Archive for February, 2008

Conferences in the News (Feb. 4-10, 2008)

AUDIO - Learning Technologies 2008: a look at e-learning
John Charlton visits the Learning Technologies conference and exhibition at London Olympia and talks to delegates about the effect new technologies are having on their training provision. — Personnel Today

Papers Requested for GCDC 08
Europe’s GC Developers Conference is looking for professionals from various industries to submit their proposals for their Summer 2008 conference. Main topics include online games and casual games. — Game Daily

Publishers in the News (Feb. 4-10, 2008)

McGraw-Hill Higher Education Publishes Text on Innovative Electronic Health Records System
Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems, used by physicians’ offices in ambulatory care settings, make patient history readily available in those critical moments. McGraw-Hill Higher Education has published a new textbook, Hamilton/Electronic Health Records, to educate medical personnel on these revolutionary systems. As part of this initiative, McGraw-Hill has partnered with Spring Medical Systems, the creator of the SpringCharts EHR system, to provide fully functional demo software to all students, offering a unique hands-on patient care learning experience. — CNN

Pearson and Family Education Network Launch Math Education Website for Parents
Each year, thousands of schools across the nation are transitioning to the research-based National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant Math programs - a different method of teaching and learning mathematics. To help parents understand the inquiry-based approach to developing the mathematical thinking skills that are at the core of the NSF-funded programs, Pearson School educational publishers and the Family Education Network today announced the launch of www.MathSupportforParents.com. — Fox Business

Westlaw Legal Calendaring Gives Litigators a Clear View of Key Trial Dates and Updates
Thomson West announced a powerful new online tool to give litigators an edge in managing critical trial dates and filing logistics: Westlaw Legal Calendaring. Westlaw Legal Calendaring is the first Web-based rules calendaring system that allows you to recalculate deadlines. It automatically calculates litigation dates from the first complaint filed through the final appeal, and tracks every event change requiring recalculation along the way, helping litigators and support staff stay abreast of dates and updates throughout a trial. — Media Newswire


Publications International ‘Lights Up’ Children’s Imaginations With New Features Providing Fun, Educational Reading Activities
Publications International, Ltd. (PI) will add major lighted elements to its electronic soundbooks for the first time ever with three new formats set to debut during the American International Toy Fair in New York City, February 17-20, 2008. PI is the world’s largest publisher of children’s interactive books. — PR Newswire

Awards in the News (Feb. 4-10, 2008)

K12 Founder’s Award Honors Top-Performing Online School Teachers
K12 Inc. . Thirty-two of the nation’s best and brightest online school teachers gathered this week at the K12 headquarters in Herndon, VA, to receive the first annual K12 Founder’s Award. This award recognizes teachers for their hard work and dedication, and for exemplifying the K12 values of innovation, integrity, aggressive achievement, courage, and a passion for helping students unleash their xPotential. — CNN

Web 2.0 Mashup Projects: A Review

Susan Smith Nash, Ph.D.

Although dynamic, integrated web applications (often called “mashups”) are increasing in number and popularity, very few manuals or guides exist that take the user step-by-step through the process of creating them. PHP Web 2.0 Mashup Projects, by Shu-Wai Chow, and published by Packt Publishing (http://www.packtpub.com), provides valuable step-by-step instructions. With this book, uses will have strategies for using the customizable homepage platforms such as iGoogle and MyYahoo, which allow users to take advantage of the client-side Javascript scripting language and the always-growing list of “gadgets,” which are applications that retrieve information from a database and then display them in the central site. It could also enable a user to build gadgets that could attract venture capital if they could form the basis of a viable business.


The term, “mashup” can be misleading. After all, ordinary web users who copy and paste code into their blog templates in order to add search tools, questionnaires, polls, maps, and links to products in order to provide functionality and entertainment for their visitors may not realize they are creating mashups. They may not have any idea that the functional chunks of code they’re importing can be called “gadgets” or “widgets” and that the dynamic links to books and products illustrate a “long tail” approach to marketing.

What those web users would acknowledge is that they appreciate how exciting it is to be able to generate your own dynamic web applications and to put them on a single page. They would love to be able to do more. For those users, Mashup Projects is ideal.

