A list of tags…
The EdTechTalk delicious site has a wealth of relevent tags. It has so many in fact, that it may be THE resource for tags about Educational Technology and learning in general. I love being able to select different tags and find out what other people are categorizing within this rather large community. However, what if you wanted to use those tags somewhere else? What if you wanted to add those tags to the choices in your own blog or search according to those terms?
What if you wanted to categorize all of your ideas according to what the community has deemed worthy of their time? Well, I did want to do that. I wanted to use the common tags of our community, so I have made all of the tags in EdTechTalk (at least up until today) into a comma separated file for easy import into anything I would like to use them for.
Here is the file: edtechtalk-tags
Pedagogical implication: I think that it really makes sense for us to start using the same words to talk about learning. Coming together on a group of tags that we would like to use for aggregation purposes is something that we have neglected too long. The community is far enough along to put get into a discussion about just where we want our folksonomies to go. We need to take ownership of terms like elearning and make them more specific. We also should be teaching our students to come together on terms to use so that all of their work can not only be found later, but also grouped according to topic, theme, or even skill level.
Think about if we had a way to group student work according to a self-reflected score (of effort, of achievement, etc.). What if we could use exemplars and organize them according to the tags that they have self-selected.
Where else should we go with our community of tags?
The Ripe Environment: Collaboration as Instinct
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:
- Put a request for a resource out on twitter.
- Do a delicious search instead of a google search (it is a community of people waiting to help).
- Link to someone who is talking about it.
If you have a half-hour:
- Start a google doc and invite a few others to join in.
- Search technorati for new blogs, videos, and people who are interested in the same thing.
If you have a longer:
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