Thing 18: Survey Goodness

If you chose the cell phone adventure last week, you might have found that even cell phones can be used for surveys… but in this Thing we will be discovering some of the "survey services" (that's fun to say) that are available for free online.


Polls and Surveys can be used for polling 100 people (like on "Family Feud"), making money (Surveysavvy), giving some statistics to things like elections (Gallup polls), and educational feedback (end-of-class surveys, to name one). What do all of these have in common? They are set up because they want feedback. What they do with that feedback (or how they interpret the feedback) changes as often as the wind (Are we, or are we not, in a recession?)… but the first step is always to get the feedback.

So this is our Thing for today. You get to discover the inner-workings of the various survey sites and really get a taste and feel for how they work. The fantastic part is that these sites (for the most part) do most of the data collecting and crunching for you. So you set up your survey and get immediate results… fully tailored with statistical analysis.

Here are the sites we'll be working with:

Discovery Exercise

  1. Check out (trial run or tour) at least two of the survey sites. See what they have to offer.
  2. Choose a site and create an account and
  3. Create (and use) a survey! Create the survey, have people take it, and take a look at the sleek results you get.
  4. Blog about the experience: what you liked and didn't like. What you hoped for and how you can use this personally/professionally.

*Hint: Surveys are also named "Choice" in Moodle if you're using it!

Thing 17: Googledocs

Many people use email and attached documents to share various versions of a project. This may work, but there are several obstacles to smooth exchange and editing. Attachments may not open or you or your collaborators may not have the same software program or the right version to open and edit a document. It is easy to lose track of which is the current version with all the changes.

Web 2.0 tools make collaborating on creating a document or other publication easier. Documents are online and available from any computer with Internet access. Edits are easy to make and save. The program saves a document’s history with all changes made and indicates who made the changes. A full set of word processing tools makes formatting simple. Click the toolbar buttons to bold, underline, indent, change font or number format, change cell background color and so on.

Get the idea from Googledocs in Plain English (our favorite videos for learning!).

In this Thing, edit a famous document using these two collaboration tools. Both are free. You don’t need an account to edit these public documents. To create and share documents, you must sign up for an account.

Use Google Docs to create basic word processing documents, presentations, or spreadsheets from scratch or you can upload your existing files. Google Docs accepts most popular file formats, including DOC, XLS, ODT, ODS, RTF, CSV, PPT, etc. You can share documents with a select group or make the document public.

Discovery Exercise

  1. Watch Googledocs in Plain English (our favorite videos for learning!).
  2. Look at this public document in Google Docs.
  3. Send an email to SWC023@gmail.com and we will invite you as a collaborator.Make as many edits and changes to the documents as you wish, using the various editing tools available.
  4. Read some Collaborative Learning classroom applications from techlearning.

Blog Prompts

  • Which of these tools is easier for you to use?
  • How do the features of each compare? Does one have features that would make you choose it over the other?
  • How can I use this for/with our students?
  • What would the Founding Fathers think?

Challenge (optional)

1. Sign in to your Google Account.

2. Create and share another type of document using other Google tools—Sheet (spreadsheet), Show (presentation tool), Notebook, or Wiki.

3. Publish the document (Public) and post the link on your blog for others to view and/or edit.

4. Blog about the tools' ease of use, potential in the school, and other thoughts.

Other Resources

Slideshare is self-proclaimed as " the best way to share your presentations with the world. Let your ideas reach a broad audience. Share publicly or privately. Add audio to create a webinar."

Thing 16: Project Calculator

The University of Minnesota Assignment Calculator is a tool from the University Libraries for undergraduate students. Students put in dates for the beginning and end dates of an assignment and its subject area and this Web 2.0 tool generates a 12-step research guide and timeline for the project and recommends resources and strategies. The Assignment Calculator is widely used and adapted by academic libraries across the country. It is a great interactive resource for students in any class.
The Research Project Calculator (RPC) is based on the Assignment Calculator and was created to help secondary students plan for and navigate the research process in an ethical manner, using reliable resources. This five step process includes deadlines and (optional) email reminders. The tool also offers hints, worksheets, and guides for various types of projects. The RPC and Assignment Calculator are aimed at schools and universities. Link it on a teen or student page, use the bookmarks to inform students and parents about their existence, and encourage students to use it as part of their research planning.

The Teacher Guide to the Research Project Calculator (RPC) assists teachers in planning, managing, and teaching the often daunting research process by providing them with resources and step-by-step instructions, based on the five-step process outlined in the RPC. The site begins with an "About the RPC" section that provides an overview of the calculator, describes the role of the teacher in detail, and explains the resources included in the tool. There is even a streamlined version called "No Time?" for busy teachers. (Is there any other kind?) Also check out the Resources for Teachers.

