Friday, June 20, 2008
Thing23
This has been quite a journey and I feel like I've become embedded into one of the StarTrek warp-speed scenes. I've advanced lightyears in a matter of hours (sometimes minutes, sometimes DAYS:-)
And I'm so anxious to USE this stuff, to SHARE it with others, to GO FURTHER.
I loved the tutorials, especially those done by CommonCraft's LeeLefever and his flying fingers :-)
The final video by Michael Wesch was eye-opening and inspirational. Great conclusion to this experience.
Thank you, RESA coordinators, for all of your efforts to make this interesting, educational, enlightening, uplifting, rigorous, introspective, and personal!
as you can see from my time-stamp on this posting, I've almost pulled an all-nighter! It's been a few years since that has happened -- but THAT is how 23Things has pulled me in. I am determined to complete it within the time constraints. Next, I'll absorb it and make it truly my own, but in my own time frame... :-)
and again, thank you!!!!
Thing22: getting 'round the YouTube Conundrum
I guess if I were reallllllly desperate to show something to my students or fellow-teachers from YouTube, Zamzar provides the answer.
[sudden scarey thought: could Zamzar be a distant relative of Zangle perhaps?]
Day2 for Thing22: I've tried out Zamzar and it actually took only ten minutes for the first conversion to reach my email, fifteen minutes for the second, and less than ten for the third. HUZZZAHHHH!!! but I imagine on a busy day, the wait-time would be much much longer as the tutorial in 23Things warned us about.
This was saved as a wvm. I know it opens on my computer but a clip downloaded from Zamzar as a flv version would not open directly from the download while on my computer. So I'll play the scientist and experiment by adding it here to see if it opens while in Blogger:
Thing21: Tubin'
I've seen numerous YouTube productions over the past few years. My favorite is Women in Art and that's where I've left my comment, the same one that I've had with the same question I've been asking with no answers yet. We'll see if THIS time I get an answer to my query about HOW it was created, now that I'm an official member of YouTube...
This embedded video begs another question: Is it ART?
What do you think?
Thing20: It's all coming together now
Thing19: del.icio.us is exactly that!
I've created an account in the name of artsmartone and have started furnishing my space there with 87 links, several of which are public, with more on the way. I need to develop more tags for them to make them more specific and easier to find, but for now, art will have to cover it.
Again, this is something that can make team teaching, collaborative teaching, student accountability, and just plain old daily life so much more well-rounded (because others can fill in the gaps with websites that you haven't yet tripped over) organized and easily accessed (because of the tagging)!!!! I'm thrilled to know about it now and can't wait to share it with my fellow-teachers, friends, and others.
Thing18: Tagging Intro
I am so glad that I decided to NOT yet do my bookmark-make-over in Trailfire yet!!!!
Delicious is awaiting me instead!!!!
My only concern at this point is how easily will I create tags that a/I remember and b/are "common" enough to be user-friendly not only to myself but "others" in that social community that is being promoted here?
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Thing17: Visual and Creative Thinking SlideShow
Visual and Creative Thinking:What We Learned From Peter Pan and Willy Wonka
From: themoleskin, 6 months ago
Presentation on Visual and Creative Thinking. The presentation explores how professional in all fields can apply creative and visual thinking skills to their work as well as why people ignore the talents that made them naturally creative as children. He will discuss the myths that people hold about creativity, why they exist and how you can overcome them.
SlideShare Link
Thing17: Slideshare
However, I did post one of the most pertinent slideshows that I discovered to my blogsite here and now, begrudgingly (because I really DO want to view more of these slideshows!), I shall continue on with the next Thing.