PHP Web 2.0 Mashup Projects starts from the beginning and defines a mashup as an application that allows users to “remotely consume services like Google Maps, Flickr, Amazon, YouTube, MSN Search, Yahoo!, Last.fm, and the Internet UPC database, not to mention the California Highway Patrol Traffic data” (preface) and more. The author acknowledges that many users will not really want to have to write PHP code, nor will they necessarily have server-side privileges.

Typical dynamic, integrated web applications / mashups fall into a few well-established catagories:

Maps
Social Networks
Photographs
Demographics
Financial Information
E-Commerce
Ads
Calendar
Dictionaries
Language Translation

Mashup Projects explains which platforms enable users to bring together already written scripts in order to have the functionality of a mashup. Examples include iGoogle, MyYahoo, amazon, MySpace and others. This is a kind of mashup “lite” since the user will not actually be writing any scripts to create a unique gadget, or to modify an existing gadget.

Mashup Projects begins with Amazon, one of the friendliest databases around, which actively encourages individuals to dynamically retrieve information in order to sell it. Chapter 2 shows the user how to work with an XML-RPC structure, which forms the core of the dynamic retrieval function of mashups. The request and retrieval functions are clearly details. In addition, the chapter discusses how to use other types of requests, including REST.Readers will be able to practice projects in by following the Chow’s step-by-step instructions. The user can make his or her own search engine using PHP SOAP, and then can build his or her own Video Jukebox. The process is clear and it moves from the simple to the complex, starting with writing the application and then “mashing up.”

Chapter 5 shows the user how to create a mashup using public safety data and maps to predict traffic snarls and situations. Chow very responsibly discusses the ethical issues involved in a “screen scrape” and that one should always seek approval to pull data from that is displayed on one’s website and importing it into one’s own site.

Chapter 6 shows how to integrate maps and image repositories (Google maps and Flickr). Chow builds the mashup around data on the London Tube.

For the more sophisticated web user and web programmer with experience with servers, creating mashups can be one of the most satisfying activities around. It allows one to demonstrate very creative thinking by being able to bring together unrelated clusters of information — unrelated databases, unrelated web applications - and to uncover really amazing and unique aspects. For example, shmapplets.com (http://www.shmapplets.com) brings together city maps, photographs, cultural information, and personal information to create virtual tours. As an example of a mashup that has been created by a user and made available for the public free of charge, schmapplet is pretty typical. It’s a great application, but it has a number of rough edges and limitations, which I found when I started to create my own schmapplet of Oklahoma City: http://www.schmap.com/published/beyondutopia/1267/

However, very effective mashups exist, with and without glitches, and they provide the user with very valuable information. There are a few very important considerations, which should be mentioned.

First, there are ethical considerations in developing some mashups. Chow discusses issues involved in “screen scraping” and he touches on the questions one should ask oneself when putting together information that could be confidential or lead to security and/or privacy breaches.

Second, there are important data quality issues that must be addressed. The mashups are only as good as the information that is retrieved. How do you know that the information is valid? Are important business decisions being made on the basis of the information retrieved in a mashup? Some serious errors could be made if the maps are out of date, the customer reviews are biased (or completely inaccurate), and other information is flawed.

Caution should be used when creating mashups. Good planning is of paramount importance. Shu-Wai Chow’s PHP Web 2.0 Mashup Projects (Packt Publishing 2007) is a valuable tool.

(first appeared in a slightly different form on elearningqueen.com. posted by susan)

DyKnow Software Enhances Learning and Minimizes Electronic Distraction for the 21st Century student in Tablet PC Initiative

Submitted by Katie Wolanin

DyKnow Software Used to Supplement Tablet PC 1:1 Initiative

The Presidential Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology has repeatedly encouraged public, private and higher education institutions to assimilate computer-based technology into learning environments. With technologies being integrated into the classroom, educators are concerned about the impact on students. Particularly concerning is the introduction of electronic distraction to the learning environment.

Bishop Hartley High School, a private Catholic school located in Columbus, Ohio, realized the importance of integrating technology and became a pioneer in one-to-one computing.. The school started one of the first one-to-one Tablet PC programs in the nation, placing a computer in the hands of every junior and senior at the school. Students have the computer 24 hours a day, seven days a week for true anytime, anywhere access.

