Even literary characters are on Twitter!

Share photos on twitter with Twitpic

This picture made me smile this morning when I found it in my twitter stream (which I have as a Yoono sidebar on my browser)

I hadn’t been using Twitter regularly before I went to the ACEC conference in Melbourne las month; mostly I used it to follow chat during conferences. However I met some interesting fellow tweeters at that conference, and it has lead to new experiences for me – a virtual bookclub for instance (currently on a Ning, but with their recent announcement about changes to free service model our bookclub may change platforms).

*** Stop Press!!***

Just glancing through my twitter stream I found a tweet from @bobsprankle which sent me to a NY Times blog post indicating that Ning will continue to provide free services to educators and their students! Now that is why I am keeping Twitter open these days – it is providing me with a lot of incidentally relevant information (if you see what I mean)

Here’s another I just found: a new way to save individual tweets that you find meaningful – Copy and paste the URL of an individual tweet into the box at Blackbird Pie, and it produces this for you:

RT @paulawhite: Be public in your work–post it on the web, podcast, share any way you can to show what works and works well. #edchatless than a minute ago via TweetDeck

(I found it a little tricky to get a URL for the tweet – I had to switch to the RSS feed of tweets, though there must be an easier way…)

So, the conclusion of these various rambling and disconnected points is that I am finding pieces of information and making connections with other educators and Teacher Librarians in a way that is meaningful for me – I am leveraging a social networking tool to enhance my working life. I am also on the learning curve – learning not to jump into the stream too often, learning to hide it when I want to concentrate on something else entirely.

My learning journey continues…

Reflective Autumn

On a whim I decided to try Wikiquote to see what it had to say about April (no good, all northern hemispherical) and then hit gold with a seach on ‘autumn’:

“If winter is slumber and spring is birth, and summer is life, then autumn rounds out to be reflection. It’s a time of year when the leaves are down and the harvest is in and the perennials are gone. Mother Earth just closed up the drapes on another year and it’s time to reflect on what’s come before.”

Mitchell Burgess, Northern Exposure, Thanksgiving, 1992

(http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Autumn)

Reflective is exactly the right word – I had a lot of time out in the backyard this weekend (7 loads of washing hung out and brought back in again) and I found myself contemplating the bright daffodil-yellow scattered amongst the emerald leaves of the apricot tree, and watching cloud shapes against a blue blue sky, listening to the sounds of early season AFL games from the oval at the end of my street, and watching my dogs. I have been thinking about what to post on this blog, because so much has been happening that I don’t know quite where to start.

Most recently we had three days of training on how to use our new Library Management System, which basically consisted of the trainer going through all twelve modules of the software, one by one, showing us how to navigate, where to find common functions, how to do what we need to do. If I had not had my laptop there with the software already installed I would have gone completely bonkers by the end of the second day! The trainer was very nice and knowledgeable, and apologised for the lecture-format, but given the time available (she is based in Perth, so popping back over for a follow-up is not an option) we had to get through as much as possible as quickly as possible. I had post-it notes, pens, a Word doc and the new software up and running, and spent my time tagging useful parts of the training manuals with post-its, writing up procedures in my Word doc, and copying the trainer’s actions in the new software so that I could practice doing it for myself. I even took screenshots and added them to the right spots in my notes doc!

What relevance does this have? Well, it is a huge reminder to me that being made to sit passively while someone else transmits the information is stultifyingly boring!!!! This may explain why I have always made copious notes, frequently with multiple colours – and occasionally illustrated – throughout my high school and university studies. I have to do something to experience the learning, and I have no doubt at all that the young boys in my classes feel exactly the same way.

Actually I find it kind of amusing that despite being an avid reader, academically successful in the traditional school model, and now a Teacher Librarian (surely the most stereotyped as a print-bound teacher?) I do not like to learn things by reading them! At a bare minimum I talk things through, but to really feel sure that I have learnt something I like to practice or perform it. I am trying to embrace this in my teaching – I want to know what it is like to use various tools in my classes, and just reading about the uses of Flip video cameras or wikis isn’t enough – I am trying them out to see what happens. This can make planning, assessment and classroom management a little tricky sometimes… but the students seem to enjoy trying these new things out, and I am certainly learning new things!

I Love What I Can Do Online

Hmm, perhaps that title needs a little work…

What I love, though, is that last night I was idling on the internet when my Skype  pinged to tell me that my friend Mayu in Tokyo was saying hello – we chatted for half an hour or so about the weather, time differences, just catch-up kind of conversation. I changed the language settings on my computer and typed in Japanese – I am so out of practice! I took a photo of myself with the built-in camera and sent it to her – so many ways to communicate so easily! Text, language input modes, emoticons, file transfers… On Skype I have shared video conversations with my boss. I have used Skype to phone my Mum, and do video with typing on the side…  Applications like Skype make it so easy to connect with other people despite distance – there are so many ways I could use this with my colleagues and students, molding the tool to suit my purposes…

Also this week, I love that I can ask for friends around the world to have their classes answer an online survey, direct them to a wiki about the project, log in and check the changing accumulation of results, and demonstrate the power of real data collection and the meanings behind the statistics by projecting the results onto a screen for my class to discuss. I love that I can tweet this request to various people in my network and ask them to pass on the url. I love that I can connect so easily to like-minded teachers and teacher-librarians around the world, just by typing and clicking…

I wonder what’s under the rest of the iceberg?

Making Connections…

I’ve been reading Will Richardson’s blog Weblogg-ed today, and find myself clicking link after link, following through fascinating ideas and pertinent quotes…

It would be easy to spend the entire day doing this, letting my head fill with fireworks as each new idea lets off another multi-coloured explosion of exciting possibilities.

However, I have other tasks to do – housework, lesson plans, 23 Things tutorials to design, socks to knit… I’ll have to let what I’ve read so far satisfy me until I have time to tackle some more.

There are never enough minutes in the day to accommodate all of the ‘oughts’ and ‘want tos’ along with the ‘musts’.

Original image: ‘fireworks at Israel 60th Celebration
fireworks at Israel 60th Celebration
by: Ziv Turner
Released under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License
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