(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.
2007-Obstacles-To-Opps

OBSTACLES TO OPPORTUNITIES KEYNOTE “The Why’s and Wherefores”

Published by:

Brian Crosby
Sparks, Nevada, USA
Blog: http://www.learningismessy.com/blog/
Twitter: @bcrosby

Bio
Brian Crosby, an elementary teacher for 26 years, teaches fifth grade in Sparks, Nevada, and has infused technology into teaching since the 1980’s. While piloting a 1:1 laptop program,students in his class utilize many Web 2.0 tools including Skype, Fiickr, blogs and wikis. His award winning student produced video about including a classmate has been downloaded thousands of times. Brian teaches several popular tech classes for teachers. You can try keeping up with him on his blog “Learning Is Messy” at http://www.learningismessy.com/blog/.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Brian+Crosby

Presentation Title “The Why’s and Wherefores”
Description
Using what is happening in my classroom as a backdrop, we’ll endeavor to provide reasons, methods and rationale during our time here that support integration of 21st century tools in education. We will share a few tools and methods that you may not have access to, but much of what you will see is probably available at your school site “¦ you just don’t know it yet.

Presentation:

iPod ready http://k12online.wm.edu/bcrosby.mp4
Original http://k12online.wm.edu/bcrosby.movhttp://k12online.wm.edu/bcrosby_ lowres.mov
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/bcrosby.mp3

Supporting Links
Sir Ken Robinson TED Talk video http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/66
Math Magician http://oswego.org/ocsd-web/games/mathmagician/maths1.html
Dance Mat Typing http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/typing/
Class Blog http://classblogmeister.com/blog.php?blogger_id=65078
Links to Class Videos http://www.learningismessy.com/video.htm
Class Wiki Page http://crosbyclass.wikispaces.com/
Animal Ark Wiki Project http://crosbyprojects.wikispaces.com/Animal+Ark
Our Flickr Page http://www.flickr.com/photos/34879177@N00/
Teacher Tube http://www.youtube.com/
Inclusion Video http://www.arisleyschool.org/Inclusion.mov
Skype conferencing software http://skype.com/

What is “Take My Hand”?“Take My Hand” Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07oo01, k12online07[/tags]

2007-Obstacles-To-Opps

Obstacles to Opportunities “Challenging Assumptions About Technology Professional Development”

Published by:

Sylvia Martinez
Los Angeles, CA, USA
Blog: http://blog.genyes.com/

Bio
Sylvia Martinez is president of Generation YES, working to empower students in K-12 schools through digital technology. Sylvia has designed educational games, curriculum, and online experiences for teachers and students. Sylvia speaks and writes on subjects such as the use of technology, simulations and games to enhance educational opportunities and enable youth voice.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Sylvia+Martinez

Presentation Title
“Challenging Assumptions About Technology Professional Development”

Description
Forty years after the invention of the personal computer, schools still find themselves begging teachers to introduce technology into classrooms. Conventional wisdom attributes the lack of effective technology use in classrooms to a shortage of, or poorly run professional development. At the same time, student-centered learning environments require teachers to develop more expertise not only in technology but also in pedagogy. Rather than continue to do more of the same, we should question assumptions and explore new models of teacher learning that address these issues.

Presentation
iPod ready
http://k12online.wm.edu/k12techPDassumptions.m4v
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/k12techPDassumptions.mp3

Supporting Links
http://myedplace.wikispaces.com/

What is “Take My Hand”?
“Take My Hand”

Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07oo02, k12online07[/tags]

Announcements

Introducing the K12Online Professional Development Tracker database

Published by:

For the first time, the K-12 Online Conference is pleased to offer free professional development credit for participants. In many cases, the professional learning which takes place online during this conference and at other times as educators share ideas via blog posts can be more helpful and practical than many “formal” professional development sessions offered at school.

This weekend, conference organizers are pleased to announce availability of the K12Online Professional Development Tracker database, which permits anyone to submit a reflection on any presentation of the 2007 conference for credit. Before creating an account on the Professional Development tracker and submitting reflections (either as copied text paragraphs or as a HYPERLINK to a blog post or other webpage on a different site) please review the K12Online07 “Expectations for Professional Development and Graduate Credit” wikipage, the Professional Development wikipage, and the PD Rubrics wikipage. Several school leaders have already added their school information to the “Schools Granting Credit for K-12 Online Conference Participation” wikipage, and we expect many more in the weeks to come.

