grading, school store, library, cafeteria, business office, etc). To enhance learning, the school where I worked employed computer labs, used a few laptops in carts, and became an extremely early adapter of wireless technology.

In 1999, both within the school and outside the school, professional networking took place primarily in the form of emails. These one-way or two-way conversations may have been read by groups of people, sent to grouped email folders, or shared on listserves, but email was the primary means of communicating. For the most part, both adults and students worked on computers in isolation from one another. Collaboration took the form of emailing a document to a colleague for feedback.

I first learned about the revolution in social networking by being instructed to stop it. We learned that students were using a new form of technology as the means to converse with strangers. This new form of technology involved the establishment of virtual communities of young people. These communities were growing exponentially and attracting young people to them like moths to the flame. The perception at that time was that no good could possibly come from these communities.

A word about school technology directors. Like most teachers, we tend to be quite conservative about what we do. By nature we are quite protective and cautious. We wish to protect our networks, protect the kids on our networks, etc.

Frankly, the first student pages I visited on MySpace (remember MySpace?) were quite unnerving. In addition to being off-putting simply because this type of media was so new, most of the pages I visited at that time had a horrid sense of design, their authors were revealing far too much information about themselves, and students were seemingly connecting with anyone and everyone. It was about that time that my first thoughts relating to teaching students about “media literacy” came into being, although at that time those words would have never entered my head. I began thinking that we needed to teach students how to navigate these spaces safely. Unfortunately, at the time, I had no clue about how to do this, nor did most of my colleagues. So, in order to better guide our seemingly reckless students, I set about the task of learning about these new social networking media. Four years ago, I brought Alan November to my school, and we learned that young people networking didn’t have to be all bad -- some students were doing amazing things at school by connecting. Three years ago, I enrolled a team of 5 teachers into the Powerful Learning Practice program. While I was enrolled in that program, a shift took place in my thinking. Two of the top educational technology leaders in the country, Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach and Will Richardson, were extolling the virtues of leveraging these new social tools in schools. Still skeptical, I decided to lean into my discomfort. I forced my self to start a Facebook page, signup for Twitter, enroll in and take part in Ning communities, and create a Second Life avatar. In no time at all, I started making connections and having meaningful conversations online about educational technology. And, via a contact I made in Second Life, I had my first experience connecting students at my school with an expert from another country. This led to experiences and conversations that enhanced both their learning and mine.

Now, via my personal learning network, I connect with hundreds of people around the world who share my interest in learning and technology. I started a music blog that I now co-author with a friend, an it has attracted close to 1,000 readers from around the world. I’m currently enrolled in a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) at the University of Manitoba where I’m learning about Connectivism as a learning theory. The course’s leaders, George Siemens and Stephen Downes, brilliant as they are, are not my only teachers. In addition to participating in the synchronous semi-weekly online sessions, I’m learning from the community we have created, a community comprised of the universe of people who are extending this course to our Facebook group, on Twitter, and in Diigo. And they are learning from me, which is, in fact, the point. We are all learning from each other 24x7x365.

Learning together -- that is the shift.

I encourage you to join the conversation.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Call me RSSable

I have been using Real Simple Syndication (RSS) for a few years now. How has RSS changed my practice? Why do I keep using it?

In a nutshell RSS has become a window into my Personal Learning Network (PLN). Here is where I go to read the news from the sources I like to follow, read blogs that I like to follow, etc. It's changed my daily practice because RSS provides me with a one-stop shop for the type of information that I like to consume and contribute to. That's why I keep using it. I can't think of any downside to it.









I use RSS every day. How about you? Is RSS an integral part of your PLN?

Monday, May 3, 2010

Check out our students blogs!

I'm happy to write that we have students blogging in all 3 divisions (lower, middle, and upper) of our school.

LS: These blogs are still somewhat locked down. If you would like to collaborate with our LS students please contact me!

MS: The 7th grade science classes have just hatched ducklings! They incubated the ducks in the classroom for 4 weeks, studied embryonic development, watched them hatch, and are now taking care of them. Check out their blog for pictures, videos, and updates over the next couple of weeks: http://ducks2010.blogspot.com
Check out and please comment on the photo/video blog of ducklings being hatched and raised.

US: Students in an Intro to Computer Science are programming in Python. Links to their blogs follow:

This is Harlan's (the teacher) ipad and python programming blog:
http://howeprogramming.blogspot.com

This is Ankush's blog on programming "laser blast" in python

This is Matt's blog - he is a second year student (currently in AP, too) who is writing "Demon Attack" in Python:

This is Luke's Blog. He is writing Mario Bros. in Python:

This is Patrick's. He is writing some sort of pokemon game in python. Right now, he has his character walking around on a map.

This is Charles' blog. He is a freshman, and he's picked an ambitious program - super mario bros.

And this is Graham's blog. He is a former AP student and a senior. He is writing Bomberman:

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Day 1 of NAIS

One of the best experiences at NAIS is meeting new people. Yesterday, having just arrived, I met a board member from a school in Nigeria. We ended up speaking about possible collaborations between our students and exchanged contact information. Stay Tuned.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

NAIS 2010

I'm live tweeting the sessions I'm attending at the conference. My twitter name is larry.kahn. Follow me or read my tweets.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Thanking PLP

This year 5 teachers from my school, from all 3 divisions, and I have been working in a professional development program called Powerful Learning Practice. This year-long program has each teacher explore new web tools by having them find one tool that enables them to "learn more and share knowledge with others about something they are passionate about" so that they can "own the technology" BEFORE they take it to their classroom. All of the teachers who participated have reported the program has been "transformational." Students in these teachers' classes are using technology in new and exciting ways to enrich their learning. They are engaged in project-based learning that is thinning the walls of the classroom and inspiring them to be creative. Utilizing tools such as blogger, voicethread, ning, and igoogle, students in their classes are blogging, making connections with students and adults from other parts of the world, meeting experts outside of the classroom, etc.

Best of all, I fully expect this transformational change to be sustainable as these teachers and I are in the process of creating a new professional development model, based on our experience at PLP, that we will implement this summer. This program is off to a great start. Further, we fully intend to continue to meet as a group on an on-going basis to continue our learning community after this program is over.