Browsing articles tagged with " call"

Staying away

Jul 2, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

This is the first time in a few years that I did not attend NECC
virtually. I have never attended physically, but I have anticipated
all of the thinking and writing that happens during this conference.
This year, however, I am on vacation. I have not taken a vacation from
thinking or pushing myself in all things ed tech. Rather, a vacation
from the competition for attention. A vacation from large halls with
standing room only (for even virtual attendees). A vacation from
second-hand commentary standing for research.
 
Really though, this vacation isn’t about escaping NECC. It is about
sleeping on a hammock with my daughter and waiting for the warm Austin
wind to take us away from everything that plugs in.

Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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LiC Podcast: Design with Forever in Mind Archive

Jun 26, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Professional Development, Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

Although I was thrown a whole bunch by not having wifi for the first 45 minutes, I think that the session was worthwhile. Here is the archive of all that we have done. I am also including my planning podcast from my drive up to copper mountain.

Presentation:

Drop Box:

drop.io: simple private sharing

Important Links:

Ben Wilkoff Links:

  1. Learning is Change Blog and Podcast>
  2. Twitter Page
  3. Other Presentation on Thursday (The On Button: Instant and Always-on Collaboration)

Presentation Links:

  1. Foreverism
  2. Math Casts
  3. Web 2.0 Game Over

Exit Plan for Vocaroo:

  • Wav files backed up to a hard drive/server

Exit Plan for Drop.io:

  • Everyone who downloads the podcast will have a copy.

Exit Plan for JamGlue:

  • Mp3 files of mixes

Exit Plan for Screencastle:

  • Download Direct Link to File and store on hard drive/server

Exit Plan for Screentoaster:

  • Mov Downloads before uploading to screencastle site

Exit Plan for DimDim:

  • Download and build own DimDim server and store recordings there.

Exit Plan for Twitter:

Exit Plan for Google Docs:

Ustream Archive:




Twitter Archive:

  • CosmoCat: @bhwilkoff was great to learn about screencasting and audio recording! Hope you enjoy Audioboo! #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:46 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Thanks to everyone for adding value to my session #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:40 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 09:13 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: Learning needs real purpose and real audience. #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:08 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: How do you capture learning? Add to the spreadsheet: http://tr.im/pvz2 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 09:05 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 08:40 PM GMT ·
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    CosmoCat: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:19 PM GMT ·
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    care507: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:13 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: I’m searching for forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/MVxM0 (expand)
    #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:13 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: #forevertie09 Devonee – Technology Integration Specialist from Mesa County

    Jun 23, 2009 08:12 PM GMT ·
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    forevertie09: I’m searching for #forevertie09 live on TweetGrid Search – http://bit.ly/4A1lo3 (expand)

    Jun 23, 2009 08:11 PM GMT ·
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    villagegreen: #forevertie09 to back channel: I’m Matthew Woolums, Integration Coordinator from DPS. My blog: http://villagegreen.edublogs.org

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: SpEd in middle school in NW Denver. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    jcope50: #forevertie09 Hi! Jill – Skyline HS Teacher Librarian- St. Vrain – just moved to CO on Saturday from CA!!!

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: #forevertie09 first year HS Computer Teacher from Manitou Springs High School

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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  • Sara24lynn: #forevertie09 Hello! I am a library media specialist in a K-5 school in Greeley, Colorado.

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    lbreed: #forevertie09 Hi! Lisa from Evergreen Middle School! I am looking forward to learning about authentic assessments.

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: Name is Matthew (obvi). Work in DPS. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:08 PM GMT ·
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    Sara24lynn: #forevertie09 Audioboo.fm is an audio tool for iPhone My audioboos http://audioboo.fm/profile

    Jun 23, 2009 08:07 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: @forevertie09 mind being blown; didn’t realize so many tools out there that I didn’t know about. Not in the know at 25?? #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:03 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: How do you use audio to capture learning? Call 646-402-5701 x 25286 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 08:00 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 07:54 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: I’m getting real-time search results at TweetGrid http://tweetgrid.com/ #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:54 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 07:51 PM GMT ·
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    toniobarton: #forevertie09 I like http://www.vocaroo.com/ recording website, easy to use.

