About EdTech4U

Showing posts with label EDUC 8848. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EDUC 8848. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Emerging and Sharing

I am proud to admit that I am a technology geek.  If there is a new technology product, website, or tool on the market I love to learn how it works and figure out how to include it in my daily life.  As a classroom teacher it is my goal to incorporate as many technology applications as I can effectively.  When selecting technology for the classroom it is important to find tools that are appropriate as well as useful for all students.  It is important to not expose my students to tools that will require them to pay any fees, while also keep their identity safe on the internet.

Tools that live in a cloud are one of my newest technologies that I try to share with as many people as possible.  Cloud computing is an amazingly powerful tool since it is often free - thanks Google, as well as available from any location.  Cloud computing meets the requirements of being gender, culturally, and socioeconomically sensitive.  There are no fees associated with cloud computing, as long as a person has access to a computer their cloud is at their fingertips.

For my final project in EDUC 8841 I created a video on how to utilize the power of the cloud.



Enjoy ~SJ 

Sunday, May 8, 2011

DVD's vs Streaming Video

I have not been a subscriber to satellite TV or cable for over five years.  I made the choice years ago to get rid of cable for financial reasons, and have not regretted my decision yet!  The only downside to not having television programming is that I cannot always keep up when people are talking about television commercials, or the latest reality TV show.  But, I have even found a solution to this.  

Just because I choose not to have cable, does not mean that I don't watch my fair share to TV.  I am an avid supporter of Netflix.  I have an extensive list of DVDs in my queue, over 100, and have streamed my fair share in a week.  I was a member of Netflix before I officially decided to give up cable, and it was one of the supporting reasons why I thought I could survive without cable.  As Netflix has enhanced its streaming options, I too have streamed more programs.  When it was time for me to find one of the required movie for the module 4, I quickly turned to Netflix.  One thought that went through my head was, "what if Netflix doesn't have one of the movie on the list?  Where am I going to turn?"  Thankfully Netflix didn't let me down.  
  
So are DVD and streaming video the next Red Queen, or are they an example of increasing returns? Dr. Thornburg defined an increasing return as "two technologies that hit the market at the same time.  By chance, one technology gets locked in and drives the other to extinction" (Laureate Education, 2009).  By this definition, the two technologies would need to hit the market at the same time.  DVDs became popular in the mid to late 1990s.  Streaming video emerged ten years later.  Due to the fact that they did not enter the market at the same time they are not an example of an increasing return.

Dr. Thornburg defined a Red Queen as "huge competition existing between two technologies, in the process all other competition is left behind"  (Laureate Education, 2009).  By this definition streaming video would need to be clearly competing with one source for DVDs.  At this point in time Netflix is the leader in streaming video, but there are several other sources.  iTunes is one place that you can acquire digital versions of media.  Also, at this point in time there is not one source for DVDs.  People are still choosing between renting them through several different companies, or to purchase them.

From my vantage point it seems that at this point in time in regards to McLuhan's tetrad, streaming video is making DVDs obsolete.  Within the next five years I would predict that very few people are still watching the video entertainment on DVD, and are turning to the streaming option.   

Enjoy ~SJ 

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Wish Books to Wish Lists!



The Sears and Roebuck company began as a mail order catalog in 1888.  Since at that time people bought must of their goods from the local general store they were required to pay inflated prices.  Sears and Roebuck were able to offer lower prices through their mail order catalog which featured farm supplies, toys, sewing machines, cars, houses, and just about anything that a person could need.  This business expanded until 1993 when it stopped producing its large catalog.  Today it prints fewer and smaller catalogs due to the interest in online shopping.

The Sears and Roebuck catalog and transitions to online shopping is an example of what Dr. Thornburg described as a Rhyme of History.  Someone once said that "The future will be like the past, only with cooler toys."  Although new technologies are invented, these new technologies allow us to go tasks that we used to do, but easier.  One example that Dr. Thornburg used in his Rhymes of History vodcast was social networking.  Social networking is a rhyme of history because it brings back the concept of a watering hole.  The watering hole was a place in a community used by people to not only gather water, but to also exchange news and stories.  Social networking sites hold the same purpose today, they allow people to share news and stories in the digital age.

Online shopping at mega stores such as Amazon.com allow people to accomplish the same task as the Sears and Roebuck catalog did.  People can log onto Amazon and browse until their hearts are content.  They can read about an endless variety of items, read descriptions as well as reviews from customers.  Once a customer finds an item that they are interested in they can either place it in their virtual cart, or my personal favorite place it on your wish list.  Placing something on your wish list is the same as turning the corner down on a page that has an item you are interested in.

It isn't that the idea of dream shopping has died with the lack of print catalogs, it is simply the way that people interact with the catalog has changed.  Gone is the thrill of receiving the Sears catalog in the mail, instead we receive email updates on family members growing wishlists!

As a side note, according to a Boston Globe article if you are interested in viewing all of the Sears catalog pages since 1896 they can be viewed at ancestry.com 

Enjoy ~SJ 

Friday, March 11, 2011

You Twit Face!

 No, it isn't the lasted slang word from urban dictionary floating around the halls of your local high school.  YouTwitFace is the result of a joke at a dinner party reaching the mouth of Conan O'Brian and then going viral in the summer of 2009.  YouTwitFace will be a website where all of the great aspects of YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook are all rolled into one website.  According to Conan in the year 3000 these three webistes will combine to create one giant time wasting website known as YouTwitFace. 

There is no question that YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook are three of the largest wasters of employees time.  The question is, what is it about these three websites that people enjoy so much?  The ability to watch entertaining short videos?  The ability to follow friends and celebrities in 140 characters or less?  The ability to update the entire world on the fact that you are wasting your employers time while tending your virtual farm?  Yes, these are three reasons why people are drawn to these three websites, the question now is how to get YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook to be a part of students time while being on task at the same time.

David Thornburg, an award winning futurists, stated (2009) "If we who care about education truly take the time to examine emergent technologies, we can perhaps anticipate some of the changes that can take place in our schools to help students learn more effectively.  The sooner we know what may be coming down the line, the more time we have to think about the implications of these technologies, and to plan on their eventual adoption when they do come to the market" (p. 2).  It is clear that YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook have emerged and become a regular part of our daily interactions with technology.  The challenge with these three websites is not figuring out educational aspects that can be included in the classroom, the challenge is the fear of coming across material that is not appropriate for students.  In response to coming across inappropriate material on these three very public websites, similar services have been created that offer social interaction with an educational focus.  Edmodo is a social media website that looks and feels similar to Facebook, but with the protections that a teacher needs.  TeacherTube is a educationally focused video website that is similar to YouTube, but again with the safety protections that a classroom needs.  Twitter can be an educationally safe resource as long as the students create accounts specifically for class and are only subscribed to each others tweets.

Between TeacherTube, Edmodo, and Twitter a teacher can create a safe environment where students can interact using social media.  Through including these three websites into the daily classroom a teacher can demonstrate to students that these types of websites are not just for entertainment, but can also be used to collaborate and interact in way educational ways.  It also demonstrates a unique way to stay connected with each other, as well as provide a different way to share ideas with each other.  These types of connections through the Internet are the types of connections that businesses are trying to create and want their future employees to be able to participate in. 

There are several ways that these technologies could be improved.  One improvement would if these three services all being replaced by one website, like the fictitious YouTwitFace.  One website would mean one username and password that the students would need to remember, as well as the ability to access all of the resources in one place.  

Enjoy ~SJ