(Almost) all our content from 2006 to 2017 is archived and available online under a Creative Commons license. Please read this post from June 2018 for more background and updates about our conference and current status.

Category Archives: Announcements

2008 Announcements

Fireside chat with Stephen Heppell on Oct 16th

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The date and time for our first fireside chat with Dr. Stephen Heppell in the 2008 K-12 Online Conference has been finalized. The fireside chat will take place at 11:00 PM Thursday, October 16 GMT. Use the previous link to determine the start time in your local time zone.

To join the fireside chat, use the following link to enter our Elluminate Live room: http://snurl.com/3xbc0

Details and links for our other two fireside chats are available on our conference wiki. The Elluminate link for each fireside chat will remain the same. Dates and times our week1 and week2 fireside chats are:

3:00 PM Saturday, October 25 GMT
Fireside Chat With Week One Keynoter and Presenters
The direct link to the time converter for this event:
TO JOIN THE SESSION
http://snurl.com/3xbc0 [sas_elluminate_com]

1:00 AM Tuesday, October 31 GMT
Fireside Chat With Week Two Keynoters and Presenters
TO JOIN THE SESSION
http://snurl.com/3xbc0 [sas_elluminate_com]

Also remember our 24 hour culminating event, “When Night Falls,” begins at 12:00 AM Saturday, November 1st GMT. Learn more on the “When Night Falls 2008” wiki and sign up to be a session moderator.

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2008 Announcements

Presentation publishing procedure changes for 2008

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UPDATE 16 OCTOBER 2008: PLEASE SEE THE POST “Let the content be free! (following CC terms)”

It’s late in the evening prior to opening day for the 2008 K-12 Online Conference. Thanks to many hours of work (not by me but by others working behind the scenes) the 2008 pre-conference keynote is scheduled to “go live” at 12 pm GMT tomorrow, October 13th, as originally announced.

Before the pre-con presentation goes live, however, as conveners we want to share some information about how we are changing our internal processes for transcoding and publishing conference presentation files this year. In addition, we want to address an issue which came up last year and may come up again: Cross-posting conference presentation files to other servers.

TRANSCODING AND PUBLISHING

As in the past, all conference presentations will be linked here from our conference blog and will be actually hosted by the College of William and Mary on their servers. There are two primary reasons for this: accessibility and archival. Many school organizations utilize content filters which block many video sharing websites. By providing all conference materials on our main k12onlineconference.org website as well as hosted files from the William and Mary server, school organizations should be able to “whitelist” (unblock) both the k12onlineconference.org domain and the wm.edu domain and provide access for educators and students to all conference content. The only exception to this is some of the wiki sites utilized to provide additional information for the conference are on other domains. (On Wikispaces.com) By archiving and curating all the primary presentation files of the conference, K-12 Online seeks to provide an ongoing and perpetual resource for educators worldwide interested in utilizing conference materials individually or with groups. If we were to NOT archive these presentation files in a single location, a strong possibility would exist that some files could be moved or server accounts could be de-activated, resulting in a lack of access to conference materials. As in past years, we hope to provide the greatest level of accessibility for conference materials while simultaneously ensuring presentations are archived for future generations.

This year, conveners are utilizing a pro Blip.tv account to upload and transcode presenter-submitted video files. Our Blip.tv account transcodes files into mp3 audio format as well as m4v iPod video format. We anticipate this will save a significant amount of convener time in compressing and prepping files for sharing, since files have been shared in a variety of formats as well as sizes in the past. Files uploaded and transcoded on Blip are hidden (made private) by the convener uploading them. After files are transcoded on Blip they are (as in the past) going to be uploaded individually to the W&M server, and those links (to mp3 and m4v formatted files) will be published on the conference blog when each presentation goes live.

In the past, a single convener (Lani Ritter Hall) formatted and created all 41 presentation posts for the conference blog. This was an INCREDIBLY large and time-consuming task. This year, individual strand conveners are composing and posting presentation posts for the 10 presentations in their respective strands. All presentation files, however (both mp3 and m4v) are being uploaded to the W&M server by a single convener, Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach. This situation is required because of server access permissions permitted by the university.