    Jun 23, 2009 07:50 PM GMT ·
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    dlevesque: vocarro does not work on a eeepc #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:47 PM GMT ·
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    erhubbell: @bhwilkoff Hi everyone! Looking forward to great conversations today. #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:39 PM GMT ·
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    matthewadennis: Will the iPhone be forever, Ben? #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:31 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: @bhwilkoff was giving it rave reviews! RT @courosa: @zemote I see Edmodo on the screen at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:29 PM GMT ·
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    sroseman: #forevertie09 how do i get rid of the echo

    Jun 23, 2009 07:29 PM GMT ·
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  • zemote: @courosa awesome!!!! thanks for letting me know #forevertie09 , if anyone has questions, forward them on

    Jun 23, 2009 07:28 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: @zemote I see Edmodo on the screen at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:27 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: #forevertie09 re: learning that lasts 4ever,think about boyd’s media attributes” persistence,replicability,searchability,invisible audience

    Jun 23, 2009 07:25 PM GMT ·
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    dlevesque: #forevertie09 why last forever?

    Jun 23, 2009 07:23 PM GMT ·
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    RickTanski: @bhwilkoff Hello from an office in Colorado Springs :-( #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:22 PM GMT ·
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    McTeach: @bhwilkoff Hello from Sunny Northern California! #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:22 PM GMT ·
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    ericolsen: Will the computers ever work?#forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    courosa: #forevertie09 Hey Ben, hi from the St. Louis airport, soon to get back to Canada.

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    villagegreen: Sitting in on design with forever in mind at tie #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:20 PM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Say hello to all of the folks at #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:19 PM GMT ·
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    RickTanski: @bhwilkoff 3 hour session! I’m going to kill some bandwidth bits for sure. #cotie09 #tie09 #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:10 PM GMT ·
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    mjmontagne: tuning in to a bit of @bhwilkoff ‘s workshop #forevertie09

    Jun 23, 2009 07:09 PM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 10:53 AM GMT ·
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    Jun 23, 2009 05:55 AM GMT ·
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    bhwilkoff: Creating a hashtag for my session tomorrow at #tie09. Come and Join in the session with #forevertie09
  • Jun 23, 2009 05:54 AM GMT ·
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    I won’t buy anything that only does one thing

    May 3, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I have been thinking a lot about this recently: I don’t want anything to do with a device that only does what it was advertised to do. It is something that I have slowly realized as over he last few years as I went through the experience of using a Smart Board, CPS clicker system, an iPod touch and an Apple TV. The two former products are meant to do one thing well. They are advertised specifically for educational purposes, and they work. But the two latter products are meant to do anything that the community makes them do, and they are not specifically marketed as educational components.
     
    The latter products I keep on coming back to because they can do more and more as the community supports future development, and I guess that this is the difference between products I want to use and ones I don’t. The ones I care to use for education, are the ones with built in communities. They are the ones that get pushed to their full potential.
     
    So I guess what I am saying is that if I am ever put in change of large purchasing decisions for a district or school, I will be choosing to purchase and support products that connect together and have a community surrouning them.
     
    For example: I am right now using my iPod touch with an open source program called boxee (remote on the touch and the full program on the Apple TV) that is a full fledged media center in order to watch powerful TED talks in high definition on my TV using WiFi to stream the content. It is all connected.
     
    Shouldn’t it always be this way?
     
    (As an aside, I realize that this example is filled with apple products. I don’t believe that apple has a monopoly on connectedness or hackability, it happens that this is the community that I associate with most easily. I would actually love to hear about other devices that you keep on coming back to because they increase in value over time.)
     
    Sent from my iPod

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Piloting you!