A variety of different examples of professional development examples following the rubric created by the K12Online07 PD committee have already been entered into the Professional Development Tracker database. Feel free to browse those submissions and get ideas for your own reflections. Participants are encouraged to use a variety of digital tools and media communication modalities to post and share reflections. The key is using this online learning opportunity (the K-12 Online Conference) as a catalyst for your own continuing improvement as a professional educator.

Many thanks to Texas educator Jamey Osborne, who has developed (and is continuing to improve) this robust online database portal, as well as San Antonio ISD for providing free hosting for the Professional Development Tracker database. Many thanks also go out to the K12Online07 Professional Development Committee, including:

Chair- Terry Freedman (http://www.ictineducation.org/)
Member- Jim Lerman (http://tinyurl.com/l5xst and http://tinyurl.com/zp4ee)
Member- Miguel Guhlin (http://www.edsupport.cc/mguhlin/)
Member- Cindy Lane (http://www.login2lane.blogspot.com/)
Willing to Help: Scott Mcleod (http://www.dangerouslyirrelevant.org/), Derek Baird (http://www.debaird.net/), Brian Grenier (http://bumpontheblog.etowns.net/)

These volunteers are listed along with other 2007 committee members on the “about page” of the 2007 K-12 Online Conference website.

After reviewing the conference credit wiki, please create a new account for yourself on the K12Online Professional Development Tracker database and start submitting reflections.

It is important to realize all submissions to the database are publicly viewable. Some features of the database are still under development, including the ability to print a participation certificate for each session for which a participant submits a reflection. These revisions to the database will continue during upcoming weeks. If you have feedback or comments on the K12Online Professional Development Tracker database, please leave them here as comments.

Conference organizers and PD committee members are enthused to offer this new framework for professional development credit recognizing the work and learning which results from K12Online participation. We hope to model “best practices” for professional development, and value both your participation and input in this process.

Please note that as in 2006, graduate credit for participation in the K-12 Online Conference is again available via Plymouth State University. Check out the grad credit page on our credit wiki for more details!

Announcements

Week1 Statistics for K12Online07

Published by:

There are many ways to measure the “success” of an educational conference. Personally, I usually measure success by the quantity and quality of learning points I take away from a conference, as well as the personal connections I make with others. In the case of the K-12 Online Conference, organizers hope each participant as well as presenter experiences a variety of “success measures” both during and following the two weeks of the main conference.

Although not completely descriptive of “success” as measured in personal ways, the number of people participating in the conference is important and reflects a growing awareness about K12Online07 in a variety of educational circles. The following screenshots were captured at the end of the day on Friday, October 19th, and reflect participation after the first week of the conference.

The K-12 Online Conference’s ClustrMap was given a free upgrade by ClustrMaps, and as a result now reflects participation levels by continent. The following shows hits to the main conference website by IP address and global location, indicating 63,281 visits since mid-September 2007:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

To put this into perspective, based on server statistical analysis for the 2006 K-12 Online Conference, organizers estimate over 54,000 people participated in all. The conference website ClustrMap on Day 1 of the 2007 Conference (October 15, 2007) showed 44,056 prior visitors:

Day 1: K12Online Conference 2007

Based strictly on user IP addresses accessing the conference website, therefore, it appears 19,225 NEW site hits to the conference website took place in week1. It is important to remember these VISITS do not represent “hits,” but rather visits based on unique IP addresses to the conference website. There are large numbers of blog spambots as well as webcrawlers which are likely included in the total visits statistic (66,281) for the conference website. It seems unlikely, however, that almost 20,000 new spambots visited the site during week 1 of the 2007 conference, however.

A reasonable conclusion? Lots of educators around the world are participating in K12Online 2007!

