Blended Edu

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Back to School 2007: Get Your Wiki On!

You already know that PBwiki is the easiest and best wiki platform out there. But did you know that Atomic Learning has FREE tutorials on PBwiki?

These tutorials will help you learn step-by-step how to create a PBwiki. Hurry, the tutorials are only available for a short time!

Speaking of wiki's, Yahoo! For Teachers has a new group for educators where they can go to get advice, share experiences and best practices from other teachers who are using wiki's in their classroom.

Whether your a wiki veteran, or just getting started, come share what you know about using wiki's in an educational setting.

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Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Add Voice to your Wiki: YackPack & PBWiki



To use this video on your site, just visit http://blip.tv/file/196824.

It's true! YackPack and PBWiki have partnered up and made adding audio to your wiki even easier than making a PB&J!

It's easy! Your students will love it! And oh yeah, it's free!

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In the 'sphere: YackPack + PBWiki

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Friday, January 26, 2007

Yackpack Live

Yackpack has introduced a new feature that allows you to talk live to people in your pack! And just like the rest of Yackpack it's easy to use: you push and button and talk, and all folks logged into your pack can hear you!

Pretty cool, eh?

This new Yackpack Live feature is an easy and convenient way to introduce synchronous communication in a distributed learning environment. So why not try using Yackpack in your e-learning back of Web 2.0 tricks?

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Sunday, October 15, 2006

Disconnected

Living on an island brings many challenges, one of which is being disconnected from the rest of the world. Thanks to new Information Technologies today we have the opportunity to connect to others’ thoughts and ideas and hopefully these virtual connections will shape ideas that will bring about change and eventual progress, though we are physically disconnected.

Feeling isolated I began to think about the many ways we are connected to each other via traditional methods of communication, such as listening to the radio, television, phones, computers, snail mail, email, and the Internet. We have been told that the Information Superhighway, the Internet, has changed the way in which we can communicate. So what are the new information technologies available over the ‘net to share the knowledge and ideas of smart minds of the smart mobs? The free movement of the Web2.0 has brought us many.

Here’s my list I frequent:
(in no particular order, and by no means inclusive or an endorsement of the product)

:: LinkedIN
:: Blogging- Blogger :: Yahoo 360 :: Technorati
:: Instant Messenging- AIM :: MSN Messenger :: Yahoo :: Adium
:: Discussion Forums
:: Photo Sharing - Flickr :: Picasa
:: Social Networking Software- MySpace :: Facebook :: Friendster :: SecondLife :: Thoos :: Orkut
:: Podcasts
:: Videoblogging
:: Moblogging
:: iTunes
:: Peer-to-Peer Networking
:: Video Sharing- YouTube :: Veoh
:: Social Bookmarking- Del.icio.us :: Furl
:: Wikis
:: RSS Feeds- Bloglines :: NetNewsWire
:: VOIP- Skype
:: YackPack
:: NetMeeting

I’ve listed ones that are free- because being a teacher I know we have little to no money to spare. Fortunately, the Web2.0 has now put at our disposal a myriad of social networking tools that allow us to connect with others without physically being next-door neighbors.

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Friday, October 06, 2006

YackPack for Education

This summer the team over at YackPack has been über busy! Sometime between attending a bunch o' conferences and implementing some exciting new features, the YackPack team found time to whip up a fantastic new YackPack Education site.

Take a moment to check it out--you'll love it!

On the YackPack Education site, you'll find real world examples of how other educators are using YackPack in their classroom. If you're a member of the Moodle community, then be sure to join your fellow Moodler's in the YackPack MoodlePack--now there's a tongue twister!

Get that popcorn ready, kick up those feet, and watch a movie by the Salem-Keizer school district in Oregon showing how a private YackPack is being used in the Math Scene Investigation course.

And if you need help, visit the YackPack Support page which has information on using a microphone, getting around those pesky firewalls and even a YackLingo cheat sheet. Yo!

YackPack-based learning activities provide students with opportunities to collaborate with their peers, learn from experts, use technology in a constructivist manner, and utilize information set in an authentic context.

Sign up and find out why teachers all over the world are using YackPack in their classrooms! It's easy, it's free and it's fun!

So, what are you waiting for? Get Yacking!

YackLinks

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Wednesday, August 09, 2006

YackPack: Let's Discuss the Blackboard Patent

In case you missed it, last week the U.S. Patent office granted BlackBoard a patent for many of the key elements used in many, if not all, of the Learning Management System (LMS). Shortly after the patent was issued, Blackboard filed a lawsuit against the online education company Desire2Learn.

