Adventure (or tedium) awaits. Your call.
Monthly Archives: April 2010
NPM 2010: Prompt 29
NPM 2010: Prompt 28
Forks Make Us Fatter! (No, wait. It’s something else.)
Twice today I’ve seen stories in the media, passed around by educators, that gave me pause. In both cases, the articles, headlines, and/or authors and sharers of the article passed along the notion that “Technology X enables skill Y.” I was a wee bit disappointed, not just because of the enthusiasm I saw in the sharing1, but because both of the articles got the technology that makes a difference wrong.
Let me show you:
Example 1 – “Texting poetry inspires students to learn”
From the article:
Chester Middle School Principal Ernie Jackson, for instance, challenged reading and social studies teacher Mel Wesenberg to find ways to use text messaging to teach poetry.
The results were surprising: Kids who used their cell phones to boil down the main points of the stanzas got 80 percent of the questions about a poem correct on a state test.
Kids taught the same poem in the traditional way – reading, reciting and discussing – got only 40 percent of the questions right.
“That’s a big jump,” Jackson said during a recent demonstration of the experiment with a sixth-grade class.
Well, yeah. When you write about something, or summarize it, then you do learn it. Writing forces the concepts into your brain in a way that discussion doesn’t. And summarizing something is a fine way to deepen your understanding of it. I suspect the student referenced in the article who didn’t have a cell phone would’ve had as much success with passing notes about the poems to her friends as they did sending texts back and forth.
Example 2 – “Teaching literacy using a Kindle”2
From the article:
She gave examples of an elementary child’s note about a character in the book she was reading: “If I were him, I’d say no way!” Such comments indicate a child is unknowingly focusing in on the author’s character development, something college students struggle with in their literature classes. Another child summarized the plot – a simple electronic form of the dreaded book report – which reinforces their understanding of the book.
I need to read Larson’s original work, which is behind an IRA paywall, but again, seems to me that the focus of the improvement wasn’t the Kindle – it was annotating and summarizing the text. Writing about what you’re reading, as well as connecting your notes to the text itself, helps readers become better readers.
The Kindle isn’t the important bit.3
Turns out, in both of these cases, the technology that helps the students to read and to understand better was a very old and familiar technology:
Writing.4
It’s exciting to bring new gadgets and gizmos into the classroom, to see what they can help us to do. But we can all too easily get caught up in the shiny object and forget that the basic toolset of teaching and learning, of reading, writing and thinking, is still the basic toolset. Reading and writing, meaningful reading and writing, are important5.
Try to write and fiddle with words regularly, be it on a Kindle, a nook, an iPad, a cell phone, or any other device you might happen to have. Teachers should be active readers, writers and thinkers, no matter their subject area. We should be reading and writing with students regularly, whatever the medium. All that practice will help you read better, and then you, too, will be less likely to fall victim to a technology du jour switcharoo scam.
Promise.6
- Look! Aha! It’s true! Texting makes for smarter kids! Kindles change everything! [↩]
- Not, I’d admit, the most useful headline. “Teaching literacy?” You mean “reading?” [↩]
- That said, Will wrote an interesting post over the weekend on why you might use a Kindle as your annotation tool, but I’m thinking that his strategy isn’t practical for 2nd graders. [↩]
- But we already knew that writing supports reading, didn’t we? [↩]
- Ira’s post complicates this, but in a good way. [↩]
- Yes, I know that “fatter” isn’t “really” a word. But it seemed like the right word. Please, no red pens here. [↩]
NPM 2010: Prompt 27
The Week in Tweets for 2010-04-26
- Looking forward to listening to @dogtrax talk us through his writing process this morning. You listen, too. http://bit.ly/cAaOG8 #
- @dmagy Some? in reply to dmagy #
- @teach42 A mix of Kindle, nook, Sony Reader store and PDF. Paper for kids books and one I gave as a gift. in reply to teach42 #
- Spent a good chunk of the morning thinking and talking with Apple folks and one of our elementary schools on all things touch. Useful. #
- @genghiskhanir @dmagy We will be notifying folks later today that the filter for YouTube requiring teacher override will remain in place. in reply to genghiskhanir #
- @genghiskhanir @dmagy Until such time as we have more bandwidth in place in the district. What do you need?What teacher can assist you? in reply to genghiskhanir #
- @beverson @svvsdhd We will be sharing our next steps a little later today. One week of testing ends today. Most likely, override will stay. in reply to beverson #
- @beverson @svvsdhd Until we have more bandwidth available. Does that create a problem? in reply to beverson #
- @beverson Oh, I beleve it will be temporary. More bandwidth comes online (hopefully) this summer. Then we (cont) http://tl.gd/uepro in reply to beverson #