The upgraded ClustrMap for the conference now permits visitors to click on individual continents or regions to see how many visitors from that area were recorded in the current measured time period. Between September 16, 2007 and October 19, 2007, these maps show:

2,185 visits from computers in Europe:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

709 visits from South America:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

2,894 visits from Asia:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1 - Asia

898 visits from Africa:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

5,464 visits from Oceania:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

52,609 visits from North America:

K12Online07 ClustrMap for Week 1

Technorati charts of blog posts with the tag “k12online07” (the official “anchor tag” of the 2007 K-12 Online Conference) also show increasing numbers of posts during October:

Technorati Chart: k12online2007

These statistics indicate high levels of participation in the 2007 K-12 Online Conference, but it’s not necessary to view maps and charts to know participation in the conference is very active this year! The web feed for conference blog comments reflects LOTS of conversations around the week 1 presentations!

K12Online07 continues tomorrow on October 22, 2007, with week 2 of conference presentations. Join the continuing conversations on the conference blog, and share K12Online with other educators with whom you work and socially network!

2007-New-Tools

New Tools “Learn to Blog: Blog to Learn”

Published by:

Anne Davis
McDonough, Georgia, USA
Blog: http://anne.teachesme.com/

Bio
Anne Davis is an educator with over 20 years experience as an elementary classroom teacher, an instructional lead teacher, a reading specialist, and an instructional technology specialist. She currently works at Georgia State University in the Instructional Technology Center in the College of Education as an Information Systems Training Specialist. Anne has created numerous blogging projects with students and teachers over the past five years.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Anne+Davis

Presentation Title
“Learn to Blog: Blog to Learn”

Description
This presentation is for educators new to the world of blogging who wish to learn how to use blogs with students in a safe and teacher-controlled environment. It is also for current bloggers who desire a step-by-step example of how to introduce teachers to blogging. The focus will be on creating blogs combined with instructional uses and examples of web 2.0 tools integrated within the blogging. Blogmeister is a good starting point for beginners as it is free, not blocked, is safe, and there is a community of help support available as teachers are beginning the process of learning to blog. It can be a good place to start to show administrators and others the power of blogging and provide examples of why we need to have less blocking and more educating and empowering of our students and teachers. While Blogmeister is the focus a WordPress example blog will also be shared. This plan can be adapted to any blogging software.

Presentation
Original
http://k12online.wm.edu/learn.mov (~1min. Run Time; mov; 1.6 MB)
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/learn.mp3 (~1min. Run Time; mp3; 1.3 MB)

Supporting Links
http://blogmeister.pbwiki.com/

What is “Take My Hand”?
“Take My Hand”

Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07nt09, k12online07[/tags]

2007-Classroom2-0

Classroom 2.0 “If All My Classes Did This”

Published by:

Wendy Wolfe
Saint Paul, MN, USA
Blog: http://notimetosleep.wordpress.com/

Bio
Wendy Wolfe has a M.A. in E-Education and Educational Technology, teaches high school social studies and a classroom technology course for Saint Mary’s University. She serves as a consultant to the MN Historical Society and other area schools, presenting at workshops focused on infusing technology and education. In the low-tech world, you will find her sailing the Apostle Islands on Lake Superior.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Wendy+Wolfe

Presentation Title
“If All My Classes Did This”

Description
Recognizing that educators want students to engage in and enjoy learning and to have the opportunities for success and that reality often brings hardware and budgetary constraints, this presentation explores free Web 2.0 tools focusing on student learning activities and engagement. For each tool, a general introduction will be made followed by:

  • Ideas and examples of how these tools can be applied in the classroom.
  • Tips to introduce tools to students, including privacy and fair use.
  • Tips on showcasing and assessing student work.