This move is being viewed by many in the education ecosystem as a power grab by Blackboard and a way for them to fight against Open Source education platforms like Moodle, Docebo, and OpenCourseWare.

So what do you think?

Our friends over at YackPack have started a new public YackCast for members of the education community to discuss the BlackBoard Patent issue. Join the YackCast and add your voice to the conversation.

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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Gen Y: Digital Learning Styles

“Perhaps our generation focused on information, but these kids focus on meaning -- how does information take on meaning?" - John Seeley Brown

In the 21st Century classroom, the student wants to control the how, what, and when a task is completed. Social media and other web-based technologies are well suited to provide avenues for students to engage in a social, collaborative, and active dialogue in the online learning environment with their peers and instructor.

A study conducted by the UK-based NESTA FutureLabs (2005) reported that the education “should be reversed to conform to the learner, rather than the learner to the system.” Moreover, the NESTA found that social media should be used to enable learners to study and be assessed according to their own learning style (BBC, 2005).

Online learning theory and pedagogical practice also centers on the concept that learning needs to be situated in a social and collaborative context. Discussion among peers can make the often invisible community threads more visible and accessible, and may lead students to find others in the group who share the same interests.

Gen Y students are hard wired to look at the variety of available technologies and then construct their own learning path, and content based on their intrinsic learning needs. As students go through process of choosing, utilizing, integrating and sharing content it provides opportunities for them to be actively engaged, provide and receive feedback, as well as acquire, share, and make use of community knowledge.

More importantly, this new digital pedagogy emphasizes providing students with a broad range of technology tools then allowing them to use them as a means to construct their own understanding and knowledge.

As a result, students are highly motivated to discuss content, solve problems together, and apply new concepts which relate to their own practice. This approach also provides student’s with access to flexible, self-paced, customizable content, on-demand opportunities for learning, along with the ability to create and share student-generated content.

The use of social technologies provides students with an opportunity to self-assess their understanding (or lack of) of the current course topic with their peers.

Moreover, as students utilize social technologies to share their thought processes and provide feedback to their learning community, they are able to help each other work through cognitive roadblocks, modify their perceptions, and negotiate their own views while simultaneously building a collaborative peer support system.

In addition, collaborative project-based learning environments help students develop critical thinking and problem solving skills—both essential skills for students to compete in a global knowledge-based society.

Web Resources

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Wednesday, May 10, 2006

YackPack: New Video Tutorials

Did you know you can easily add YackPack to your MySpace or hi5 social networking page? What makes YackPack so great is that it allows you to hear your friends voices! It's like audio email.

You can even create private YackPacks or create and then invite all your friends to join a public YackCasting group!

YackPack even has a whole bunch of new video tutorials to help you learn the ropes! So go check it out!

Web Resources

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Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Moodle + YackPack = MoodlePack


Today I received fantastic news from Timothy Takemoto about a new YackPack group he started especially for the Moodle community:

"Thank you very much indeed Derek for bringing our attention to this tool. I have created a Moodlers yackpack so that Moodlers can test YackPack more easily. All you have to do is click on the link... Please click on the link to join: Launch and join Moodlers YackPack."

Come join us and learn all the ways you can use YackPack in Moodle...And thanks to Tim for starting the MoodlePack!

Web Resources

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Sunday, April 16, 2006

Sprechen Sie Deutsch in YackPack!

Last week I introduced Martina Schubert, creator of the Let's Speak German podcast, to YackLearning.

In case you missed it, YackLearning.net is a new site developed by YackPack to highlight the use of audio messaging in education and training.

Well, Martina immediately saw the possibilities for using audio messaging to teach languages and implemented YackPack into Let's Speak German. That's fantastic!

When I took a look at her YackPack classroom, I was amazed to see how many of her students had signed up to lernen Sie Deutsch (how am I doing Maxie?) in YackPack!

Gute Arbeit Maxie!

Web Resources
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Saturday, April 15, 2006

Slide into Learning

Slide is a nifty little photo scrolling program that allows you to publish image-based content (via RSS or iPhoto 6) directly to a Slide Player. Teachers and students can use Slide to create and share presentations right on their desktop!



The great thing about Slide is that it knows how to play nice with other kids in the Web 2.0 sandbox. This means you can use Slide to create your own mash-up with other web-based services like Flickr or YackPack. Or even the "dreaded" MySpace (shhh, it's our secret).

