Thursday, January 31, 2008

Waking up from a Learning Coma

This will be my last post here at blogger.com. My own district is blocking it which makes it difficult to post here. From now on I will be posting at Discovery Education site.
Please join me there to continue our learning journey together.

~Anne

Saturday, January 19, 2008

FETC Bound

I am so excited. I have been on a roller coaster of a ride lately at work. Getting really excited about all of the proposed changes and then slamming back to Earth when I hear about budget deficits. *SIGH*
This week I am about to get ramped back up to running on adrenalin as I was lucky enough to be allowed to travel to Florida for the Florida Educational Tech Conference. I am so pumped up because of all the learning that I know will be taking place. This is the first conference in years that I am "going" to and not "presenting" at. I am also supercharged because I get to meet up in person with several of my DEN buddies that I have not seen since the DEN Academic Excursion I went on last summer. I can't wait to share all of the amazing things I will learn! Florida here I come!

~Anne

Thursday, January 10, 2008

A Healing Wound

Two years ago my grandmother hurt her leg, since then she has had an open wound. The healing process has taken a very long time and was finally achieved in baby steps, but not without a lot of heartache and back steps.
This long healing process feels a lot like the battle with technology in my district. For a long time, things have not changed. Everyone has done their own thing with budgeting, purchasing and inventory. We now have a new dynamic tech leader who sees the big picture. He is not concerned with the politics as much as he is the learning in the classroom and the differences the appropriate tech could make in our classes.
We have had many "band-aid" solutions through out the years but every time we think things may be "healing" more "blood"seeps through the bandage, just like my Gram's leg wound.
I just want to jump ahead in our tech plan and heal everything already, but I am starting to realize that it will take many baby steps and lots of setbacks before things will be good. The speed at which technology changes adds so many challenges. This month we have been dealing with a virus that attacks Symantec (sp?) which was our AVS of choice. We have been cleaning up for 3 weeks solid. Just this week our district's network was attacked by an outside source, and our admin team had to make the decision to cut off the network to try and protect our information. This meant no internet, no servers, no email, no printers, no electronic IEP. In a special ed district especially this was simply a disaster. We are still in the process of cleaning up the mess. The only good thing to come out of this, is that the admin team is now considering the option of Macs across the board when we do updates next year.
We are taking small baby steps and as frustrating as this is to me as the tech integration specialist at least we are moving in the right direction. Three steps forward and two steps back, it doesn't feel like we are getting anywhere at all, but I must be patient. We will get there just like my Gram did.

~Anne

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

My 2007 in Review - Part 3 (Final)

October sent me to the Closing the Gap conference where again I was reminded of the power of Twitter. One of my friends on Twitter noticed that I was at CTG and so was someone else she followed so we set up a meet at the "top of the stairs" in the hotel. Which is when I met Karen Jankowski. We had so much in common and we never would have met if it wasn't for Twitter. I was also introduced to several new blogs which I now follow: Free resources from the Net (for Spec Ed) being my favorite. During this conference I was also blown away my some assistive tech devices and software I saw. I joined my first ning: Assistive Tech. Shortly after that I joined a couple of other nings: Il-TCE, and SL in Education. The other tool I finally started using was del.icio.us. It finally became clear to me as I sat in session at CTG how I could use this tool to benefit my district and colleagues. I created an account and tagged all of the sites I was introduced to in sessions as CTG, so my colleagues could benefit from my account.

November led me to the discovery of Google Groups. Now I realize that this is old technology but it was the first time that I tried to use them in my school district. They worked very well for what we needed and showed the admin what we could do if we were able to collaborate more.

December was a mash up of so many tools. Every time something new comes across Twitter, I feel compelled to check it out. My friends there seem to have a lot more time than I do to surf and find the "cool stuff". My newest discovery via friends on Twitter is twhirl. Twhirl is a twitter interface that sits as a separate application on your computer. It runs in both Mac and PC. I like this much better than TwitterFox or Twitterific, both of which I have tried and discarded in the last year.

This brings me back to January. It's hard to believe another year is behind me. Apparently I can't even catch my breath before my next adventure begins. It is January 1 and I am already starting to learn new things!

Thanks for taking this trip down memory lane with me...see you again soon.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

My 2007 in Review - Part 2

June signaled not only the end of the school year but the start of some of the most amazing learning opportunities I have ever had. I was lucky enough to present at NECC 2007 in Atlanta. NECC of course was a very educational experience but by far my 2 best experiences came from Networking at NECC. The first was a pre-conf event with the DEN. On the bus ride over I finally got to meet one of my favorite people from SL in RL, Jen from WOW. We were introducing ourselves to everyone on the bus and when I heard her name, I started shouting it's me, JessieMarie! It was very funny. We didn't get a lot of time to hang out because there was so much learning to focus on. We were learning the finer points of green screening from the folks at Discovery. The learning that took place was important but the connections that were made were invaluable. The second experience was presenting a poster session. I was actually almost insulted when NECC "busted" me down from a concurrent session to a poster. I almost turned them down, but then good sense prevailed and I went ahead with it. I had almost 150 people come through my poster session and I presented nonstop for 2 hours. I ran out of business cards and nearly lost my voice. It was an amazing experience. When they asked me this year to do a poster session, I graciously accepted without a second thought.