Presentation
iPod ready
http://k12online.wm.edu/If_All_Classes.mp4 (23:01 Run Time, mpeg4, 74.1 MB)
Original
http://k12online.wm.edu/If_All_Classes.wmv (23:00 Run Time, wmv,66.2 MB)
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/If_All_Classes.mp3 (22:56 Run Time, mp3, 10.5 MB)

Supporting Links
Gcast
http://www.gcast.com/

Gliffy
http://www.gliffy.com/

ToonDoo
http://www.toondoo.com/Home.do

ScrapBlog
http://www.scrapblog.com/

Google Presentation
http://docs.google.com/

Zoho
http://zoho.com/

Recipes4Success
http://www.recipes4success.com/

Zambar
http://zamzar.com/

What is “Take My Hand”?
“Take My Hand”

Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07cl10, k12online07[/tags]

2007-Classroom2-0

Classroom 2.0 “Design Matters”

Published by:

Dean Shareski
Moose Jaw, SK, Canada
Blog: http://ideasandthoughts.org/

Bio
Dean Shareski is in his 20th year in education. He has taught grades 1-8 and is currently a Digital Learning Consultant for Prairie South School Division in Saskatchewan, Canada. He is passionate about the power of networks and advocates for students to be in charge of much of their learning and be challenged to create new things and connect with new people.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Dean+Shareski

Presentation Title
“Design Matters”

Description
Design is a word and idea that engulfs so much of our lives. How does it impact our classrooms and schools? How can we begin to think of design as something that we intentionally build into every day. We’ll look at very practical examples and ideas to begin the process of making design and creativity a part of teaching and learning.

Presentation
iPod ready
http://k12online.wm.edu/k12.mp4 (24:42 Run Time, mpeg4, 94.1 MB)
Original
http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=-7573353454993995098&hl=en-CA (24:22 Run Time, Google Video)
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/k12.mp3 (24:23 Run Time, mp3, 33.6 MB)

Supporting Links
http://designmatters.wikispaces.com/

What is “Take My Hand”?
“Take My Hand”

Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07cl09, k12online07[/tags]

2007-New-Tools

New Tools “Collaborative Concept Mapping – Breaking the Bounds of Location and Time… for $0.00 per Seat”

Published by:

Frank Pirrone
Buffalo, New York, USA
Blog: http://www.tona.wnyric.org/

Bio
The presenter has been involved with programming and computing since 1979, building and using early machines in the microcomputer revolution, as well as exploring a number of the more interesting programming languages. He has created applications for personal, commercial and educational use from that beginning to the present, including in his capacity as school district Technology Integrator.

Bio Page
https://k12online07presenters.wikispaces.com/Frank+Pirrone

Presentation Title
“Collaborative Concept Mapping – Breaking the Bounds of Location and Time… for $0.00 per Seat”

Description
This presentation will explore a Concept Mapping solution developed at University under funding by US government agencies. CMapServers are running around the world for accessing, publishing and collaborating in building Concept Maps. CMapTools, use of which can promote the development of high-order thinking skills, is a stand-alone application for developing Concept Maps that can be published to a CMapServer. These Concept Maps are capable of containing concept text and relationships, as well as rich multimedia elements and hyperlinks to other resources to support and inform the map.

Presentation
iPod ready
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-server.mp4(9:35min. Run Time; mpeg4; 21.3MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-tools-iPod.mp4(9:19min. Run Time; mpeg4; 22.4MB)
Original
http://k12online.wm.edu/introduction.ogg (3:02min Run Time; ogg audio; 3.1MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/rationale.ogg (3:59min Run Time; ogg audio; 4.3MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-server-orig.mp4 (9:35min Run Time; mpeg4; 23MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-tools-full.divx (33:49min Run Time; divx video; 277.7MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-tools.divx (34:02min Run Time; divx video; 160MB)
Audio only
http://k12online.wm.edu/introduction.mp3 (3:02min Run Time; mp3; 2.8MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/rationale.mp3 (3:58min Run Time; mp3; 3.6MB)
http://k12online.wm.edu/cmap-server.mp3 (9:35min Run Time; mp3; 8.8MB)

Supporting Links
Concept Map Theory
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Publications/ResearchPapers/TheoryCmaps/TheoryUnderlyingConceptMaps.htm

Concept Map White Papers
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Documentation/WhitePapers.php

Concept Map Documentation
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Documentation/

Concept Map Research and Publications
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Publications/

CMap FAQs
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Support/FAQs.php

CMap Help
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Support/Help/

CMap Support
http://cmap.ihmc.us/Support/

What is “Take My Hand”?
“Take My Hand”

Access Help Desk

[tags]k12online07nt10, k12online07[/tags]