For example, I created a Slide Show on the 1906 San Francisco earthquake using the Flickr tag "1906". Slide even provides you with the HTML snippet so you can embed your Slide Show into your web site or blog. Or a student could subscribe to the class Slide feed and view it on their desktop Slide Player. Pretty slick, eh?

Imagine the ways students and teachers can use Slide in the classroom! One key benefit of Slide is the ability for student's to subscribe directly to your RSS feed. This way you know exactly what content will be scrolling across their computer screen.

Slide also holds great potential to deliver on-demand learning opportunities for online learning communities or e-learning
. Slide and YackPack together may even prove to be a good alternative to a PowerPoint presentation.

So many possibilities!

Web Resources

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Thursday, April 13, 2006

YackPack:Grading & Narrative Feedback

We've already showed you how YackPack can be used to foster a collaborative, inclusive, and interactive learning environment. But did you know you can also use YackPack as a grading, narrative feedback, and assessment tool?

Yep. It's true.

And YackPack founder BJ Fogg has created a short movie to show you how he uses it for grading at Stanford University. So grab the popcorn and click here to find out how you too can grade with YackPack.

Web Resources

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Wednesday, April 12, 2006

YackPack:What you Yacking 'bout Willis?

My friend Gayle teaches writing, speech, and EFL/ESL classes at Kanto Gakuen University and Toyo University in Japan. Like other members of the Net Generation, her students love their mobile phones, blogging, and technology.

I sent Gayle a link to YackLearning.net and she thought YackPack was a fantastic learning tool to weave into her curriculum. However, after viewing the YackLearning movie, Gayle still had one burning question:

"Sent ya a recording/mssg. What do you call that? We said "ping" for AIMing...dish me the jargon. ;-)"

Good question Gayle. I wondered the same thing when I started Yacking. Thankfully, the uber cool team at YackPack took a break from the YackLab and put together a Yack-ictionary.

So, from the YackPack home office in Santa Rosa, here's the dish:

YackLingo Yack: An audio message
YackPack: The group with whom you Yack
Yacker: The voice behind the Yack
YackTrack: A series of yacks that play in sequence
PackHost: The Yacker hosting a pack
YackCast: The yacks you send out for all the world to hear
YackStack: A stack of messages
YackFAQ: Come on, you know what this is
YackCircle: A visual element, the circle you see on the screen

Hope that clears it up for you Gayle. Hopefully, the YackLingo terms won't get "lost in translation." Or is that yacklation? Oy!

Web Resources

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Saturday, April 08, 2006

eLearning Toolbox: YackPack Tutorial

Barry Jahn has prepared an excellent and easy-to-follow tutorial on how to use YackPack in the classroom. Yackpack is an amazing interpersonal podcasting tool designed by a team of programmers at Stanford University that takes no special software or expertise to use.

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Thursday, April 06, 2006

YackLearning: Learning via Interpersonal Podcasting

YackLearning.net is a powerful new way to teach and learn through audio messaging. Various Internet companies allow you to create and share audio messages. We recommend using YackPack, because it's private, it's easy to use, and it offers true interpersonal podcasting."

I'll be posting more about YackLearning soon, but I wanted BlendedEdu readers to be among the first to know about this fantastic interpersonal podcasting resource.

I'm also excited to announce that I have agreed to join the YackLearning Educational Advisory Board. I'm looking forward to working with BJ Fogg, YackPack, and the other advisory board members!

If you're using YackPack in an educational setting, drop me a line so I can share it with the YackLearning team. Who knows, we just may feature iyour pack on the YackLearning site!

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Thursday, March 16, 2006

YackPack: Let's do the Timeshift

Our friends over at YackPack have released a new and exciting feature: Audio Blogging for Groups. Over on his blog, YackPack founder BJ Fogg describes how the introduction of threaded audio allows you to have "timeshifted conversations."

Says the Fogg:

"When you click the play button, all the audio messages play in sequence inside a pack. You can jump forward or backward."
You can check out this nifty new feature by visiting the YackPack homepage. Just click the "play" button and you will see for yourself how this feature really bumps up the community cred factor on YackPack.

Right now the YackPack team is calling this new feature "Audio Forum." But they want to jazz that name up a bit. So if you have any good suggestions, you can leave those here. So far, the only name I've thought of is ChatterBoxYP.

Hmm. Perhaps not.

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Sunday, March 05, 2006

YackPack en Français!

eMob YackPack Screencast: Nos amis plus d'à l'eMob ont juste signalé un examen merveilleux de YackPack. Le NIC a également créé un cours d'instruction français de langue pour illustrer à quel point il facile est d'employer YackPack pour e-learning.