Students carry their Tablet PC with them between home and school where they are free to use their computers as they prefer; however, for some, that freedom became a problem during class. As teachers at Bishop Hartley began to integrate the technology into their lesson plans, they had no way to know if students were working on the lesson, surfing the Internet, or engaging in some other off-task behavior during class.

The teachers appreciated the added value of the Tablet initiative, but were hesitant to take full advantage of the technology because of electronic distractions.

Kenneth Collura, Director of Communication and Instructional Technologies for the Dioceses of Columbus, implemented the Tablet PC program and wanted it to effectively enhance teaching and learning in the classrooms of Bishop Hartley. He recognized the need to provide teachers with a solution to eliminate electronic distraction so they could take full advantage of the technology.

Collura began to focus on software applications that would complement their one-to-one initiative. While researching software, Collura saw a demonstration of DyKnow Monitor®, a software system enabling teachers to monitor and control student computers, ensuring student accountability. While viewing the demonstration of DyKnow Monitor, Collura was introduced to DyKnow Vision, a collaborative note taking application used to improve the learning environment.

Collura was drawn to the DyKnow software applications because of their ability to overcome electronic distractions while creating a more personalized learning experience and utilizing Bishop Hartley’s wireless environment. DyKnow Monitor became the first solution Collura implemented in order to keep students focused during class time.

Foreign language teacher Stephanie Howe believed DyKnow Monitor made a noticeable difference in her class. The thumbnail views of student screens gives her peace of mind knowing that students are participating class and staying on-task. After implementing the software Howe noticed more accountability among students and overall improvement in students’ grades.

Once Bishop Hartley began using DyKnow Monitor, Collura found that teachers appreciated knowing the students were using their computers for educational purposes. He was encouraged by their enthusiasm and decided to focus on the need to deliver improved individualized learning.

“In high school, where students take seven 45-minute long classes per day, each moment of instruction is valuable,” Collura explains. “We needed a way to make every minute of education personalized for each student.”

Collura’s solution was the introduction of DyKnow Vision to his faculty. With this application, the teacher’s prepared or spontaneous class notes are transmitted onto each student’s computer screen. Students can easily add their individualized annotations, creating an electronic notebook. DyKnow Vision allows teachers to insert content from other applications, poll students and share information interactively, as well as many additional capabilities.

Collura realized a need to reach students with various learning styles, including tactile, visual and auditory learners. With DyKnow Vision, teachers can embed a video from the Internet into the electronic notes to reach visual and auditory learners, while tactile learners can use the Tablet PC pen to add notes to the teacher’s lesson. Students can use the different DyKnow Vision tools to get the best results for them individually – and all the various learning tools are captured in one personalized electronic notebook.

Collura did not require teachers to use the software, but he noticed that they were seeing positive results and were using it in class with increasing frequency. Each semester more teachers and students requested to use the software in their classes; DyKnow Vision and DyKnow Monitor were enhancing the learning experience for teachers and students.

Howe noticed that DyKnow helped slower writers capture all the notes. She also observed that students appreciate having a complete and accurate copy of her notes from which to study, making them more confident when taking exams.

Based on positive student and teacher feedback, Collura decided to purchase DyKnow Vision for all participants in the one-to-one computing program at Bishop Hartley. Today over 300 students have access to the software in all of their classes.

Students at Bishop Hartley enjoy using DyKnow Vision and their enthusiasm for learning has increased. Parents have also noticed a difference. In fact, students are doing so well academically that parents are concerned about how their children will perform at college without a Tablet PC and DyKnow software. Collura eases their worries by reassuring them that teachers using DyKnow Vision are also training students how to take notes and improve critical thinking skills.

The successful implementation of DyKnow software at Bishop Hartley prompted Collura to host several workshops allowing educators from around the country to experience their program hands-on. He notes that every school that has attended a workshop has left impressed by the impact DyKnow software is having on teaching and learning in the classroom.

Collura plans to expand the one-to-one computing program throughout the 55-school Dioceses, and he hopes to outfit these schools with DyKnow Vision and DyKnow Monitor.

