Obligatory Back to School Post
August 29th, 2008Read Write Web gives a list of the top 10 web apps for students.
Read Write Web gives a list of the top 10 web apps for students.
For those who have teaching writing and composition, or for that matter anyone who requires analytic writing in their classes, you might want to check out The Topoi brought to you by USC Writing Program and Mark Marino (of Writer Response Theory).
One of the things I have wondered is how long it will take professors (mostly talking about higher ed. here, as K-12 has been far better at this in my estimation) to start leveraging the web for pedagogical purposes, and not just in terms of sharing narrative, ideas, thoughts, philosophies about teaching, but actually sharing teaching tools. It seems to me that we repeat a lot of content across colleges and universities, especially in the core courses. So, why not share some of these resources rather than having instructors re-invent the wheel everywhere. To be sure a lot of sharing does go on, especially intra-institutionally, or at the level of swapping syllabi, but still much more can be done.
In that regard, enter the Topoi. What Mark has collected here in one page are a series of writing tools to help with basic composition instruction. But the innovation here is to collect the tools as a series of “widgets.” This means as an instructor you can easily borrow from what Mark has collected to suit your particular needs. Think of this as Textbook 2.0 with a serious “rip-mix-burn” aesthetic/ethic. Because everything is in a self-contained widget it is easy to take the pieces you need and put them into your own writing/composition assignments or class resource page.
It’s a bit hard to explain, so just click on over to the USC page and have a look for yourself.
HASTAC’s digital media and learning competition is now open. This year the competition is focused on participatory learning, with grants of up to $250,000. Of particular interest though is the young innovator awards (with grants of up to $30,000) focused on getting young scholars age 18-25 to propose what comes next.
For those who have not already seen this, my suggestion that you take my class for free was picked up on by The Chronicle of Higher Ed. (In the comments there are also several other online classes listed.)
More importantly though, it looks like there is significant interest in this class, and it looks more and more likely. The key hurdle right now is the technical one. So far I have been only able to find online video conferencing which supports six users. I will know more soon so check back here for updates. My plan would be to select people, coordinate a time for the discussion session and start these after Sep. 1st.
Note: If you emailed me asking to join and have not received a response from me, please email me again so I can make sure you are on the list.
And the word for obvious conclusion of the week goes to John William Pope Center for Higher Education which concludes that sharing syllabi online is a good idea. Really? You’re kidding sharing knowledge actually helps?
Seriously is there a reason to not do this? Are you really going to suggest that education is fostered by being secret and clandestine, treating the syllabus as some proprietary, rare commodity available only to a select group of students? Please! Publish your syllabus online, not behind a firewall, not only can your students see what they should expect for the class, but professors and students at other Universities can use the syllabus as a resource.
What about syllabus stealing you ask? Here’s your solution: publish all your syllabi on the web, give them a creative commons license. Now another faculty can use as he/she sees fit, but only if they give you credit . . . problem solved.
Updated
Yesterday I decided to post the working syllabus for my grad class for the upcoming semester in an attempt to elicit feedback before I make some final choices. I then posted that I had done this twitter. Not surprisingly I received some useful feedback. What I hadn’t anticipated was interest in taking this class from people in my twitter network, mostly grad. students at other universities where a course like this is not offered. So, then I started thinking, why not give the class away for free to those who want it?
Here’s what I am thinking:
The class at UTD (University of Texas at Dallas) is structured like a typical graduate seminar, that is a heavy amount of reading, followed by class discussion/lecture lead by me. It is easy enough for anyone to download the syllabus, and do the reading. The difficult part is coordinating some sort of online discussion section for those who are not at UTD, as I feel a large part of the learning experience is informed by discoursing about the material. What I thought might work is the following:
This would not be for credit from UTD, the knowledge is free, the degree will cost you money. Grad students who are currently enrolled at another university though could arrange with their home institution to take a directed reading on this material, with a professor at their university signing off on it, perhaps by writing a seminar paper which that professor would evaluate. Of course grad students who just want the knowledge would not have to do any work save reading, listening, and showing up for a discussion. Think of it as a more formalized reading group.