Allez vont voir ! Il est magnifique !

Our friends over at the French language e-learning blog eMob have just posted a wonderful review of YackPack. Nic has also created a French language tutorial screencast to illustrate how easy it is to use YackPack.

Great work eMob!

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Thursday, February 02, 2006

YackPack:"Emotionally Satisfying"

Brian Bergstein, Technology Writer for the Associated Press, has just written a review of YackPack. His verdict: YackPack Is More Emotionally Satisfying Than E-Mail, Voice Mail.

Smart man that Brian Bergstein, but then I've been bullish about YackPack from the get go!

Why does Brian love YackPack?: "Not only do tone and emotion come across, but I also felt freer to ramble in a natural, conversational way when I didn't have to type out my thoughts."

Spot on!

YackPack provides students with a platform to engage in social, collaborative, and active dialogue with their peers and instructor, without having to spend time trying to figure out how to make the technology work.

Moreover, because YackPack is so easy to use, it gives everyone in the learning community a chance to participate. No struggling to type quickly in a synchronous environment, or worrying about composing a post in an asynchronous forum.

The ability of students to exchange information and build relationships with each other in a "natural, conversational way" is what makes YackPack such an invaluable online educational tool.

And now it's even easier for you to use YackPack on your site--just pop the handy HTML snippet into your blog, web page, MSN or Yahoo! Group and presto: You're ready to start Yacking!

B.J. Fogg has designed a product that anyone--from the Net Generation to the Greatest Generation can use. But ultimately, YackPack isn't about technology, it's about relationships.


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Sunday, December 18, 2005

Yackpack Upgrades!

Have you tried YackPack yet? If not, here are two new reasons to give it a try:

  • The interface has been simplified. Now it's even easier to Yack with students, family, & friends!

  • Webmasters (and mortals) can embed YackPack on their own website. Just email the wiz kids over at YackPack and they will provide you with a partner ID and code. A few quick steps later and you're ready to go!


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Monday, December 05, 2005

Storytelling U, YackPack & You

"The experience of participating in a story, as teller or audience, is typically that of being caught up in it while it is being told...
Stories convey meaning about the social context and identity of the teller and audience. However, stories also have an effect on that identity and context." - John McLeod

Since the dawn of time, storytelling has been a part of the human experience. From early man's cave drawings to the tall tales of the American South, stories are a mirror which show us where we've been, and shape where we are going as a society.

Sharing our experiences has the power to build bridges of understanding between cultures, and provide generational continuity in the circle of life.

Storytelling is also a powerful learning and teaching tool. The story form model provides a context in which teachers can bridge cognitive roadblocks, scaffold knowledge, and actively engage students in social learning activity.

But storytelling, in many communities, is becoming a "lost art."

In partnership with professional storytelling coaches around the country, YackPack has launched Storytelling U to teach and promote the art of storytelling.
This is a wonderful (and free!) techno-constructivist opportunity for your students to learn the art of storytelling, engage in social activity, and learn how to use new technology.
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Sunday, November 06, 2005

YackPack: Social by Design

YackPack founder B.J. Fogg recently announced that San Jose's Tech Museum of Innovation will be utilizing YackPack as an educational tool in an upcoming exhibit on communication and innovation.

Here's an excerpt from his blog post:

"Now for the educational part . . . The kids will yack with other people inside their circle: a researcher, an inventor, and an engineer. We want the kids to see a pattern to innovation: Problem --> Invention --> Action.

At some point, the kids will listen to a message from a researcher, talking about finding a problem -- something that needs fixing. The kids will then (in theory), yack back to the researcher. Next, the kids will listen to an inventor talk about dreaming up solutions, and the kids yack back. Finally, the kids listen to an engineer talk about making things real."

At first glance, this seems like a pretty straightforward activity. But a closer look yields an example of how students benefit when learning activity takes place in a situated, authentic, and socially collaborative environment.

Let’s break down the key elements of this activity.

Social by Design: Situated Learning & Cognitive Apprenticeship

The situated learning theory argues that learning and knowledge acquisition takes place only when situated in a social and authentic context.

Ultimately this process –known as legitimate peripheral participation—moves the newcomer deeper into a community of practice leading them closer to acquiring the knowledge and skills required to be an expert.

Cognitive apprenticeship is an instructional design and learning theory wherein the instructor, through socialization, models the skill or task at hand for the student. Students may also receive guidance from their peers.

The role of the teacher is to help novices clear cognitive roadblocks by providing them with the resources needed to develop a better understanding of the topic. This process is called scaffolding.

