Browsing articles tagged with " pdf"

Guest Teaching 10.29.08

Oct 29, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   365 Questions, Uncategorized  //  No Comments

Cores 1+4:

  1. Write-on: 
  2. How can we decipher the symbolism of Maus 2, extracting more meaning from only the images?
  3. Frame analysis:
  • Describe- Describe the frame in detail. Make sure you find even the smallest pieces of information that are hiding within the illustration.
  • Explain- Explain the meaning of each of the objects and details in this frame. What do these things symbolize or represent? Why does the author use this image instead of another one? What message is the author trying to convey through this frame?
  • Expand- Show how this frame and its different meanings relate to the rest of the book or to your own life.

4. Use Photo Booth to take a picture of the frame you would like to analyze.
5. Annotate the photo with description, explanation, and expansion using preview (after you have converted it to a PDF)
6. Go to Slideshare.net and upload your file… Make sure that you tag it with maus2.
7. Look at our greatness.

Cores 2+3:

  1. Write-on:
  2. Using a backchannel to discuss and ask questions about Animal Farm (While we read).
  3. Text animalfarm and then your question or comment to 41411.
  4. I also need a google jockey to get images that help to express what is going on in Animal Farm.
  5. Read Chapters 9 and 10 of Animal Farm.
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    The Ripe Environment for Authentic Learning: TIE 2008

    Jun 27, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  2 Comments

    The process of creating a Ripe Environment for Authentic Learning is one that must be experienced rather than explained, so it is my most sincere hope that you experience The Ripe Environment today and that you take ownership enough of it to take it with you when you leave today.

    Let’s start with the basics, though: defining our terms.

    6. It’s the Content, Stupid.

    • That is why we use blogs to communicate, not because they are easy, not
      because they are more collaborative, it is simply because they let the
      content speak for itself. Without content you are nothing. Without
      great ideas there is no hope for the future. It is the content that
      matters, not the format. That is why we do blogs, to pull content up
      through the rss straw, roll it around in our mouth-like readers,
      tasting each smooth milkshake post and swallow it down, totally
      satisfying our desire to fill our bellies with content.

    7. The Marks of Collaboration

    8. Independent and Interdependent Questioners

    9. Change Cannot be Institutionalized

    10. The Most Powerful Learning

    • The typewriter vs. the fully connected blog post.
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    The Ripe Environment: The Markers

    Jun 26, 2008   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  No Comments

    The “I know it when I see it” form of collaboration is no longer valid.

    We need new ways to tell if learning is happening through group contribution. We need to be able to assess collaboration, but we can’t do it the same way that we assess writing or proficiency. Those skills are much easier to boil down to a continuum or rubric. Others have tried, and we have been for the most part satisfied with their traditional, enigmatic, and mostly non-educational continuums for collaboration.

    These forms, however, are not worthy of our cause. They provide us with a way to see things in an abstract sense, showing a fictional path to collaboration that is just as hopeless as using the term as a buzzword to show that change is occurring.

    Instead, I would like to outline the types of collaboration that occur in The Ripe Environment. These are the markers that we should be striving for and looking for:

    1. Learning objects to be used by multiple learners, created by multiple learners. (This does not include one person writing or creating and the others supplying their input. True collaboration means that everyone has their fingerprints on the potting wheel.)
    2. Collaborative asynchronous lists. (Never underestimate the power of listing. And yet, the power is not in the listing. It is in the reordering, reorganizing, and reconstituting a list. Think of wiki collaboration here.)
    3. A followable thread of discussion (This can be through linking, commenting, or something like voicethread)
    4. Shared Space with over 10 revisions (Any object or space that has been edited or revised more than ten times by multiple authors can be considered a respectable work of collaboration).
    5. A mash-up or remix of anything (This type of collaboration marker is the halmark of true collaboration. The best examples are when the masher doesn’t know the mashee. That is when the unintended (but most amazing) concequences of sharing and collaboration kick in.)

    Obviously this is not an exhaustive list. What are the other markers of collaboration in The Ripe Environment?

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    Two New Documents

    Oct 27, 2007   //   by Ben Wilkoff   //   Uncategorized  //  No Comments

    itunes pic
    I have been working on a couple new documents that make sense for the development of pedagogy and the future of education. You can find the links to them at the k12online conference: http://k12online.wm.edu/AuthenticLearning.pdf

    http://k12online.wm.edu/101Resources.pdf

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