So, I am considering conducting this experiment. Serious, you can just take this class for free, I’ll give away the knowledge. A couple of caveats though. First I am not sure I can do this, I need to find a way to host online discussion, preferably video conferencing. Second, I am only going to do this if I have the right group of people and the right number. I think perhaps between 5-10 committed students. Less than five the discussion is not so productive, more than ten and it can get out of hand. Also I am thinking of limiting this to grad students currently enrolled at other universities. I realize this is rather prejudicial, but if I am going to do this I want to “stack the deck in my favor” by having a group that has a relatively homogenous sense of purpose and educational background, this makes the discussion far more productive (I could be convinced otherwise though).
Thoughts? Issues I haven’t thought of? An idea for how to host a video conference for between 5-10 people? Leave a comment.
Interested in this class? Send me an email, and if I get enough response just maybe I’ll run this experiment in free knowledge. So, pass the word around to grad students who are interested in Emerging Media, but don’t have classes at their schools. You can find information about the class at the course blog.
Update: Nils Peterson asks why not do the “full monte” (i.e. make the class really progressive and refigure even assessment?). Read his post, and my reply at his blog. (Basically I agree with him, but this is just a strategic first step.)
For those who requested it, here is the information and links to the talk I recently gave to the Texas Community College Teacher’s Association.
Approaching Digital Literacy: Creating a Networked Culture on Campus (Texas Community College Teachers Association 2008). (You can download the high quality Quicktime Movie or the lower quality mp4.) Below are the references for this presentation:
Two useful (perhaps) links that are worth taking a look at (both discovered via twitter—thanks twitter friends):
If anyone doubts that the age of mobile computing is here compare the lines at your local Apple store (or just search Flickr) and compare those to lines at Sprint, or TMobile. When someone asks me about the iPhone, I explain it is not a phone but rather a portable computer that happens to make phone calls. While the cell-phone companies were slow to innovate, Apple moved on the market, and we are now seeing the beginning of a transformation. Granted the iPhone is still expensive, and has a limited market share. Other companies are copying the iPhone though, and hopefully projects like Android will drive the price down making mobile computing devices fairly ubiquitous.
The significant change this last week in the iPhone though was not GPS or 3G network access, but rather the ability to put applications on the phone, allowing users to customize the phone and drastically increase its usefulness. I have had the iPhone since last year and noticed it allowed me to leave my computer at home a lot more, and now with applications I can see this being even more the case. There are a lot of educational possibilities for something like this once more students and instructors have access to mobile computing devices, but for now I thought I would mention the iPhone applications which have a place on my mobile computer already. Most are free, or really cheap. (Note: I have more apps than those listed here, but these are the ones that I already use for academic purposes, or know I will once the semester starts.)

(Brief mention for my favorite non-work related iPhone app: Urbanspoon.)
Any other academically useful iPhone apps? or requests for apps?
Update: Liberal Education today links to some of the more science oriented apps.
Lately I have been spending more time than usual thinking about the future of education, not just in terms of how to use Web 2.0 tools in the classroom, but more broadly how the ubiquitous nature of knowledge and information is going to transform the institution of higher education. Now granted this is a large topic, and by no means do I have the time to write a post sufficiently addressing that issue, or even a post addressing one aspect of that question, but something I read on Smart Mobs got me to thinking.
A teacher at Woodland Park High School has turned the classic pedagogical structure around. Instead of having students come to class to listen to a lecture, and go home to do homework/problem sets, he records the lectures, students watch them at home, and they spend the class time working with the material in a hands-on way. So this idea coupled with a series of posts on edwired (a great blog you should add to your feed) about the future of the institution made me wonder is this the future? That is professors giving away content for free (lectures, ideas, the main substance) and than charging for the premium content of in class time. Perhaps. And, I am not sure this already doesn’t happen in some respects: MIT Open Course Ware, Yale Open Courses.
More later as I develop this . . . perhaps. In the meantime leave comments/thoughts.