Some of the most common cognitive roadblocks include: difficulty grasping theoretical concepts, unfamiliar terminology, or information presented in an abstract context.

In an effort to guide students around these roadblocks, an instructor would provide a scaffold consisting of resources, information broken into manageable chunks, or placed in a contextual framework.

The cognitive apprenticeship process requires students to take an active role in their own learning, creates a student-centered learning approach, and allows students to be a co-participant in their learning.

Ultimately the student becomes an expert who no longer needs the scaffolding. In turn, they will have a better understanding of potential roadblocks and are now equipped to guide others through the process.

Putting it All Together

In the YackPack museum activity, students will form a community of practice consisting of their peers, and several experts. Based on their existing knowledge, students will identify an issue and then Yack with the experts (and peers) on ways to solve the problem.

Since the students have been to the Tech Museum of Innovation the topic will be authentic and situated in a contextual framework. Moreover, the experts will be available to create scaffolding and clear cognitive roadblocks related to the topic.

Get Yacking!

Why not use YackPack and try something similar in your own classroom?

After a field trip to a local museum, arboretum, historical monument, or zoo break students into groups and have them reflect on their experience. Have them write down (or blog!) some questions or issues related to their field trip.

Then create a YackPack and invite an “expert” to answer the student’s questions. The “expert” can be someone from the education department at the museum, or a professor from a local university.

Or take a virtual tour of a museum located on the other side of the world! Combine the virtual tour with a group project, foreign language skills, or other skill set, and then invite an expert (see above!) to join your class in a YackPack discussion.

These YackPack-based learning activities provide students with opportunities to collaborate with their peers, learn from experts, use technology in a constructivist manner, and utilize information set in an authentic context.

So, what are you waiting for? Get Yacking!

Web Resources

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Monday, October 24, 2005

YackPack: The Social Life of Speech


YackPack is a new social software product that allows users to record and send audio messages to friends inside privately formed groups.

While there are other products that provide avenues for collaboration over the web—most notably message boards, email, and instant messaging—YackPack is among the first products to allow users to post asynchronous voice messages.

YackPack was developed by B.J. Fogg, a psychologist well known for his study of computers as persuasive technology, and Director of the Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab.


Social Voice Messaging

The ability to interject voice into an online space is important because it provides opportunities for members of a community to convey the expression, emotion, and intimacy embedded in human speech.

These audio emails or voice messages also provide a way for members of a community to develop social bonds, place information in a situated context, and support constructivist learning environments.

And as we have discussed before, the exchange of information, learning, and development of a community of practice is largely the product of social exchange.


YackPack U

So what are the educational applications?

  • Many of the audio-based educational applications we have discussed for the iPod can easily translate to a YackPack group.

  • The ability to integrate human speech into the curriculum becomes even more important in pure eLearning context where students and teachers don’t meet in a face-to-face setting.

  • A language teacher can YackCast (verb conjugation, dialogue, etc) to an entire class. In turn, the students can respond to the teacher via a YackPack audio message.

  • Teachers can use YackPack to provide feedback on the proper use of accents, pronunciation, or other nuances the student would be hard pressed to learn from a textbook.

  • Students can form a YackPack to work on group or collaborative projects. Since each member of the group has their picture and profile in the group “people cloud,” it helps students build a unified team, even though they may be separated by geography.

  • Teachers can use YackPack to provide encouragement and/or narrative feedback to online learning students. Whether it’s providing feedback on curriculum, or technical support, hearing the voice of the instructor may contribute to student support, self-regulation, and retention.

  • The YackPack website has an example of a teacher who uses YackPack to teach his online students how read poetry. And in turn, the students read their poem and YackCast it back to their teacher and peers.

  • YackPack can provide audio-based learning and collaboration opportunities for students with multiple intelligences, physical, cognitive, or other issues which might preclude them from participation in a traditional learning community.

YackPack: A Sure Winner

Dr. Fogg and the rest of the YackPack team have developed an impressive product, one that users will find many applications for both in and out of the online classroom.

The clean, easy-to-use interface will allow users to jump in and begin sending audio messages, without struggling to figure out how to use the technology. The combination of textual, visual, and auditory elements makes YackPack a powerful learning tool in online education.

As more people begin using YackPack, it will be interesting to see the ways in which people utilize the technology to meet their needs. Will people use YackPack on web-enabled mobile devices? Will a global community or network of YackCasters exchange ideas, hacks, and information?

Indeed, the future looks bright for YackPack. And who knows, in a few months we might be buzzing about the Yackosphere


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