Web Tools

RSS Mashups...

These include our staff bulletin, the public web page, a Flickr photo gallery, a multi-author classroom notes site, book recommendations from our library, and a weblog to power our reader board.... With a tool like FeedDigest, I can mix them into one RSS feed that will give me a chronological look at the weblog activity at Lewis, all in one place...

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Amassing a Treasury of Photography - New York Times

Amassing a Treasury of Photography - New York Times: The Eastman House and the International Center of Photography To be completed in the fall of 2006, Photomuse, a joint project of the Eastman House and the and as both institutions work out agreements with estates and living photographers, the intention is to add tens of thousands more pictures.... For example, a Hine picture of an Italian immigrant couple could be found under the headings of "immigration," or "Italian-Americans" or "Ellis Island" or "urban photography" or under the headings of exhibitions where the photograph has been shown through the years.

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NECC Talking Points: Social Software

NECC Talking Points: flickr4schools...
Over at eSchoolNew ETI, Tom Hoffman discusses the use of tools such as Flickr by teachers and schools, and suggests that school district IT departments need to start thinking of providing similar services.

Tom goes on to make the point that...

"Schools need to start taking seriously their responsibility to maintain a student's digital content from K through 12."

At Lewis Elementary, we utilize Flickr to document student work and events that are shared on our web site. With my camera phone I capture images several times a week, and then post them via email to Flickr. Mainly it's just a way to easily add images to our web site, but imagine a system similar to Flickr that allowed you to capture student work and then upload it to a portfolio... Think of how a teacher could use tags to organize and categorize student work.

I'd also add social bookmarking tools such as del.icio.us and Furl to the list of tools schools should be taking a look at. A problem I run into is having students find good web resources, then lose them, or worse yet just print out a bunch of web pages. Even had one teacher having her students write down in a folder the web addresses of the pages they found. While Furl and del.icio.us are great tools, I can't have my 4th and 5th grade students sign up for these services.

We have been looking at some Open Source del.icio.us alternatives such as de.lirio.us and Scuttle. Have decided to give de.lirio.us a try, and this summer we are working to set it up on our intranet. We will also be re-imaging our computers and plan to add a de.lirio.us bookmarklet to the tool bar on our browsers. Another advantage of this is exploring with students the social aspect of these tools and seeing how they work with one another to share the resources they find.

RSS Ticker...

In the main hallway at Lewis Elementary we have an LCD panel powered by an iMac that displays school images along with news and announcements. We have been using Keynote to display the images and news and announcements. This has worked pretty well, but the updates have to be done manually and I'm the one that has to do them. I've been looking for a better solution and this past weekend I discovered an interesting piece of software called Tickershock. Tickershock is an Mac OS X application that displays RSS, RDF and Atom news feeds anywhere on your screen in a animated crawl or billboard display. As of today, I've ditched Keynote in favor of Tickershock. The updates are now handled by an RSS feed from a weblog I created for posting to the readerboard. The images are displayed as part of the desktop picture and come from a folder of several hundred images that changes every 5 seconds. Now all I'll need to do is remotely update the pictures every few weeks.

Using Amazon as your online book index..

During the spring quarter I have been working with two fourth grade reading groups 4 days a week. One group has recently been reading John Reynolds Gardiner's Stone Fox. It is the story of a boy named Willie who lives in Wyoming with his ailing grandfather on a potato farm and they are facing some hard times. The climax involves a dog sled race. It is a great story and I recommend it for your younger readers. As part of a culminating project associated with our reading of the book, one student named Samantha, chose to create a board game based on the book. The other day while creating questions for the game, she needed to find the name of Willie's teacher. Off hand I couldn't remember it and she couldn't either. If this was a non fiction title I would of had her look in the index, and that was the first thing I asked her, does it have an index? It did not. So rather than hunt for it, I suggested we try to find it on Amazon.com.

Previously I had showed her group how to get more information about the book from Amazon. This includes things such as book reviews, different versions, languages and bibliographic informaiton. A very interesting feature is the ability to search within most titles. Their Search Within The Book feature is pretty amazing. We walked over to the computer, searched for the book in Amazon, found it, hit search within the book, typed in the word teacher, and up came a listing of pages where that term could be found in the book along with an excerpt highlighting the term. We discovered that on page 43, we are first introduced to Willie's teacher, Miss Williams.

In addition to this feature, books that have been indexed by Amazon also return other interesting information. For example, click on Concordance

for an alphabetized list of the most frequently occurring words in a book, excluding common words such as "of" and "it." The font size of a word is proportional to the number of times it occurs in the book. Hover your mouse over a word to see how many times it occurs, or click on a word to see a list of book excerpts containing that word.

This comes in handy when creating a vocabulary list to accompany lessons associated with the book. In addition you will also find other information associated with the book including reading level, complexity, number of characters, words and sentences and some fun stats such a words per dollar and words per ounce.

I don't know much about the Amazon API, but am wondering if folks such as Tom Hoffman could dive into this and create some tools that would allow teachers and students to mine this type of data, but then again , as it is now it is pretty easy to use.

NYTimes Multimedia: Kaifeng-on-the-Hudson

Kaifeng-on-the-Hudson:

"Nicholas D. Kristof says the Big Apple could go the way Kaifeng, China, if the U.S. doesn't make some bold changes."

Today, The New York Times has a multimedia piece (Flash Movie) from Nicholas D. Kristof discussing the furture of New York and comparing it to Kaifeng, a city in central China that in the year 1000 would of been considered the New York City of its day. He looks at its decline and wonders about the future of New York.

It is an interesting piece, but I am writing about it because of how it is constructed. It's total length is about 4.5 minutes. It combines, still pictures, voice over narration, video, and text to explain his thesis. If you search the Times, you will find that Kristof does one of these pieces about every eight weeks. I'm wondering how he shoots the video. Who does the editing and such, and how involved he is in the production of the pieces.