All learning begins when our comfortable ideas turn out to be inadequate. -- John Dewey

Online Tools for My Students

Posted: December 30th, 2009 | Author: csessums | Filed under: tactics | No Comments »

compassionThis is a list of the tools that my students and I have used or played with this semester. Many I rely on. Others I am experimenting with. Feedback and/or recommendations welcome. (^ ^)

A GMail account. All sharing collaborating, communicating starts with GMail including GoogleDocs, Spreadsheets, Surveys, Presentation, Google Reader, Google Sites, iGoogle, and Google Groups. I have replaced my Entourage calendar at work with Google Calendar (and I am excited to start playing with Chrome someday). Wave is still in the “gaming” stage. And while use multiple search engines for differing purposes, I start with Google Search (with ads off and Twitter search). Google Scholar is also useful for finding articles and research quickly. Google Earth has been used as well for student activities and “play.”

Personal learning journals are kept using Blogger or WordPress.

Social bookmarking is done with Delicious. While I use FriendFeed and Diigo weekly, I still rely most heavily on Delicious. I have also taught student to search it and SlideShare to find helpful resources and information.

When playing with concept maps, we have explored Gliffy, Bubblous, Wisdomap, and MindMeister. For rubric development we use GoogleSpreadsheet and Rubistar with some success.

I am experimenting with Mendeley as a bibliographic resource. I started with EndNote, then switched to keeping spreadsheets in Google.

We used Audacity to support digital audio recordings and Jing for our screencasting activities. Prezi has also been used to create unique presentations. Glogster has been discussed but not integrated into our curriculum in a meaningful way.

VoiceThread was introduced as a way to combine audio, visual, and textual interaction online.

Wordle is always fun for looking at patterns in bodies of text.

computersTwitter has been used to support discussion and dialogue as well as collaboration and assessment. I use Tweet Deck to stay in touch with my Twitter PLN.

YouTube has served as a host for several student projects plus serves as a great resource for teaching and learning.

Tumblr is my digital errata filing cabinet.

I recently discovered hundreds of wonderful music playlists on LastFm.

I use my uni’s library catalog and WorldCat for searching books. I use Amazon for examining similar texts and recommendations.

While visit Facebook on occassion, my students are all dedicated users. They have even presented lesson content and quizzes with it. My students are quite savvy!

I use Flickr for personal photos and Picasa for professional work. Flickr is also used to find Creative Commons media.

Wikipedia is used as the CliffsNotes of the world.

tools mosaicMy college uses Moodle as a course management system and we recommend Firefox for browsing. Additionally, Firefox has hundreds of add-ons for enhancing our time on the Web.

Wiki-wise my students have used WetPaint (too many ads), but I prefer Wikispaces or PBWorks.

Skype is still a favorite for VoIP-ing. And in my college we use Elluminate for collaborative Web conferencing.

We’ve played with a number of games in class including The Eyeballing Game, a Wikipedia-based trivia game, short-term memory games, dexterity games, strategy games, prisoner’s dilemma, Poisson Rouge for the six-and-under set, musical ball dropping, and In Bb for a class symphony.

And while the TED site is not a tool, it continues to inspire me and my students and I thought it deserved an honorable mention.

Images:

Compassion: http://www.bestmadeco.com/FEATURES/catalogs/fall09/P1030484.jpg
Computers: http://2.media.tumblr.com/Hxs1TBsQ4lqq501cbrWuOHslo1_500.jpg
Tools Mosaic: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2222/2085828080_9f56f1abc7.jpg

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