This blog is designed to give educators some background and tools for incorporating blogging into their curriculum.
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Friday, December 11, 2009

Help Me Out: Practical Applications for Web 2.0 Apps in Education

I have a vision - to compile a comprehensive list of Web 2.0 tools (wait...it doesn't stop there). I want to create a practical resource database of Web 2.0 tools (lesson ideas, lesson plans, practical teaching ideas). I don't want to stop at saying "Try this" - I want to be able to say, "Try this, by doing this, this, and this to achieve this outcome". Will you help me?

Please help me by completing the following form
(hosted by Google Docs):
http://bit.ly/5wY1l3


There are literally thousands (and likely more) Web 2.0 applications that can be used (and should be used) in education. I am compiling a list of applications and I would like to include at least one practical education use for each. If successful, I would like to compile a collaborative digital resource, to which you will all contribute, in an effort to provide educators with a useful tool to engage students and enhance their learning experience.

(Examples: Blogging (Wordpress, Blogger, EduBlogs, etc.), Twitter, Wikis (Wikispaces, PBWorks), YouTube, Facebook, MySpace, iPhones / iTouches (Know any cool apps to use? How do you use them?), Evernote, GoogleDocs (that's what this form is created on!), Other Google Apps (Calendars, Sites), Polleverywhere, Audacity, etc., etc.) The list goes on, and on, and on, and on.........

Often, educators are provided with the names of Web 2.0 type tools and their locations. They get an idea of what the tool does, but are often not provided with any practical feedback / direction for how the tool can actually be used in a classroom setting or any other learning environment. I am hoping that this project will bridge that all important gap so that we can get more and more educators on board with the digital world of education.

Thank you for your participation. I'll let you know where it goes.

Please help me by completing the following form
(hosted by Google Docs):
http://bit.ly/5wY1l3

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Google Goggles - Visual Search Engine & Education



I was surfing the net today and discovered a completely new and cool application from Google called Google Goggles. Google Goggles is a visual search engine that, currently, works in conjunction with the Android phone platform. Essentially, the app. works with the phones camera to capture visual information that can then be read by Google's various applications (i.e. Search, Maps, Earth). The application will return information to the user based on the picture or video that is provided.

An article by Barbara Krasnoff from Computerword.com (Dec. 8, 2009)
Google's latest lab experiment lets you send it photos for identification

An article by MG Siegler from techcrunch.com (Dec. 7, 2009)
Search by Sight with Google Goggles

Google Goggles Visual Search Demo


I can't help but be excited about the implications this has for teaching and student learning. Imagine what this type of technology could do for an English Language Learner, or for students with learning disabilities. Scavenger hunts on field trips just got a whole lot more exciting. Imagine what dynamic research projects could be designed.

With the advent of online learning, students are no longer limited (or constrained) to their desks, textbooks, notepads, and paper. Entire courses can be completed without ever touching pen to paper.

Imagine.....

Imagine a student sitting on the bus, working on their Marketing course online. They see an ad in the bus that shows a happy couple running on the beach in front of a hotel. The student could hold up their phone, scan the image, and determine where the hotel in the photo is. The quality of the advertisement could then be analyzed as the visual search application brings back results on airfare, hotel accommodations, and local sights. The student could then email all of that information back to themselves and/or post directly to their online project. Ahhh, I get excited just thinking about it!

The benefits of this technology for engaging students has no limits. The interconnected nature of today's teenager is not a secret and the research is abundant. Today's students need something more. This application not only replaces the need for books, but it takes knowledge to places that static pages never could. If social networking contributes to the "genetic" make-up of Web 2.0, does visual search technology represent the cusp of 3.0?

Visual search technology is still in its infancy (still in beta testing), but imagine what the future holds. What do you think? How could this be used in education?

I can't wait to try it out!
Check out more on Google Goggles at the Google webpage - CLICK HERE.

UPDATE (Dec. 11th, 2009)
Google Goggle Demonstration