Get Ready – It’s Almost Time!

The K-12 Online Conference 2010 has launched the Pre-Conference Keynote by Dean Shareski.

Dean’s Sharing: The Moral Imperative was thought-provoking and a poignant reminder to us all about how much we learn from each other and how necessary it is to keep sharing and collaborating as we move through this digital highway we have found ourselves on.

Tomorrow, the K-12 Online Conference 2010 officially kicks off with the Student Voices Keynote & the Leading the Change Keynote.

2010 Schedule - K-12 Online Wiki

We’re planning to show Rodd Lucier‘s presentation “Creative Commons: What Every Educator Needs to Know” as part of our Personal Tech session after school on Wednesday.  The use of Creative Commons has been a hot topic at our school lately, so the timing is perfect!

The strands Student Voices & Leading the Change will continue to release four presentations each day to “go live” for the rest of the week.

Beginning the week of 25 October 2010 is the other two strands of the conference: Kicking it Up a Notch & A Week in the Classroom.  Both strands have outstanding educators keynoting; Darren Kuropatwa & my very good friend Allanah King!  Four presentations each day will be released to “go live” for the rest of week as well.

2010 Schedule - K-12 Online Wiki

My own presentation, Record, Reflect & Share: VoiceThread as a Digital Portfolio, is part of the Kicking it up a Notch.  It is set to go live 12:00 PM  Wednesday, October 27 GMT (For those of you TimeZone challenged like me, that’s Wed, Oct. 27th 8pm, Bangkok time).  If you watch it, I hope you enjoy it!

k12online

Right, I’m off to get my “jarmies” ready for the conference! That’s the best thing about the K-12 Online Conference – you can “attend” sessions anytime, anywhere, dressed anyhow!

Click here for the full presentation schedule.  Which presentations do you think you will watch?

2009/365 Flickr Photo Challenge

Cross-posted at Eye To Eye

Today is the last day of the 2009/365 flickr photo challenge. I’m disappointed in myself because I made it to 263 and didn’t finish the challenge. Since October, 2009 I haven’t been as disciplined as taking a photo a day. Below is a sample of the 263 photos I did take.

365 Photo Challenge 2009 - a set on Flickr

Instead of lamenting failure, I’m once again challenging myself to complete the 2010/365 photo challenge.

Flickr: Discussing Final stretch - counting.......reflecting....... in 2009/365photos

You must check out D’Arcy Norman’s photoblog. It’s inspiring – and one that is definitely in my reader for the 2010/365 challenge and Dean Shareski has posted his thoughts already on the The Year in Photography. The edtech365/2009 group especially for those involved in education and/or technology has already created the edtech365/2010 group with a discussion started on how to use this group in the classroom. That’s definitely worth exploring.

I discovered (albeit a little late into the challenge) Daily Shoot on twitter. That’s one piece of inspiration that I’ll be relying on for the 2010/365 challenge. If you’re thinking about joining the challenge for 2010 – do it! Click on the links some more tips from some veterans of the challenge to take a photo-a-day for a whole year! Digital Photography School has become one of my favourite photography blogs. It’s site boasts a tonne of skills, tips and techniques from photographers around the world.

My other favourite photography blog, Photojojo suggest the following tips:

# Bring Your Camera Everywhere
Yes, everywhere. Get in the habit. Grocery stores, restaurants, parties, work, and school. Going to a movie theatre? Snap a pic of the flick with your phone–there are photo-ops everywhere. If you have one of those tiny tiny cameras, you have no excuse not to have it in your pocket all the time. And if you don’t? Camera phones are a great substitute.

# Make Posting Easy
You can install blog software like Movable Type or WordPress on your own site and create an entry for each photo, but for true ease of use, try a photo sharing site. Flickr will let you post a week’s worth of photos in 2 minutes flat, and fotolog and Photoblog.com are geared toward a photo-a-day workflow. Making it fast and easy means you’re much more likely to do it.

# Vary Your Themes
Try to capture the day’s events in a single photo. Perform photographic experiments. Take a photo of someone new you meet, something you ate for the first time, or something you just learned how to do. Take a photo of something that made you smile. And don’t forget to take a photo of yourself at least once a month so you can remember how you’ve changed, too.

# Tell a Story
Use your blog entry, or your photo description, to explain what’s going on in each day’s photograph. How good did that dinner taste? What made you want to take a photo of that stranger? It’ll help you remember down the road, and it gives friends following along a better appreciation of why you took the photo you did. You don’t need to write a lot, just enough to add some color.

# Don’t Stop, No Matter What
This is perhaps the most important tip of all. You will get tired of taking a photo every single day. Some days, you will consider giving up. Don’t. The end result is worth the effort. Remind yourself why you wanted to do it in first place.

There will be times you’ll think there’s nothing interesting left to take a photo of, and times you’ll think you didn’t do anything exciting enough to take a photo of. There’s always a great photo to be made.

Get out of the house and take a walk. Or stay inside and look around. Take a photo of something important to you. Take a photo of the inside of your house so you can see how your taste has changed over the years. Take a photo of anything, just don’t stop.

N.b. It helps if you’ve told your friends about the project and asked them to follow along. Their encouragement will keep you going!

# Post early, post often
Plan on going through and posting your photos at least once a week so you don’t get backlogged and feel overwhelmed. Ideally, post every day or two. Again, spend the time up front to make sure it’s quick and easy to post. It’ll make all the difference.

Favourite 5 in the Classroom of 2007

Apparently it started with Larry Ferlazzo’s “Best of the Year Lists“ but I was inspired to post by Langwitches and Dean Shareski’s recent posts about Top Stuff of 2007. It’s important for me to stress that there are so many apps, tools and various web2.0 resources out there that continue to amaze and delight me and make my role as an educator/motivator more exciting, more exhausting and definitely more rewarding than I could ever hope to put in one list!!

I wish I was as creative as Silvia and Dean when it comes to graphics but thank goodness I have myskitch!

1. VoiceThread – Love the simplicity, love the connectivity, love the interactiveness, love it, love it, love it!

VoiceThread - Group conversations around images, docs and videos.

2. Skitch.com This webservice works hand in hand with the Mac application Skitch to give you 1-click uploading of images for fast and fun image sharing (embedding codes provided). What really makes this app awesome is the ease at which you can capture an image, add writing, arrows, etc and embed it just as quickly on your blog/wiki etc.

Skitch.com > nzchrissy > Skitch.com > nzchrissy

3. Technospud Online Projects 4 Teachers – I am sure that I would not have forged such amazing online friendships, and been involved in fantastic Collaborative projects if it were not for Jen Wagner and the amazing work that she does for educators of all levels. Now there’s a technospudprojects ning too!

Technospud Projects

4. Wikispaces – Wikispaces rock! ‘Nuff said!

Fullscreen

5. Edublogs / Learnerblogs – I love blogging and truely believe that the value of blogging in the classroom is worth the trials and tribulations of getting students blogging in the classroom. I could not have done it without Edublogs!

What’s your list of 5 favourites for 2007?