    Apr 3, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    I had a lot of conversation today about pilot initiatives within a
    larger institution. it seems as though in each project that I take
    part in, there is reason enough to get a small group of (semi)
    dedicated people together who will try something out and report back
    on their success. Whether that is moodle, gmail, google sites, dimdim,
    or ning; it seems as though there is never enough at stake to require
    all users to jump on board initially. While this is good in a lot of
    ways: less kicking and screaming, learning from mistakes with small
    group is better, and less chance of falling flat on your face with
    everyone watching. But, it is bad in many as well: no ensuring that
    the pilot will go further, no urgency in rolling out to everyone, and
    all pilots are basically representations of the person who creates
    them.
     
    This last point is what I would like to focus this post on. What I am
    finding as I do more pilot initiatives is that I am trying to model
    the pilot on my own practice and workflow. I am taking what I feel is
    valuable and important and I am saying that others should feel the
    same way. At the end of the day, I am piloting a larger and more
    unwieldy version of me.
     
    While it is flattering that others would want to help beta test me, I
    am not totally sure how smart it is. I am not a typical user of almost
    anything. I want to break things open and push them to do what I
    envision, not what they were intended for. While I may have a good eye
    for what others may need, I need people who aren’t using tools in such
    ways to help design the pilots too.
     
    I guess what I am trying to say is that I cannot pilot myself if I
    want the pilot to actually do what it is supposed to: test whether or
    not something will work for everyone. But, how do I ask those who are
    less willing to try new things to become a part of a pilot. How do I
    ensure that all voices are heard so that when things do go live, the
    backlash from these users isn’t fierce enough to shut it down?
     
    Easy question, right?

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    What is it now?

    Mar 25, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    There is a syndrome that I see from many of the people that I work
    with, and at many times, it I can be guilty as well. It happens when
    someone asks a question or has a request of you. They have a simple
    thought that they would like to discuss with you, but instead of
    answering, you put it off or say that you don’t have time for their
    tangent. You talk about all of the other things that you have to do
    and you just don’t have time for their little project.
     
    While this may be strictly true, you are shutting any opportunity to
    advance your relationships with those people who ask or your skills
    with the tools that are required for the request.
     
    I know this sounds that I am advocating for dropping everything you
    are working on to fix other’s problems, and I guess I kind of am.
     
    If we have programs in schools that are called drop everything and
    read for kids, I think we may as well have programs in schools called
    drop everything and help for adults. I believe that if the culture
    within a school or online space is based upon helping others to be
    better or to know more, it is the only way to truly institutionalize
    life-long learning.
     
    When I shut people and their unique requests for help out (or put them
    off indefinitely) I find that I stagnate. It take some going out to
    help someone else in order to truly lean something new about what I
    need to work upon.
     
    I guess that I learn more and more that all learning is connected.
    Even if I am not researching online schools when I am helping someone
    to forward their email, it doesn’t mean that it won’t eventually end
    up helping in the long run.
     
    I guess all of the things in my brain really do have a long tail, and
    it isn’t until it wraps around something important that I notice.

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    The educon 2.1 opening panel.

    Jan 24, 2009   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    Idea one: The purpose of school is not to churn out a finished product. Innovation doesn’t come from a place of completion.
     
    Idea two: If we mean 99 percent of the places that we call school, I would say there is no purpose.
     
    The purpose should be to be THE place to go and create, learn, and build real things.
     
    Idea three: The purpose changes. Does the purpose take into consideration of all cultures and ideas. It can’t just be the transmission of values, other than inquiry.
     
    Idea four: The purpose of school is to create community.
     
    The best thing you might be able to do in a day is getting the students to talk to one another.
     
    Idea five: The purpose of school is to learn how to communicate.
     
    You have to be able to present arguments and convince people that you know what you are talking about.
     
    Calibrate what students know as important, difficult, and original.
     
    Idea six: The purpose of school is to expose kids to people who are actually doing what is possible.
     