He also recognizes the need to show the quantifiable results of using DyKnow Vision and Monitor in the classroom. Collura plans on conducting a related study of this technology at Bishop Hartley to obtain meaningful data that further supports the power of the applications with high school students.

“DyKnow Vision and DyKnow Monitor are not only quality technology products; they have a solid education foundation that makes a difference in the classroom. The company’s commitment to the integration of teaching and technology has helped validate the one-to-one computer model for us,” he said. “It would be a dream to have DyKnow software on a computer for each student in our schools.”

 To learn more about DyKnow, check out the official site HERE.

Click HERE for a cool video related to this case study.

Online Education in the News (Jan. 28-Feb. 3, 2008)

Commentary: Bill Gates
In this article and slide show, Bill Gates explains his vision on global education. At the heart is the problem of scale: of finding ways to make high-quality educational resources reach not just a handful of students in a single classroom but hundreds of millions of students around the globe. He sees technologies as the answer to this dilemma, and cites MIT’s OpenCourseware Initiative as a good example. — Globe and Mail

Social Technology As a New Medium in the Classroom
New modes of everyday communication-textual, visual, audio and video-are already part of almost every high school and college student’s social life. But can such social networking principles be effective in an educational setting? Read about how one teacher sees potential applications of social technology in the classroom. — Red Orbit

Students who fail class can take online alternative to pass
In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, students who have failed a core course they need to graduate at the district’s four high schools have been piloting a Web-based system to catch up. Juniors or seniors who cannot retake the failed course may use the PLATO system, granted they can read at least a sixth-grade level and their parents agree. — Gazette Online IA

IT News (Jan. 28-Feb. 3, 2008)

OPM offers cultural training online
Federal employees can now go online to learn more about American Indian tribes and culture thanks to a new e-learning course. Posted on the Office of Personnel Management’s GoLearn.gov, the course includes details about tribal governments in addition to cultural and historical facts. — Federal Computer Week

Which Technologies Will Shape Education in 2008?
Mobile broadband, collaborative Web technologies, and mashups will all significantly impact education over the next five years, along with “grassroots” video, collective intelligence, and “social operating systems.” This according to a new report released this week by the New Media Consortium and the Educause Learning Initiative, the 2008 Horizon Report. In the near term–that is, in the timeframe of about a year or less–the technologies that will have a significant impact on education include grassroots video and collaborative Web technologies. In the mid-term, mobile broadband and data mashups will make their mark on education. Mashups, according to the report, will largely impact the way education institutions represent information. — Campus Technology

Could Amazon and Audible Rewrite the Rules of Publishing?
Steve Jobs said earlier this month that Amazon’s Kindle e-book reader was dead on arrival, since Americans have largely abandoned reading. Now Amazon wants the naysayers like Mr. Jobs to listen up –- literally. it said that it had agreed to buy Audible, the Web’s largest provider of downloadable audiobooks, for $300 million. Amazon isn’t saying much about what it will do with the company, but bringing audiobooks directly to its Web site and to the Kindle is the obvious first step. — New York Times Bits Blog

Pilot Of UK Government’s Largest E-learning Programme Leads To Department-wide Deployment Of Eedo’s LCMS
Eedo Knowledgeware today announced that the Department for Work & Pensions (DWP) is standardising on ForceTen(TM), Eedo’s learning content management system (LCMS). The decision follows the largest e-learning pilot programme within the UK government, at Jobcentre Plus. The initiative is part of the HR Modernisation Programme, designed to equip employees with the knowledge they need to realise their full potential and meet the government’s business goals. — ABN Newswire

Games in the News (Jan. 28-Feb. 3, 2008)

Tabula Digita’s Game-Based Algebra Software to Be Used in Three Palm Beach County Middle Schools
Being able to captivate students so much that they will forget that they are learning — but not forget what they have learned — is no easy task. But educators in Palm Beach County School District have found a solution that will do just that while teaching complex mathematical concepts. The answer? Educational video games from Tabula Digita’s DimensionM™ series. — Red Orbit