In July, I was invited to an experience that would enrich my education far beyond my imagination. I was invited on the DEN Academic Excursion to the Bahamas. Imagine being trapped on a boat with 50 of the most innovative tech educators in the country for 4 days. Close your eyes and see Joe Brennan, Hall Davidson and Steve Dembo sitting at your table and giving advice on your quandries, laughing at your jokes, and in general enjoying your company. The group on the excursion started out as strangers but ended up as family. I was introduced to so many amazing tools, sites, projects and programs on this trip that it would take another blog entry to detail them all. However, the one tool that immediately became a daily use for me was Twitter. I never understood Twitter, it seemed, well "stupid" to me. Why on earth would I stop my day and go to a website to tell people what I was doing. My Twitter affair began in the airport, my flight was delayed by 2 hours so I bought internet and decided to give Twitter a try. Many of the people from the cruise had raved about Twitter. I just didn't get it. I set up an account and that's when the magic began. As I sat there in the airport, one by one the majority of people from the cruise created accounts. We were now able to stay in touch and share the amazing things we were doing. I actually found others in the airport who were also waiting for delayed flights through Twitter! It was so wild. My Twitterlove has continued since. Twitter has become as important as my email. I can get immediate feedback and I learn about new tools everyday from my TwitterFriends. The friendships I made on the cruise have continued in the real world due in part to Twitter. I am thankful everyday for each of you, you know who you are! (wink)

August brought Animoto into my life. Animoto is a video mixer program that digitally mixes up your photos with music and special effects. The free account lets you make 30 second clips with 15 photos, however that wasn't enough for me. I paid the $30 for the whole enchilada for a year. I wanted to make longer videos with more pictures.

September was the discovery of Voicethread. VoiceThread is am amazing tool that lets you upload images and then record messages either audio or text for each image. People have used it to narrate powerpoints and other types of presentations. The neat thing is that multiple people can record info for one image. We did this to try and describe our DEN academic excursion.

Thanks for sharing in part 2 of my excellent academic adventure! Stay tuned for part 3!

~Anne

Friday, December 28, 2007

My 2007 in Review - Part 1

2007 has been a whirlwind year for me. My learning journey has never moved so rapidly. My job title changed from Tech Facilitator for Differentiated Learning to Instructional Technology Specialist and my job responsibilities changed from being team focused to whole district. Our district is in the process of writing a curriculum. We have never had one before so this has been a huge paradigm shift. We also now have a new tech director who has a vision of our future that is very exciting to me, hopefully his progress won't be slowed down by bureaucratic red tape. I believe that between our curriculum director, leads, new tech director, tech savy superintendent and myself that we are finally heading in the right direction technology wise. It's a very dynamic time to be in education and I think we are finally going to start participating in it instead of just standing on the sidelines saying our kids can't do this, our teachers can't do this, our administrators can't do this....etc.

There are so many new things I was introduced to this year. Therefore this blog entry will be broken into three 4 month segments. I hope you will join me on what was a most excellent adventure.

In January new to me was the "buzz" about Web 2.0 tools. I had heard the term bantered about in conversation but I didn't truly understand what it was all about. I started to investigate, this sounded important.

One of the tools that I discovered early in the year (Feb) was Skrbl. Skrbl is an easy to use collaborative whiteboard. It's a great way to collaborate with people in other locations. I used it in several presentations I did to get people to participate in projects anonymously. No one knew who was doing the editing just that it was someone in our group unless they wanted to be identified.
Moving into March I discovered PhotoBucket which has become a place that I do a lot of image editing, hosting and resizing. There are many new tools here that I haven't had time to play with because of all the "new" sites that keep popping up in my learning.

April led me to the most time consuming and yet rewarding find of all. Second Life. Second Life is a virtual world created entirely by the users. It is a constantly changing environment with a plethora of possibilities for education. I am only a part of the Main Grid, but I know there are amazing things happening on the Teen Grid in schools now. This discovery also led me to becoming a part of an amazing team, the Discovery Education Network in SL Leadership Council. I am the Co-Chair of the building team. In world I am JessieMarie Flanagan known as JM. The DEN-SL offers FREE teacher workshops in world every Wed night. We also host a variety of events throughout the year. If you are interested in checking out SL let me know and I would be happy to hold your hand while navigating through this immense amazing place.

In May, Will Richardson ignited my love of blogging and I learned to use an aggregator.
My choice is Google Reader because it links into my iGoogle which shows up as my home page with all my links to other gadgets and gizmos...well you get the picture. I started this blog the day I took the workshop from Will Richardson, but then I failed to keep up with it. Partially because I spend so much time reading blogs and commenting on them from my Google Reader and partially because I "forgot" about it.

One of my goals for this year is to start writing more regularly and try to build up some readership. This will be tough for me as I feel like everyone else has already said what I wanted to but just didn't know how. I get stuck on what topics will strike a cord with people and get them talking. I want to be a part of the conversation not just a listener on the sidelines.

Please join me later in the week for part 2 of my excellent adventure. : )

~Anne

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Mac vs PC - Dead argument

I can't believe how time flies, is it really already Dec 2nd?! My Black Friday crazy shopping is now behind me and I am ready for the holiday craziness to begin. My family celebrates both Hanukkah and Christmas which makes the holiday time even more stressful. My only saving grace this year is that Hanukkah is so early that our "events" don't overlap.

While wading my way through my stack of RSS feeds which seems to grow daily, I found this video on YouTube, I think it was on CoolCatTeachers blog, if not I apologize, I am getting old.
Anyway, I have truly enjoyed the Mac Vs PC arguments I have had with many of my male friends. I am a loyal Mac user and always have been since Apple IIe. What I enjoy most is now listening to them bellyache how they want a Mac for the holidays! My how the tide has turned!