    Perhaps it is in finding out how things really work. Perhaps it is in not knowing everything. Perhaps it is in knowing exactly what you want to do with your life.
     
    Idea seven: The purpose of school is to be the great equalizer. But the system can’t keep up.
     
    We need to fix it so that schools are what they should be.
    Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Pride in resistance to change.

    Dec 9, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  1 Comment

    I had a meeting today about transitioning to a google apps for your domain installation from an exchange server.
     
    This sounds like a pretty easy sell, actually. It will save something like $13,500 a year. In the end it was, but not for that reason. It was only easy because admin didn’t have to change their workflow in any way. They would still be able to use outlook exclusively. It would only be the “back end” that would shift. This idea took me totally by surprise.
     
    It wasn’t because I want people to completely shift the ways in which they do things just because I think it is better. It took me by surprise because it basically meant that the admin did not want to learn anything that they did not already know. That alone makes me sad. The idea that the current way of doing things is ever “the way” of doing things strikes me as defeatist. I don’t think I could handle setting an institution based on that model. Perhaps that does work for some people, but I don’t see how.
    Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

    Posted via email from olco5′s posterous

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    Create your own MobileMe (Sync Everything, at all times).

    Nov 12, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  3 Comments

    An aside: it is too bad that every post I write seems like an attempt to get back into the habit of posting, but I suppose until I start blogging consistently again, that is just how it is going to have to be. I have missed way too many things that I have been thinking about to ever fully catch up, but perhaps I can start anew. Anyway, here are my latest thoughts.

    Before I go into the details of how to sync yourself completely, I want to tell you why I even undertook this idea. Well, our school system uses an extremely proprietary e-mail and calendaring system called firstclass. Every person that uses firstclass in our schools is locked in to using the firstclass calendar for appointments and things of that nature. But, because I have seen the light of using Google Calendar (open API, shared calendars, embedding, etc), I refuse. In fact, I was so obsessed with the idea of converging the two that I speant an entire weekend (when I wasn’t having fun with my family) on getting Firstclass to sync with Google Calendar, and then eventually my new blackberry that the school district provided for me.

    So, this is how you sync everything:

    Calendars:


    Contacts:

    Now, for the details…

    (Update: I didn’t put this in the initial post, but I think it is worth mentioning that Firstclass does have a way to sync with both Palm Desktop Software and SyncML directly, but since my district hasn’t set either of these up, I thought it was important to try and find a better way of doing things… there are also third party services that do some of this, but I want a FREE workflow)

    In order to get your first class calendar to talk to anything else, you will need to export it as a iCal file:

    Now, you may look at this picture and ask, why I wouldn’t just export it as a blackberry file and skip all of the steps in the middle. Well, there are a few reasons. One, if I did this, all of the events would be duplicated every time I exported and imported. Two, because I am on a Mac I do not have any blackberry desktop software to make this sync work.

    So, onward we go to iCal. First, you will need to set up your Google Calendar to sync with iCal, using this handy dandy tutorial from Life Hacker.

    Now that you have your Google Calendar set up to sync, simply import into iCal your latest and greatest export from Firstclass:

    Now, if this isn’t your first time doing this, you will end up with a lot of duplicates. If that is the case, just use the iCal Dupe Deleter. This is also a good tool for deleting duplicates from Google Calendar if you have ever found yourself with too many of one item.

    Now, you have synced completely to your Google Calendar and you are ready to sync to your blackberry. Simply point your device to this address and download your over-the-air sync application.

    You can now enter an event in Firstclass, iCal, Google Calendar, or on your blackberry and they will sync with one another. Pretty cool, right. But, we are not done. If you would like to have your calendar in an even more universal Format, you can put it on a SyncML server, like Funambol.

    All you have to do is download their blackberry application and you can sync to your heart’s content there.

    For Contacts:

    If you are also looking to sync your contacts, you can simply use your Blackberry or iPod touch to talk to Funambol using their built in programs (search for funambol in the App store, or use the above link to download the blackberry funambol application).

