You can learn more about Zerolandfill at their website or with the link to a podcast I produced to try and share the information with others. The Artist Review Today podcast is no longer in production and I have edited the podcast to focus strictly on Zerolandfill.
Artist Review Today’s Podcast on Zerolandfill.net
ARTShow14Zerolandfillnet
Please pass this information on.
Zerolandfill is a great group that collects materials and prevents it from going directly into land fills. These materials can be of great assistance to teachers, artists, and handmen. There is no cost to collect the materials, you have to come and see what has been collected.
]]>I have been following the Itouch and Ipad with a lot of interest along with other mobile devices for the last year and think it is time to create a blog based upon the 21st Cent. Tool Kit concepts I proposed in the following article: http://markquinn.net/blog5/2009/06/03/the-classroom-communication-tool-kit-for-21st-century-learners/
I have had a lot of discussion with teacher over the last year concerning the need for a change in the models of professional development concerning technology. I am planning on launching http://markquinn.net/21st-centurytoolkit/ to support this cause over the next few weeks. I will be sharing apps and other reviews at this address from this point forward and maintain this blog dealing with only podcasting.
I hope you will join me at the new blog and continue to contribute ideas for us all to become stronger in the classroom.
]]>Soluto runs in the background and looks at your boot process on your PC. Once that has been done, the program begins to offer suggestions on ways to speed up your process. What I really like about the program is that you do not have to be an expert to understand it. It offers suggestions in a “no brainer”, “advanced” and “you can not remove that” type of approach to help you tweek your boot process. Point and click to what you want to tweek and its done.
The program is for Windows only.
Check out the video to learn more:
The introduction of the website for Moe’s Notes states:
Moe’s Notes is a multimedia note recorder, editor and organizer for creative and/or busy people. You can save audio, an image or video, text, tags, and GPS coordinates in each note. You can edit, sort and search for notes in various ways, then email them or upload them to Facebook.
The Iphone is simply the most compact all in one multi-media communication tool there is on the market at this point. No other device allows you to create media in both an audio and/or visual manner and share it with others as quickly as an Iphone with approporiate applications. What has been lacking is the coordination of that media into a complete package where text, audio and visual could be combined into a complete message for communication and/or note taking. Moe’s Notes answers that need with a simple interface and an astonishing depth of editing power for an app that is .99 cents.
I agree that for busy people, this application can create a tool for notes and reference that is top shelf for the ability to document ideas and then sort and share them with others. I do think that the publisher is missing a large market with tool, mainly because hardware has not been developed for the educational market to allow this tool enterence into the modren classroom.
I have written a series of articles entitled the 21st Cent. Tool Kit and discussed the use of social media and hand held devices in the classroom. (http://markquinn.net/blog5/2009/06/18/considerations-for-developing-the-21st-century-tool-kit-in-the-classroom/) The discussion of the mobile device and it’s growing use in society has to begin to show in the educational classroom.
At the time I wrote that post, I was not aware of anyone using mobiles in the classroom. Recently, I have learned of several schools have begun to experiement with cellphones in the classroom where the students have a present amount of time and texts to allow communication with learning groups and teachers on demand. They also have access to websites that have flash animations that will demonstrate a problem like the one they are dealing with on demand. Early results show that students are improving scores on their standardized tests upwards of 30% in Math.
The main factor in rolling out this on a larger scale appears to be just money; The cost per handset and the fact that many sources of funding directly prohibit giving the student personal possession of the device at all times. The simple fact is that this ideas is still in early development and as always early adopters pay a cost to play in that area; but Moe’s Notes is an application that should be on a short list of applications to be included when this technology becomes more common.
I personally believe that may come soon than expected. I believe the second generation Ipad will develop a camera and then this will allow the hardware changes to invite this application into the classroom.
Much of the discussion about adoption of technology centers around thinking that is 20th centuary in its focus. Our students have evolved in the 21st centuary and are adopting these tools as a seemless part of their lifestyle. As discussions continue on how to reach our students, perhaps we should consider HOW they prefer to interface, interact and process information and meet them on the field they are already using.
]]>I had been pricing different video recorders and wondered if Flip had responded to the educational market by offering and educational discount. I am happy to report that they have!!
Flip has an offer to allow 2 for 1 offers to classroom teachers. (maximum of 4 units) You can find the details to the offer here: http://www.theflip.com/en-us/buy/educators.aspx
Using Flip Video cameras you can add a lot of varations to online presentations. Discussions in the Podcast Academy include the use of video in podcasts to assist students with learning content. Students are expressing to me that it helps them learn the content and they enjoy it more than using just a text based presentation alone.