Discovery Exercise:

1. Look at the RPC and the Assignment Calculator. Don’t try to cover every aspect of the tools, but rather browse the steps and consider how you could encourage students to use this product.
2. Look at the supporting materials in the Teacher Guide and Resources for Teachers. Are any appropriate for class or can you find other resources to supplement what you do for students?
3. Blog about your experience.

Blog Prompt Ideas
How might the RPC and the Teacher Guide help you help students plan and manage research projects?
Which resources did you find to be especially helpful?

Thing 15: Choose Your Own Adventure (Part 3)

Choose Your Own Adventure: Part Three: Online telephone and/or Cell Phone Serendipity

We are breaths away from MEA week here in Minnesota, so this week is packed FULL of things that are just a lot of fun... but, fear not brave warriors, there is (almost) always a possible link to education and your classroom!


Online Telephony

Cell Phone Serendipity

Enjoy!!

Thing 14: Choose Your Own Adventure (Part 2)

Choose Your Own Adventure: Part Two: Digitial Storytelling and/or Musical Fun

It's almost MEA week in this great state of Minnesota, so this week is packed FULL of things that are just a lot of fun… but, fear not brave warriors, there is (almost) always a possible link to education and your classroom!


So, for Part Two, here's your menu:


Digital Storytelling

Musical Fun

Thing 13: Choose Your Own Adventure! (Part 1)

Choose Your Own Adventure: Part One: Funnies, Pictures and/or Mindmaps

It's almost MEA week in this great state of Minnesota, so in order to combat the "too-many-5-day-weeks-burnout", this week is packed FULL of things that are just a lot of fun… but, fear not brave warriors, there is (almost) always a possible link to education and your classroom!
So make your choice, but choose well!

(Just kidding. If you don't like your choice, switcheroo!)

Funnies (Comics/Cartoons)
Pictures/Images
Mindmaps

Thing 12: Try out Moodle



As we learned in the last "Thing", Moodle is an exciting educational technology that easily lends itself to creating "hybrid" classes (online and in-classroom). We saw and thought about possible applications from a very broad perspective. In this "Thing", we get to dig a little deeper and take a look at some of the specific things that Moodle has to offer.

*A quick note: One of the Challenge items from our last discovery was to get your own Moodle shell set up. If you're interested in Moodle, It might be worth your time to do that now so that, when you learn about the specifics, you can apply them right away and get playing!

On this discovery journey, you are going to get to log into a Moodle demo course and check out some of the things Moodle has to offer and dream about possibilities for you and your students.

Discovery Exercise

  1. Go to the Moodle Demo Course (top one) and create an account.
  2. Once your account is created, go back to the Moodle Demo Course and enroll in the course (on the left hand side).
  3. Check out 3-5 things in the demo course. They walk you through a pretty easy demonstration of each of the things you could use within Moodle. (If you're at a loss, check out Assignments, Quizzes, Choices, Forums, Wikis and Workshops.)
  4. Blog about your experience with Moodle! (If you're at a loss, check out the prompt ideas below.)

Discovery Resources

Blog Prompts

  • What specific things are especially interesting to you in Moodle?
  • What applications that we have already learned about do you see in Moodle?
  • What ideas do you have for the use of specific Moodle applications in your area?
  • If you were to start with just one thing in Moodle, what would you be sure to do?
  • What solutions are there for students who do not have internet access at home? (How do we, as educators, bridge that inequality and still utilize Moodle to its potential?)

Challenge (optional)

  • E-mail Gary Blok (if you're a member of district 833) and ask him to set you up with a class in Moodle for one of your classes. And then read this: Getting Started for Teachers
  • If you already have a Moodle class, try one new thing that you learned about in the Moodle Demo Course.
  • Check out the "Teaching Do's" (like "encourage students to learn together") and "Teaching Don'ts" (like "Don't get overwhelmed by Moodle") .

Discovery is so much fun!

Have you ever thought, ”Gosh, I wish I had time to learn more about blogs, wikis, or (enter your Web 2.0 tool here)?” Well, this is your chance to take the time to focus on your personal and professional development around Web 2.0 tools. It’s fun to explore these tools and figure out ways to use them in school, with your personal Web sites, or in other ways.

SWC's 23 Things is a twist on the Library Learning 2.0 program developed by Helene Blowers at the Public Library of Charlotte & Mecklenberg County and adopted or adapted by many other libraries (including Minnesota Libraries with 23 Things on a Stick) and organizations since then.Learning 2.0 is online learning program that encourages staff to learn more about emerging technologies on the web that are changing the way people, society and schools access information and communicate with each other.

Over the course of the next nine weeks, this website will highlight “23 Things” and discovery exercises to help staff become familiar with blogging, RSS news feeds, tagging, wikis, podcasting, online applications, and video and image hosting sites.To familiarize yourself with this project, be sure to read the About page. The FAQs should answer most of your questions about this program. If not, then please add your question to the FAQ page as a comment.So fasten your seat belts, grab your mouse and get ready for a discovery adventure… and remember, it's OK to play with technology and have fun!