Because of travel and access constraints (Sheryl is in New Zealand and pays for bandwidth by the minute in her hotel) we are going to publish Dr. Stephen Heppell’s keynote tomorrow with links to our blip.tv website. His presentation files will be available for download from the W&M servers by the end of the week. We apologize in advance if your school organization does not permit access to the blip.tv website, and you are therefore not able to download and view the pre-conference keynote tomorrow from your school network. We do not anticipate having to initially publish other conference presentation links from our blip.tv site, however. Remaining presentation links should all be from W&M.

We are pleased, however, that publishing via blip.tv will permit us to not only provide links to a QuickTime (.mov) version and audio-only (.mp3) version, but also a Flash-video transcoded version which will play in a web browser. This version will play from the blip.tv domain, however, so if blip.tv is blocked on your school network it will not be accessible for you. Again, we plan to address these accessibility challenges as we have in the past by publishing all content to and linking from the W&M servers. The pre-conference keynote availability on the W&M server will be delayed, however, until later this week.

CROSS-POSTING CONFERENCE PRESENTATION FILES

Last year, particularly at the start of the conference, several people offered and asked for conference presentation files to be cross-posted to different servers for downloading. This process of “mirroring” files for download (or more accurately “file shadowing”) on different servers is common for many software downloads.

Because of our need and desire to compile server access statistics for our conference which are as accurate as possible, WE POLITELY DISCOURAGE participants and others from providing mirrored, alternative, or file shadowed copies of K-12 Online presentations on other servers other than W&M. Content in presentations for the 2008 conference is explicitly licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. For the reason just mentioned, however, file mirroring is discouraged during and following the conference.

We are looking forward to another outstanding year of creative idea sharing and collaboration with K-12 Online! Please remember to forward and share our conference marketing flyer with all the educators you know, so as many people as possible can join in the learning which is just STARTING here for the 2008 conference. 🙂

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2008 Announcements

Live Events for K12 Online

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As the K12 Online Conference is fast approaching, members of the Live Events committee are planning a number of interesting ways for you to become involved. As in the past, we will be hosting Elluminate and Skype chats during the keynote sessions and fireside chats, and we will once again welcome participation in When Night Falls. Check the conference schedule for dates and times of the events. (Note: If you are interested in serving as a moderator for When Night Falls, please check out the Moderator page!)

An exciting new addition this year is our Cup of Joe discussion groups.  Conversations around each presentation will be gathered and brought to life through the use of VoiceThread. Each presenter has identified three essential questions relating to their session and these will be posted on a correlating presentation VoiceThread. We encourage you and your colleagues to grab a cup of coffee, listen to a session or two, and then share your thoughts/reflections on the VoiceThreads. We hope these essential questions will help facilitate reflection for individuals as well as larger groups. And, as part of your reflection we ask that you let us know who you are, what you do, and where you grabbed your Cup of Joe!

Image: 55/365 One Big Cuppa’ Joe
http://flickr.com/photos/lingualx/407686041/

2008 2008-notK12 Online Announcements

Announcing notK12 Online

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K12 Online depends on the collaboration of many people to make this unique conference a success. This year, as we discussed what an online “unconference” might look like, we struck a committee to do some of the heavy lifting and thinking about our online unconference venue, notK12 Online. We asked Bud Hunt to chair the notK12 Online committee and he’s assembled an excellent team of educators to help us figure this out: Jackie Ballarini, Bill Bass, and Marcie T. Hull with substantial technical assistance from Andy Schmitz.

Our thanks to all of them; they’ve done some great work and will be continuing to volunteer their time and energy to help make this extension of K12 Online a blow out success. Here’s what they’ve come up with:

Not K12Online exists as one way to expand, and amplify, the possibilities of the K12Online Conference, to ensure that everyone has a way to add to the conversation(s) started by, inspired by, or missed by, the formal conference. Think of NotK12Online as one aggregator for content related to the possibilities generated by K12Online. To be honest, we hope you don’t need us, and we recognize that you really don’t. But we’re here anyway, a reminder of how you might use the power of digital tools to promote learning wherever, and whenever, you are.