Thing16: More Toys (aka Online Productivity Tools)
I selected Trailfire since I've been collecting artsy websites forEVER and this promised to be something that I could finally call "home" for my collection. It's going to take some time to get them switched over and I'm running up against the deadline of getting all 23Things completed, so the organizational side of this will be put on hold for a bit. Thing15 Google Docs Rocks
Thing14 Final Thoughts on Podcasting
However, I believe that my role in podcasting will be that of consumer and sharer. There is so much I already have to pack into my one semester with each batch of my students and this podcasting is something that I don't think will fit that time frame. HOWEVER, the video production teacher and the drama and speech teacher might be the ones I need to share my new-found podcast motherlode with and that IS something I can fit into my schedule :-)
As for obstacles I anticipate in my district, the only thing that comes to mind is the filter/blocking issue. Other than that, it's a great curriculum strengthener and an awesome PR builder, so I can't imagine finding any folks in the front offices that would be anything but supportive and thrilled if staff and students jumped on board with this.
Thing13 My search is on for art podcasts
SECOND hit! another treasure is discovered: Academic Aesthetic http://www.epnweb.org/index.php?request_id=34&openpod=13#anchor13 a keeper. I've added it to my Bloglines RSS list.
My trip to Podcast Alley resulted in several potential possibilities. But time time time is not my friend so I'm inserting the link here to visit/explore more later http://www.podcastalley.com/search.php?searchterm=visual+art
Yahoo gave me only three options and the one I clicked on gave me a yahoo warning that it might be trouble, so I didn't continue to check it out.
So the results of my searching for podcasts that I can use in my classroom reveal that I do have many many options and I think that I'm going to turn this into a road-rally-in-cyberspace assignment for my students this coming fall. And I'm finally eager to visit Bloglines! I want to read more from that RSS link to the Academic Aesthetic. I feel there's a kindred spirit there...
Thing12 Podcast Intro
Background for folks who may be reading my blog and might be as unfamiliar with the term as I was: As explained in 23Things, the word podcast comes from a combination of the words iPod and broadcast. And as this hootenanney [60's-talk] clip, You Don't Need an iPod, explains, it is quite a common and easily accessible method of communication nowadays: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpciLIA0Kn4
Probably more appealing to the current batch of high school students that I teach would be this Ninja version of quickly explaining "podcast": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEmss2lg-ug
Listening to the honors chemistry podcast commercials triggered a thought that I could have my basic design students create infomercials about color harmonies... verbalizing concepts that are typically grasped by visual representation would be challenging but the delivery format would make that challenge fun to implement.
Several podcasts I tried to visit didn't cooperate in downloading/uploading... (I believe it's my quicktime, not their podcast.)
Speaking of what I believe, one site for podcasting, Digital Voices, has a space dedicated to This I Believe. I found that it was well-worth the search to get here and the time to listen as 46 high school students speak clearly and powerfully about what they believe about their life, their country, their society, etc. https://digitalvoices.wikispaces.com/space/filelist
The National Gallery of Art has a variety of podcasts available as well as rss feeds: http://www.nga.gov/podcasts/index.shtm
So my initial skepticism over podcasting having any relevance to what I teach is definitely being pushed aside as possibilities and potential become increasingly more promising...
Thing11 PS
So all's well that ends well in All Things Wiki Thing11.
I'm anxious to get my kids started on those wiki topics. Emailing them an invitation to begin it now over summer break might be just the nudge they need to get started on their summer drawing assignments... :-)
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Thing11 All Things Wiki
http://icandrawstickmenquotesart.wikispaces.com/ -- and I played with font and style and color and even added a couple hyperlinks.
But the second one: http://artsmartone.wikispaces.com/ is giving me a bit of a headache... Ads are appearing despite the fact that I checked in as an educational K-12 space. So now I need to backtrack and untangle it. But in the meantime, I'm putting in a rough draft of what I'm entering here for Thing11's reflections.
Wikis hold the promise of focused discussion/input from a select few or the entire world, depending on how the organizer sets its parameters. Blogging is more like a dear-diary thing (said with all due respect to those whose blogs are places of highly intelligent conceptualization and far-reaching scope.)
I wish wikis had come into my life SOOOO much sooner to facilitate a wide variety of event-planning and lesson-enrichment. But better late than never, eh?
