One of those rare moments of internet zen when you stumble into something really nice for free. In this case, a whole bunch of very nice icons.
One of those rare moments of internet zen when you stumble into something really nice for free. In this case, a whole bunch of very nice icons.
I was fortunate to see Graham Higgins give an inspiring presentation at KM Singapore earlier this month. He showed clips of two TED presentations. They were fantastic. So I’m showing them both here. Get a cup of your favourite beverage, sit back and be amazed. Jill Bolte-Taylor on her brain - stunning, inspiring, amazing. Sir Ken Robinson on creativity in education - funny, wicked, inspirational. (if you get prompted to choose a player (7 or 8), choose either one. Both worked equally well for me.
Jill Bolte-Taylor.
Sir Ken Robinson.
Technology empowers us to do things which make us unique. In this TED talk, Neil Gershenfeld from MIT talks about “the killer app of personal fabrication”. He sprints through some breath-takingly brilliant visions of the future. But the point which hit me hardest is that we need to give students, teachers… everybody, more opportunities to move from consumers of technology to fabricators of technology. Watch the video here:
You might be prompted to choose ‘player 7′ or ‘player 8′ (Flash). Pick either one, both worked for me.
It’s a brilliant talk, but hard to follow. Quite complex, compared to other TED talks. I had to watch this one a few times to get the whole picture. But it’s awesome.
All the TED talks are amazing. Check them out at TED.
In the spirit of making stuff, check out Makezine too. It rocks.
Here are some of the Firefox addons I’ve been using in an educational context for the past 5 years or so. The links take you to the pages that explain what each addon does:
Essential
Good to have
Nice to have
Web Development
*The essential search addon*
Here are some of the search addons I use regularly from my Firefox searchbar. (no links here, sorry - you’ll have to find them yourself in MyCroft):
The searchbar is one of Firefox’s strongest features. Having the right addons greatly enhances Firefox’s functionality. I’ll write another post on this at some other time.
Switch off ‘comments’ in groups.
We’ve found that the ‘comments’ option in Ning groups gets a bit confusing for our members. All our teachers can create groups. So we encourage all teachers who create groups to disable ‘comments’, and encourage group members to use the forums instead. Not a problem for you yet?
The problem we’ve found is that group members get confused if they have to choose between writing a comment or starting a group discussion thread. Too many ways to communicate. Too many choices.
The ‘discussion forum’ in the groups works better because discussions are threaded, the comments are not, and they’re in reverse order - which is confusing.
Now, I’m sure comments are great in groups where the members know the difference between a forum and a comment wall. But in our experience, most don’t. If the comment wall gets used for something that would work better in a discussion, then any potential for developing a good discussion seems to dry up immediately.
Ning has a couple of pages (1, & 2) that tell you how to do this, but I thought I’d tie them together here for relative simplicity (they miss a couple of steps too, but they haz picturz). Please read everything below carefully.
The Ning Developer network post says this is a beginner difficulty-level task. Without being condescending, I’d say it’s a tad harder than that. (So I’m assuming that if you’ve read this far, you’re not a beginner and you already know what a favicon is. =P )
I’m doing this for Windows XP users (sorry Mac people, check out the links above).
Suggested tools
I recommend that you use http://www.favicon.cc/ to make your favicon pixel by pixel. It’s fun. To get the colours right, I recommend that Firefox users get the great Colorzilla addon (use it to pick colours from your page to add matching colours to your favicon).
WARNING
BE CAREFUL: You’re going to use WebDAV to connect to the source code and folders on your Ning network. Do not do this on a computer that you share with other people! They might be able to wreck your network. (see, this isn’t for beginners, is it?)
12 steps to the favicon
Once you’ve made your cute favicon, save it to your desktop as favicon.ico and follow these steps (in Windows XP):
Clear the cache in your browser, hard refresh your browser (Firefox: Ctrl Shift R), maybe even close your browser… and behold the glory of your new favicon!
If it doesn’t show after all that, then wait a bit. I’ve known favicons to take a day or two to appear.
If you’re a Ning network creator, you can change ‘blog’ to ‘journal’, ‘notes’ to ‘resources’, ‘music’ to ‘podcasts’, ‘my page’ to ‘my e-portfolio’, you could even change ‘banned’ to ‘retired’ or ‘booted’ or whatever you want.
Why?
The point of changing these labels and the other text in Ning is to personalize your network by using the language that your members are most likely to relate to.
For example, we found that among some of our members the word ‘blog’ had negative connotations. So we changed it to TP Journal (short for Teaching Practice Journal), and then it became something they felt comfortable using.
How?
Go to ‘Manage’, then ‘Language Editor’, pick your language from ‘current language options’, mine’s English (British). This will open your language editor page. In the left column you’ll find the original Ning version, on the right is where you add your ‘custom text’ version.