Kids Learn Math and Science through Online Videos, Interactive Tutorials, and Music
When kids are stuck on a homework question, where do they turn? Now they can get help finding the answers with Scholastic StudyJams!(TM) an online learning experience for kids in grades 3-6 that takes the most challenging math and science topics and explains them through animated videos, Karaoke songs, interactive tutorials, quizzes and more. — Melodika.net

Virtual Workplaces in the Classroom
Today’s business students have grown up with computer-based simulations. So it’s only natural that business simulations are growing in popularity in business school programs—and threatening the once unassailable dominance of the case study. — Business Week

Research in the News (Jan. 28-Feb. 3, 2008)

Surveying Higher Education About Online Marketing
At the eduWeb Conference, Hollis Thomases and team conducted a survey about online marketing plans and challenges for higher education. The majority of respondents (66.7 percent) target their online marketing efforts toward undergraduates. This article explains the survey results. — Web Ad.vantage

Programs in the News (Jan. 28-Feb. 3, 2008)

Palm donates smart phones to autistic people
Palm Canada Inc. has donated 100 new handheld devices to the Geneva Centre for autism to use as part of their e-learning pliot program. The Geneva Centre said the smartphones are a perfect fit for the program’s participants as they promote visual-learning and communication in individuals who suffer from the spectrum disorder. — IT World Canada

Honda uses e-learning for 40K
Honda Motor Europe is going to provide its 40,000 employees, distributors and dealers with a combination of e-learning and classroom-based training about its company. The manufacturer will use CERTPOINT’s virtual learning system (VLS) multi-lingual software as the basis for knowledge and sharing designed to create “brand ambassadors”. — British Computer Society

Rwanda: Rwanda Chosen for Global Pilot Education Initiative
Rwanda has been chosen for a world pilot programme, which will enhance the country’s National Education Plan. Rwanda’s selection for the programme, ‘Education for All Fast Track Initiative (FTI)’, was announced over the weekend at the ongoing World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. — All Africa

Tests of Tech Literacy Still Not Widespread Despite NCLB Goals
The No Child Left Behind Act made it a national goal for all 8th graders to be technologically literate. Learning.com has sold hundreds of thousands of its middle school version of TechLiteracy Assessment since the test was launched in 2005. The Educational Testing Service, administers the SAT, has produced an online version of a tech-literacy assessment called iSkills that is appropriate for high school seniors and college freshmen, and another version for college juniors. This article explains technological literacy and looks at trends in the U.S. — Education Week News

Few 5th-, 8th-graders reach advanced science level in exams
Measuring student achievement in science is a requirement of the federal No Child Left Behind Act, but it is not a measurement of adequate yearly progress under the act’s guidelines. A relatively low number of fifth- and eighth-graders scored at the highest level of the science portion of the Maryland Assessments, but school officials are optimistic that scores will rise as students become more familiar with the test. — Baltimore Sun

eLearners.com and Leading Online Colleges Join Forces
eLearners.com, a web resource of EducationDynamics, today announced that it is partnering with three online colleges and universities to grant at least $2 million in full-ride scholarships to working moms as part of a new campaign, “Project Working Mom: Putting Education to Work”. The first round of scholarships will be granted around Mother’s Day and eLearners.com will continue to grow the scholarship pool and distribute the remaining scholarships throughout the year.  — PR Web

Goiit.com Launched to Guide Students for Joint Entrance Examinations
India-based company Vriti Education Pvt Ltd has launched Goiit.com, an online education portal which provides a platform where students or engineering aspirants can prepare for Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) – the entrance exams for IITs as well as other competitive engineering entrance exams such as AIEEE, BITSAT, WBJEE, etc. — PR.com

Vantage Learning and Walden University Work Together to Further the Education of Teachers Worldwide
K-12 teachers can now choose from more than 25 individual Web-based graduate courses offered by Walden University through Vantage Learning’s online store located at www.VantageOnlineStore.com. Walden’s individual graduate courses, which are designed by teachers for teachers, combine educational theory with practical strategies that can be applied in the classroom immediately. Walden courses are currently available in the following topic areas in Vantage Learning’s online store: classroom management, instructional strategies and assessment, motivation, reading and literacy, and technology. — Ad-Hoc News