3. Open Education Safety
1) Keep your personal information secret.
2) Never meet anyone in real life you only met online.
3) No incoming communications from “outsiders.”
5. Productivity Tools
(just Google it)
• “25 Digital Things All Teachers Should
Know”
– Delicious (tagging)
– Wiki (tagging)
– PhotoSharing (tagging)
– Snagit
– RSS Feeds
– Wordpress
– Google.com (Google Docs, Google
Reader, Google Earth) 5
6. 5 Things You Need
1.Media Sources
2.Free Media Editing Tools
3.Free Media Publishing Tools
4.Free Media Collaboration Tools
5.Free Media Organizational Tools
6
7. Media Sources
• Learn360: Video, Stills, Audio
• YouTube, Vimeo, Subject-specific Video Sites:
– Don’t allow referral videos
• TeacherTube:
– Same as YouTube, but vetted
• iTunes, Google, Flickr, Other:
– Watch your copyright rights
• CreativeCommons.org:
– Choose license for non-commercial use.
7
8. How To Search
• Set ‘safe search’ mode.
• Start in Wikipedia to find 5 keywords
• Search other resources with 5
keywords:
– Who: Ming Dynasty
– What: Technology
– Where: China
– When: Ancient
– Why: History of
8
9. Free Media Editing Tools
• Windows MovieMaker:
• Edits Video (iMovie if you’re a Mac)
• Windows PhotoStory:
• Edits Photos into a Movie (iMovie if you’re a
Mac)
• Audacity:
• Edits Audio like a Cassette Tape Recorder
• PhotoEditor:
• There are a number of online options, check
with your SBTS. (Pixie has a good photo
editor.) 9
10. Free Media Publishing Tools
• Blogs: explanation & example 1 &
example 2
• Wikis: explanation & example
• PhotoSharing: explanation
• Social Bookmarking: explanation &
example
10
12. Make Pictures “Tell”
• Don’t show what your telling
– Talk about what you are showing
• Use Visual Metaphors: Compare 2
Things
• One Prior Knowledge & One New
• One Visual, One Language
12
19. Use of Media in Learn360
Posted: www.slideshare.net/Clairvoy
www.Clairvoy.com
www.delicious.com/Clairvoy/Learn360_Aug2012
Notas del editor
\n
We are currently in a technology revolution in education. But it’s not what you think. It’s not the technology itself. The real revolution is the fact that students have access to technologies outside of school. \n\nHere's the problem. A study of students conducted last year found a majority of forth and fifth graders spend 3 to 6 hours a day on social media unsupervised at home. They play with Myspace, Facebook and all the "sharp scissors" collaborative technology out there. Heck even in 3rd grade there are early adopters in each class using MySpace and collaborating with folks they don't know in their gaming sites. Webkins starts them off at an early age. Yes, that's right, Webkins targets kids with stuffed animals and with each animal they get a login for a social networking site.\n \nOpen Education, as it is currently defined, is the use of free and collaborative technologies in education.\nFraught with issues about safety, stability which are brought about by misunderstanding and fear, practitioners and proponents of Open Education have a rough row to hoe.\nBlogs, wikis, free media production software, sites allowing web pages to be built with little or no effort are making things easier to do.\n
In the K-5 environment, collaboration must be managed. \n\nThe authentic publishing environment can be provided, but without incoming communication.\nTurn off your computer or monitor if you see something that bothers you.\nPorn Shui - Diablo Cody, screen writer for Little Miss sunshine\n\n