NotK12Online, at this point, consists of two distinct channels of content that we hope you’ll consider submitting to.

Have a presentation you’d like to share relating to one of the four themes of this year’s conference? Check out the details of the “Presentation Channel” below and consider creating a presentation to share. Or not.

The other piece of NotK12Online is the “Critique Channel”. Critically examining our practices is important – as are divergent opinions. We are seeking to foster constructive dialogue about teaching and learning, as well as meta-talk about events like K12Online, in this channel. Submissions to this channel will offer constructive criticism and/or feedback on the K12Online sessions.

In the case of both channels, we’re seeking not to own the conversation, but to provide a venue for folks who would like to connect the work they’re already doing to the conference in an informal way. We’re also interested in your thoughts on what other channels we might’ve missed.

NotK12Online will “run,” meaning we’ll be open for submissions, from October 13th, 2008 until November 16th, 2008. After that, submissions will close, but the links will be around. The idea behind the extended time frame is to provide time for people to reflect upon and continue the conversations that ensue from their K12Online experiences. This also allows people time to create a presentation or critique that may have been inspired by the conference content. Of course, after November 16th, we encourage everyone to continue sharing presentations, discussing and networking, and reflecting on the work of others, but we won’t be the venue for that – we’ll count on you to use the tools of the open Web, as well as the K12Online website, to do so. (We really, really don’t think you need us at all – and yet plenty of good work isn’t ever shared. We hope to be the push that some might need to help them to publish.) We’re still working on our web presence where we’ll be taking submissions and aggregating them, but we wanted you to have a glimpse into what we’re seeking at the moment, both as a chance to get some feedback but also to take the opportuniy to give you a heads up – we hope you’ll consider putting something together. Below are our submission guidelines.

Presentation Channel: Presentations can be submitted under any of the four themes for K12Online – 2008. The four themes are “Getting Started”, “Kicking It Up a Notch”, “Prove It”, and “Leading the Change” (Read the original strand descriptions here.). Presentations that, in some way, fit the strands of this year’s K12Online conference are welcome.

Guidelines:
1. Presentations may be submitted from October 13th, 2008 until November 16th, 2008.
2. Presentation content must be hosted offsite. We will not host content other than text and links, thus you must provide links to your presentation, published elsewhere. If you have a blog, publish there and submit your information to us. if you don’t perhaps it’s time to create one.
3. Presentations must have original education-related content related in some way to the strands of the formal conference. Any presentations of a strictly sales/merchandise flavor are certainly welcome on the open Web, but won’t be re-broadcast via NotK12Online.
4. Presentations that have been published at K12Online will not be re-broadcast here.
5. All presentations will be shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.

Critique Channel:

Guidelines:
1. Critiques may be submitted from October 13th, 2008 until November 16th, 2008.
2. Content must be hosted offsite. We will not host content other than text and links, thus you must provide links to your critique.
3. Submissions must be produced and delivered in the spirit of critical reflection which allows for improvement in practice. The goal of this channel is to provide constructive critical response to the ideas, topics and presentations of the K12Online conference, in the spirit of furthering conversations past the commenting stage.

We welcome your feedback about these guidelines and ideas, as well as NotK12Online itself. Ideally, a conference about self-directed learning should be, in part, about making itself obsolete. We hope NotK12Online will allow for some playing with, and stretching of, the boundaries of an online conference. And we hope you’ll be willing to submit the work that you’re doing to one of our channels. NotK12Online should serve as an amplifier of sorts. That’s all. Perhaps it’ll be the little bit of a push that you need to get moving on sharing some of the work that you’ve been up to. Or, ahem, not.

It’s certainly worth it to try.

As always we’re interested in your thoughts, suggestions and ideas; feel free to comment here and share them.