I have enclosed one example of a learning station I created several years ago for introductions of students to content and also incorporations of review materials all into one presentation. Perhaps this may give you some ideas on using video in your own classroom.
Check it out, it is a good starting point to find things if you are new to your IPOD.
]]>I found a post on the blog Lifehacker this morning that may just be the solution to the situation. http://cutmp3.net/ allows you to quickly upload and mp3 file and trim its starting and ending points and then save it back to your computer with a file name of your choice.
The interface is simple and quick. There are no effects or other “fancy” adjustments, so correction with this tool is not really possible. It may serve as a great tool to allow primary grades to do their own editing and save a teacher some time of doing all the work.
As a side note, if you are not currently following the blog Lifehacker I really encourage you to do so. The blog always posts helpful hints on a wide range of subjects to save time on things.
You can follow this link to read the quick post of Cutmp3 on Lifehacker: http://lifehacker.com/5495435/cutmp3net-extracts-audio-from-files-entirely-online
]]>I have always felt that Itunes was a very soundly designed software package for what it was designed to do. I generally recommended that people might wish to consider staying with that product for ease of use. Once you learn how you can capture other RSS feeds for podcasts that are not carried by Itunes, I really do not see the need to go searching for another program. The interface between the library and device is really nearly fool proof.
I happen to see a posting on Lifehacker that polled readers on what the best podcast manager software might be. They reviewed the features of: gPodder, Zune, Miro, Itunes, and Juice.
I was happy to see that many others also feel that Itunes is a quality software package to work with podcasts. See the results of the survey below:
As a side note… if you are not following Lifehacker’s RSS Feed or checking out their site, I highly recommend doing so. The quality of the writing and the ideas to save time or create really unusual things to be more efficient is very good.
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http://www.audiofootnote.com/
I think podcasting still is an avenue for education that has yet to be fully tapped in its power of communication. I follow 50 or 60 podcasts on a regular basis on a wide range of subjects; TED Talks, Pandora Musicology Shows, Tips from the Top Floor, Cleveland City Club are among my favs.
The amount of information one has access to through the web is really amazing. Often you may find the need to take notes on things as you hear them for future reference and that is great if you have pencil and paper handy. I choose to listen to podcasts often while I am waiting in line, riding in a car, or walking. What to do?
Footnote for Iphone and Touch has answered the need. This application allows you to record an audio note and interface it with the podcast with a time date stamp without leaving the player of the podcast.
I think that many different types of students may find this useful if your teacher or professor uses podcasting as part of your classwork. I have really found it to be a useful addition to my apps on the phone and have not regretted the $5.00 price I paid for the app.
You can download the app in the App Store and also learn more about it here: http://www.audiofootnote.com/
]]>Mindy Bedrossian and I met when she took the Podcasting Academy workshop at WVIZ Ideastream in Cleveland, Ohio. Soon after taking the workshop, she contacted me concerning an idea for a grant she had called Generation to Generation and was working to secure the funding through The Toyota Tapestry Foundation.
The grant involved recording the oral history of local senior citizens about what life was like before the scientific revolution. The recording and interviews were all to be done by the students in Mindy’s classroom. The project description read:
The years from 1900 to 1999 saw the most dramatic changes in the history of mankind in science, technology, warfare, transportation, and health. From horses to the space shuttle, slide rules to computers, leeches to chemotherapy, and from libraries to the Internet, the advances of this past century has changed society forever. Students will visit the elderly and record their stories about what life was like before antibiotics, refrigeration, chemotherapy, and computers. These very important primary sources will soon be gone, and their testimonies of how life drastically changed for them will soon disappear forever. Students will then create pod casts of these interviews, developing a permanent audio collection of primary sources for future generations.
It was a lot of fun to see the skills Mindy learned in the Podcast Academy workshop put to use with students. The edited versions of the podcast were very nicely done and the amount of primary source information that the students collected and will be retained was amazing. It was very interesting to hear all the details of how things were done before we have the modren tools we take for granted today.
The project has caught the attention of many people in the community. It has been featured on WKYC TV-3 with Romona’s Kids and Mindy was recently accepted to travel to a conference in Calf. to speak about her experience with Generatiion to Generation.
I had looked at Mind’s website this morning and saw that she was featured on NPR recently. She has already clued me in that there is another production in the works for next year. I don’t know what is involved yet’ but this was so much fun, I can’t wait to get started!
Check out the Generation to Generation Podcasts at this link.
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