    Then you can sync your contacts with the funambol server.

    As for your Mac, you can use the Preference Pane sync.

    This will let you put your contacts on your mac, on the funambol server, or on your blackberry and they will all sync.

    I understand that MobileMe does a lot more than this, but I believe that if we can create a FREE workflow for each one of our teachers, students, and administrators that syncs information to the place that they need it, we will be able to have the conversations that truly matter. We will no longer be stuck trying to find information, it will always be ours. Although you may not geek out at all that I am proposing, I think there are some pretty heavy implications for continuity in the systems that we are creating. If you have figured out any more syncing tricks, please leave a comment and add to the value of our collective research.

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    The Ripe Environment: Collaboration as Instinct

    Jun 26, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    I sat at the over-long table, as I always do on Mondays and thought about the next time I would meet my students for Extended Learning Time (our version of a multi-discipline course without any set curriculum or standards to give guidance or restrict us).

    “Well, it is earth day in a couple of days.”

    Immediately, my colleague and I started a Google Document called Earth Day 2008. We started dropping in links to pages we found.

    “Oh, I did hear something about an event on the National Geographic Channel. Did you hear about it. Something about the human footprint.”

    We were pushing hard now, 25 minutes before kids arrive. Link after link being proposed as a starting point.

    “What is the question we are really trying to get our kids to answer here.”
    “Is Earth Day important and why?”

    And we we started writing out a discussion, a plan of attach. We eventually came to the conclusion that there were others who were interested in asking this same question, experts even. And yet, within 30 minutes we created an authentic question and activity around it. Our instinct was to create and collaborate, rather than offer worksheets as an attempt at lesson planning. This is our Ripe Environment, and the class that the students came into that day was Ripe too.

    They couldn’t wait to see who had the bigger footprint. They couldn’t wait to collaborate on their own weekly or monthly collection of soda cans or milk jugs. This process of not waiting to be told, of instinctively knowing that it is the right thing to do, that makes it truly authentic.

    So, how do you foster this instinct for collaboration. Well, by saying yes to it as often as possible. It is my personal belief that there is never too little time to create, too little time to collaborate.

    If you have only a minute:

    1. Put a request for a resource out on twitter.
    2. Do a delicious search instead of a google search (it is a community of people waiting to help).
    3. Link to someone who is talking about it.

    If you have a half-hour:

    1. Start a google doc and invite a few others to join in.
    2. Search technorati for new blogs, videos, and people who are interested in the same thing.

    If you have a longer:

    1. Start a wiki and get people to contribute.
    2. Start a blog and get people to contribute.
    3. Start a movement and get people to join.
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    Learning 2.0: The Colorado Conversation (The Reminder)

    Feb 21, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  No Comments


    My anticipation is rising. The time is drawing near when Learning 2.0 will be here. I will not attempt to recreate Karl’s amazingly concise post (if you have read my blog for any length of time, you will know that brevity is not always my first priority).

    The purpose of this post is just to keep the awareness at an all time high that things are happening in Colorado. We aren’t trying to be the EdTech mecca, just to have a unified (whatever that means) voice for change. Let’s see what happens.

    “Just a reminder for those of you attending – either physically or virtually – that Learning 2.0: A Colorado Conversation is coming up this Saturday, February 23rd, from 9:00 am – 2:30 pm MST. If you registered, you should’ve received this email a few days ago with some updated information. And here’s the schedule for the day’s activities.

    For those of you interested in attending virtually, we will be attempting to Ustream the seven sessions – channel info here.
    Please keep in mind that our first priority is pulling off the physical
    conference, so if the Ustream happens it will be a bonus, but we’re
    going to give it a shot.

    We have about 170 folks registered,
    although I imagine a few will change their minds at the last minute.
    The weather looks like it’s going to cooperate, everything is planned
    out and we think (emphasis on think) we’ve thought of everything. It’s going to be interesting . . .”

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