Friday, October 23, 2009

podcast presentation

So you want your students to podcast


What’s a podcast?

Episodic downloadable audio (or video) content.

Does not require an iPod.

Usually has an associated RSS feed.


Recommended Podcasts

Technology: This Week in Tech

Science: Quirks and Quarks, Science Update

Social Studies: Stuff You Missed in History Class

Math: Math Grad

English Language Arts: CSTW Writers Talk

Arts: CBC Arts Podcasts

Medicine: White Coat, Black Art


How to create

Hardware (microphones, pop filters, etc)


How to create

Software

GarageBand

Audacity Portable

Myna


How to publish/share

hosting and syndication

technochild.net

mypodcast.com

ourmedia.org

feedburner.google.com


Music/Sound Effects

jamendo.com

audiofarm.org

musicalley.com

wikipedia.org/wiki/Podsafe


Legal Issues

Copyright or Creative Commons


Now let’s podcast…

Friday, October 16, 2009

recommended podcasts

A few podcasts that teachers may be interested in listening to:

Technology: This Week in Tech
Math: Math Grad
English Language Arts: CSTW Writers Talk

This is just a preliminary list to get you started, there are certainly others. Feel free to comment if there are others that you listen to.

Friday, September 25, 2009

picasa recognizes people

I'm a big fan of Picasa photo organizing software. They just recently introduced face recognition/tagging, which is very cool. It even seems to do fairly well at distinguishing the photos of our toddlers from their cousins, even though they look fairly similar.

We have a lot of photos (over 80 GB and counting), so it takes a while for it to scan through all of those to recognize faces, but it's doing fairly well so far.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

new features in Google Docs

Just a quick post to mention two new(ish) features of Google Docs.

The word count now includes some readability information.

It is now possible to insert an equation using an equation editor (LaTeX syntax, just like Wikipedia).

Friday, September 11, 2009

levels of writing

In the literature world there are levels of writing and levels of reputability; for example a magazine article is different from an essay or a short story. I've been thinking about how there is a similar hierarchy online. Maybe blog posts tend to be more reputable than Facebook updates, which are higher quality than Twitter tweets.

And I'm not just saying this because my father blogs and mother-in-law uses Facebook, a researcher recently found, in a pilot study, that Facebook increases your IQ while Twitter probably weakens your working memory.

Perhaps all reading is not good reading.

Monday, August 31, 2009

new to Microsoft Office 2007?

Our school district has recently upgraded all computers to Microsoft Office 2007. For users unfamiliar with the "ribbon interface", Microsoft has a great resource:

Guides to the Ribbon: Use Office 2003 menus to learn the Office 2007 user interface

Saturday, August 15, 2009