2008 Announcements

Announcing K12 Online 2008 Presenters

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The 2006 and 2007 K-12 Online Conferences provided outstanding opportunities for free, collaborative, accessible professional learning for educators around the globe. The 2008 conference is shaping up to again provide more exemplary learning opportunities in the same spirit of collaboration and sharing! The learning will begin with a pre-conference keynote during the week of October 13, 2008. We will again invite presenters to submit “teaser trailers” for their presentations in advance of the conference.

This year’s fantastic line up of keynote presenters will create an inviting and welcoming introduction in which the sharing of ideas among diverse learners working in diverse contexts continues. These distinguished folks will not only extend the conversations, but also invite each of us to stretch and grow as they share their expertise and wisdom in their respective strands. We are delighted they have each agreed to accept their roles as keynote presenters. See our post from June 25th for more information about keynote speakers in each of our 2008 strands.

The presentations accompanying the keynotes for each strand have been selected by “blind” peer review committees coordinated by each strand convener. The committees’ tasks were extremely difficult as the quality of proposals was again outstanding. We thank everyone who submitted a proposal. We are elated to announce the K12 Online 2008 presenters whose creativity, depth of thought and innovation promise to make K12 Online 2008 exemplary.

The presenters by strand are:

Getting Started

Free Tools for Universal Design for Learning in Literacy
Jennifer Kraft

The Google Gamut: Everything you need to get started.
Kern Kelley

I Like Delicious Things
Chris Betcher

Never Too Young
Sharon Betts

Reading Revolution: New Texts and New Technologies (Suggestions for revised focus)
Laurie Fowler

Travelling Through the Dark
Steven Kimmi

Video Conferencing
Brian Crosby

Web 2.0 Tools to Amplify Elementary Students’ Creativity and Initiative
Jackie Gerstein

What Did You Do In School…?
H. Songhai

Prove It!

Best Practices with Primary Access: An Overview of Research on Student Creation of Highly Scaffolded Digital Documentaries in a History Classrooms
Glen Bull, Thomas Hammond, Curby Alexander

Facilitating Tech Integration: A Synthesis of the Research
Jon Becker

Open, Social, Connected: Reflections of an Open Graduate Course Experience
Alec Couros

CANCELLED: Professional Development without Borders: A Research and Support Model for Global Education
Konrad Glogowski and Sharon Peters

Promise into Practice: What It Now Means to Teach Adolescent Readers and the Impact of the Results
Sara Kajder

Throwing the Box Away
Barbara Bray

We Like Our Blogging Buddies: The Write Stuff with Blogging Mentors
Kathy Cassidy and Patrick Lewis

“You know, I can download those pictures myself and show you how to make a Photostory”
Elaine Newton

Using Online Argument Role-Play to Foster Learning to Argue and Arguing to Learn in a High School Composition Class
Richard Beach

Kicking It Up A Notch

Games in Education
Sylvia Martinez

Oh the Possibilities
Lisa Parisi

Changing Disabilities
Elizabeth Lloyd

Back-channels in the Classroom
Scott Snyder

Connecting Classrooms Across Continents: Planning and Implementing Globally Collaborative Projects
Kim Cofino and Jen Wagner

Interactive tools for remote and synchronous mentoring
Michele Wong Kung Fong

Monsters Bloom in Our Wiki
Ann Oro and Anna Baralt

Parental Engagement in the 21st Century – Leveraging web 2.0 tools to engage parents in non-traditional ways
Lorna Costantini and Matt Montagn

Film School for Video Podcasters
Mathew Needleman

Leading The Change

Beyond the Stacks: Using Emerging Technologies to Strengthen Teacher-librarian Leadership
Carlene Walter and Donna DesRoches

Current leadership models are inadequate for disruptive innovations
Scott McLeod

Overcoming Entropy
Louise Maine

Pushing the Limits: Web 2.0 and 21st Century Learning
Aimee Stoffel

Ramapo Islands
Peggy Sheehy

Teaching Web 2.0 – Everything you need in one place
Wendy Drexler

Telling the New Story: Leverage Points for Inspiring Change Orientation
David Warlick

