Thursday, August 30, 2007

EFL Resources

Nick Gromik has created a really good wiki with instructions for video archiving your own presentation (using his own presentation on Vygotsky as an example), creating a videoblog (vlog), how to create a video cast for an iPod, and so on. He includes some student instructional video productions. A most useful collection.

EFL Resources

E-Portfolios

In a discussion some time ago on the Webheads' list, Sharon Betts (http://www.sharonbetts.org/site/pmwiki.php) gave us a nice list of definitions of tools that might be used for electronic portfolios. I cite her here with her permission:

*Blogs* - Blogs are ongoing individual postings with the ability to take
comments from readers. This is a great way to journal, reflect or get
input.

*WIKIs* - are online editable pages available to anyone given
permission. Usually you can attach files to wiki pages and there is a
comment page connected. This is good for collaboration. It does not
fit the journal model as well as it does a portfolio / archive model.
Of course, it is also great for multiple editors of a single document.

*Forums* - threaded discussions. Can be used for the same as above.
They individualize each posting, but in a threaded manner unlike blogs
which are sequential

*Social networks* - combine all or some of the above with many added
features. If you are ready to launch your students into the cybersphere
of learning, this is the way to go. I like Ning - but it still does not
have a wiki module although the blog and forums are great.

*Course Management Systems* - also combines the above features and adds
the ability to quiz etc. It is an online class. My favorite is Moodle
(at the moment). Students are part of a class and can use the forums,
wikis, as well as complete assignments. I do not like the blogging
feature presently being used.

There are hybrids of all the above - and more appear each day. The key
is to know what your goals are for each project.

  • Is it your students first adventure into online learning?
  • Do you simply want journals?
  • Do you wish to attach artifacts?
  • Do you want to actually hold your class online with assessment and all?
  • Do you want to use these [features] in a more social atmosphere?
  • Do you have the ability to pay for a service or to host it "in house"?

Sunday, August 26, 2007

vod:pod

Mike Marzio has put a bunch of his Real English videos onto vod:pod, which converts them into a highly compressed, easy to manage format that can include closed captioning.

This is the search result for "Real English" at vod:pod. Looks like this might be a good place to archive stuff.

Tony Buzan on Creativity

Buzan is the originator of mind-mapping (I didn't know that!), and here talks about a global crisis in creativity. From Esnips:



Thanks to Webhead Michael Coghlan.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

JingProject


Another winner from Carla Arena, Webhead:

JingProject allows you to take a screenshot of your desktop, or a movie, and then instantly send the URL of the resulting media to any email address. Carla Arena tells us that you can also record voice over. I'd been looking for a way to take screenshots of my Mac for instructional videos, and this may be just the ticket. Unfortunately, I'll have to upgrade to OS X.4 to do so.