So on the left search for the word you want to change. Let’s say you want to change ‘blog’ to ‘journal’ everywhere on your Ning site. Enter the word ‘blog’ in the search box on the left. It’ll return all the instances of ‘blog’ on your Ning network. On the right, you can edit all the instances of ‘blog’ and change them to ‘journal’ or whatever.
Sections on the right that are pink and contain no text have ‘missing’ text. With these, just copy the text from the left-hand column and paste it into the corresponding empty pink box opposite on the right. Then edit the word.
Once you’ve finished changing your words, save the page. Then go and check how your site looks. If you’ve changed all instances of the word on your site, you’ll see the changes everywhere.
Suggestions & stuff
For an education-focused Ning network, I can recommend changing ‘Music’ to ‘Podcasts’ (unless your network is about Music Education, of course). Podcasts are usually more relevant than Music in an Educational context (this doesn’t exclude music, of course). This makes the ‘Music’ player suddenly useful as a ‘Podcast’ player.
The ‘Notes’ pages work well when called ‘Resources’.
On one site we’ve renamed ‘Events’ as ‘INSETTs’ (IN SErvice Teacher Training) which is more relevant to the members on that site.
‘Groups’ we’ve renamed as ‘SIGs’ (Special Interest Groups), which in our context is more specific and relevant to our members.
Over the past year I’ve set up and overseen the running of three educational Ning networks that have had good feedback over many courses and events. The three networks we have running at the moment are for teacher training & development, so the members are all adults. But based on other experience we’ve had in using similar technology with secondary students, I recommend this approach for younger learners too. YMMV = Your mileage may vary. Let me know what you think.
In this post I’ve listed some steps that I recommend that you follow in setting up a Ning network in an educational context. These steps might appear a bit over-structured (and pedantic) but they’re derived from real experience, ‘hard knocks’ and lessons learnt. I hope you find them relevant to your context. Let me know what you think.
Our networks are private, so I can’t give any links. If you want more info or specifics, please comment and I’ll help.
Our 3 Ning networks
The first is to support trainee teachers on a CELTA course. ‘Groups’ used for courses. ‘Blogs’ used for reflective journals (only tutors are ‘friends’ to ensure privacy of posts and comments). Face-to-face, shoulder-to-shoulder induction in two 1-hour sessions.
The second is to support school teachers from Singapore schools in developing their skills in using literature for English language learning. ‘Groups’ used to split cohort into tutor/thematic groups. ‘Blogs’ used as above.
The third is the focal point for our own teachers’ research and development. This is too complex to tell the story here. I’ll have to write another post. Lots of ‘human’ face-to-face stuff has gone into making this work.
The 12 steps for EduNing startups
YMMV but Delicious wins, Foxmarks comes second, Ma.gnolia third and Google bookmarks gets lapped several times before retiring from the race. Foxmarks? Not in the title above, I know, and it’s not an online bookmarking tool like the others, I know that too. But it’s good and worth a mention.
Why do I rate Google bookmarks so low? Well simply because Google released Chrome without support for Google Bookmarks. This is bad because in my view Chrome handles bookmarks appallingly, and given Chrome’s online app focus, a strong Google Bookmarks would have fixed Chrome’s shortcomings. Bad timing I reckon. Ivan’s blog also makes the point that Google has so many apps in development that their online bookmarks offer is bound to get neglected (compared with Delicious). Everything Google has is ‘Beta’, even Gmail. Yeah, right.
Ma.gnolia is the new kid on the block. Very pretty interface. Does pretty much what Delicious does, but I agree with these guys and PARAgiraffe for the moment.
Foxmarks now. This has got very good since they introduced favicon support. It was good before, but I reckon it’s got much better with favicon sync. Before Foxmarks I used Torisugari’s Bookmarks synchronizer, back in the day. But I switched to Foxmarks when Torisugari slowed down on updates. I rely on favicons in my bookmarks toolbar to find my most used links. I can click and go. Here’s a screenshot which I hope will show you what I mean:
Delicious wins for me mainly because it’s simple and effective. Also as Ivan’s blog mentions, it has a healthy business focus: it’s the only thing they do, so they’re committed. Another point in favour of Delicious is that our partners in local schools here in Singapore are using it. There’s also an excellent Delicious Firefox addon. The only gripe I have about this addon is that it takes up quite a lot of space on my NT profile at work - I had to delete this addon since Firefox 3 came out because I couldn’t log out: my profile was too big.
I’ve started a revolutionary move away from IE6 towards using Firefox at our school, but if our IT infrastructure won’t handle the Delicious Firefox addon we might have to do without it. I reckon we’ll manage ok. Here’s what ours looks like so far:
Apart from showing our teachers how great Firefox is, I’m also going to have to persuade them to start using Delicious in their teaching practice. I’m not sure these people know how to make the most of their bookmarks anyway, but that’s another story.
Innova Junior College seem to have the right idea though:
On the subject of how bad Internet Explorer 6 is… check out IE Death March just for fun.