The Lie of Community: The True Nature of the Network
Bud Hunt

There’s Something Going on Here You Need to Know About”¦
Dennis Richards and Charlene Chausis

2008 Announcements

In loving memory of Lee Baber

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The 2008 K-12 Online Conference is dedicated in loving memory to our friend and accessibility committee chair, Lee Baber. Lee passed away on Thursday, July 31, 2008. EdTechTalk has a memorial page for Lee which we encourage you to visit and share.Lee BaberA memorial fund for Lee’s family has been established, and details about sending a contribution will be posted soon on her memorial page on EdTechTalk.Teachers Teaching Teachers will meet (as usual) on EdTechTalk at 9 pm Eastern Wednesday, August 6th, and will be sharing memories and remembrances of and for her.We miss you Lee.

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Announcements

Inside K12Online Episode04: A conversation about NOTk12onlineconference.org

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Welcome to episode 4 of the K-12 Online Conference News podcast channel! In this podcast recorded over Skype  the conveners and Bud Hunt discuss a new idea for the conference this year: “NOT K-12 Online.” What is it? Why are we considering this? Why are we working hard to offer the formal k12onlineconference in the first place? Will this crazy idea crash and burn, or will it soar like an eagle? Time will tell. Bud will lead us in this new endeavor. Give a listen and learn more!

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Show Notes:

  1. notk12onlineconference.org
  2. A photo from our skype call this evening
  3. Bud Hunt
  4. K-12 Online on Twitter

Subscribe to the Inside K12 Online Podcast Channel

2008 Announcements

Inside K12Online Episode03: Keynote Speakers and Committees for 2008

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Welcome to episode 3 of the K-12 Online Conference News podcast channel! In this podcast recorded over Skype from San Antonio, Texas, at NECC 2008 and Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, the conveners discuss each of the keynote speakers for the 2008 conference as well as the committees we are forming now. Volunteers are needed now! We’ve got a GREAT lineup of speakers and a lot to look forward to in the 2008 conference. Remember the deadline for submitting proposals has been extended to July 11, 2008.

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Show Notes:

  1. Announcing K12Online08 Keynotes!
  2. Willing to Volunteer?
  3. Second Call for Proposals
  4. K-12 Online on Twitter

Subscribe to the Inside K12 Online Podcast Channel

2008 Announcements

Willing to Volunteer?

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As the K12 Online conference grows the need for volunteers does too. The conveners of K12 Online 2008 are requesting volunteers to chair and serve on committees that will support the upcoming K12Online conference. Each committee will have a convener, a chair, and three committee members, to make up a five member team. The committees are as follows:Media and Communications (Public Relations)- This committee will be responsible for getting the word out about the conference.Convener- Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach (snbeach at cox dot net)Live Events – This committee handles live events during the conference, our culminating event “When Night Falls” and fireside chats.Convener- Dean Shareski (shareski at gmail dot com)Help Desk– This committee will be the conference technical support team and will work from a proactive role in terms of recommending tools and “how-tos.”Convener- Darren Kuropatwa (dkuropatwa at gmail dot com)Professional Development– This committee will arrange oppotunities for graduate credit and Continuing Education points that can be obtained globally.Convener- Wes Fryer (wesfryer at yahoo dot com)Accessibility Options– This committee will create a resource and be available to answer questions about ensuring that presentations are accessible by all participants, even those with disabilities.Convener- Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach (snbeach at cox dot com)Roles and Responsibilities– The role of the convener on each committee is to serve as a liason from the committee to the conference as a whole.The role of the chair is to organize and facilitate 2-3 meetings (Elluminate is available for your meetings) prior to our conference and to lead the committee in development of a support plan and related tasks to fulfill your committee’s purpose.The role of members will be to carry out, with the chair, the purpose and plan of the committee.Interested? If you are interested in chairing or serving on one of the above committees please contact the appropriate convener or leave a comment below with your contact information and someone will get back with you right away. We would like to have committees formed and functioning by the end of August.