- .@khoog No. We are temporarily moving YouTube to address a bandwidth problem. The filter is still not a behavior management tool. @dmagy #
- @ktenkely I'm not so sure that I want all things touch. But I'm curious. in reply to ktenkely #
- @ktenkely Yeah. I worry about distractions versus usefulness. (On both teacher and kid side.) in reply to ktenkely #
- I continue to flip the lip. I continue to not win anything. Good thing I like the coffee. #
- Interesting thread on filtering in the private sector. They're struggling, too. http://bit.ly/biu3Wc #
- There is nothing terribly amazing about followthrough, save for how important it is. And how difficult. #
- @donalynbooks Your Mondays are better than mine. in reply to donalynbooks #
- @markwagner Yes. Technology isn't the babysitter, the security guard, or the nanny. You are. If you need to be. in reply to markwagner #
- @msstewart I'm trying to imagine that poem read in Garrison Keillor's voice. Not going to listen, I don't think. in reply to msstewart #
- @teach42 Good idea. I did the same. Thanks. in reply to teach42 #
- Don't tell Ani – but tonight's the night I start her on the XO. Shh. #
- @sleslie Try the new doc editor in Google Docs. It's pretty much Etherpad now. Awesome. in reply to sleslie #
- @sarahpom Yes. It is. How far back are you going? in reply to sarahpom #
- @robwall I was delightfully surprised and impressed. You? in reply to robwall #
- I'm thinking I need to create a book of Mad Libs for gadgets. "How the ______ will _______ the field of _______." I think it'd be huge. #
- Heck. It might save journalism. Or change it. Or education. Or whatever. #
- @woscholar Nah. Can't save print if it's not a book. On paper. (Or can it?) in reply to woscholar #
- Took a wrong turn at Sam's Club. Trapped in the candy aisle. #Lost amp;hungry&helpless #
- @sarahpom Start with Eccleston. He's there, too. Tennant makes more sense after. Promise. It's fantastic. in reply to sarahpom #
- Whew. Found what I was looking for. http://twitpic.com/1gy2oi #
- @sarahpom It is. I keep it on my queue. Good stuff. Truly fantastic. in reply to sarahpom #
- @msstewart Let's just keep this between you and me, then. Shh. in reply to msstewart #
- @sarahpom I think the new guy, though, has lots of potential. Catch up fast. #
- Success. There is a fine steak in my future. #
- Suppose, instead of seeking out another free data trap to replace Ning, this time, you investigated hosting something yourself. You can. #
- Heck, if I can figure it out, certainly you can. Probably better than I. #
- @keisawilliams I am not. I don't belied that I am a vampire. in reply to keisawilliams #
- @budtheteacher @keisawilliams Or "believe," for that matter. in reply to budtheteacher #
- Free cone night at the ice cream place. Why? They've run out of cups. That's turning a problem into an opportunity. Love that. #
- @beverson Yeah. It's pretty messed up. But I liked it when I was little. in reply to beverson #
- @sarahpom Fantastic. in reply to sarahpom #
- @sarahpom It gets better. in reply to sarahpom #
- @InnovativeEdu I'd bet there's a bit of distraction, too. in reply to InnovativeEdu #
- My cynical self wonders if conferences like #140conf are/should be sponsored by Ritalin. #
- @web20classroom @mbteach @dharple Is that true? All of us? All the time? in reply to web20classroom #
- Just because a phone rings doesn't mean you have to pick it up. #
- @SVVSDLibraries Not if you're being rude to someone else by answering the call. in reply to SVVSDLibraries #
- @hrheingold Would love to read that paper – but they sure make it hard to get to. in reply to hrheingold #
- Been a crazy couple of weeks here in the office. This is why. http://bit.ly/9oKG2P #
- @jonbecker Yeah. But it's how the department has evolved. The tech department here was originally an extension of geeky educators. in reply to jonbecker #
- @jonbecker The CIO reports to the asst. superintendent of learning services – same as with curriculum and instruction, or has for 9 months. in reply to jonbecker #
- Listening to @karlfisch teach algebra. I dig it. http://thefischbowl.blogspot.com #
- @jonbecker It's an opportunity. C&I, Tech, PD, all report to one person responsible for the learning side of the district. I like it. in reply to jonbecker #
- @jonbecker I think you need some educators in the technology department, especially as IT specializes. in reply to jonbecker #
- So by the end of next year, @karlfisch's got Algebra 1 covered. Who votes we get him teaching Algebra II the year after? #
- And who's covering language arts in Colorado? What does that video series look like, @karlfisch? (Serious question.) #
- @SVVSDLibraries I'm bummed I'll be missing the SMART Goal stuff – I'll try to watch from home as I can. Thanks for streaming! in reply to SVVSDLibraries #
- @smartinez @jonbecker I don't know, but if you see it, I'd sure appreciate a copy. in reply to smartinez #
- @msstewart @russgoerend Sites will do basic blogging. Check it out. in reply to msstewart #
- @msstewart Ah. Gotcha. Reader would be nice. in reply to msstewart #
- Thinking today about how organizations use technology to force/support choices/decisions. What does your technology allow/prevent/require? #
- @bengrey Seems like most iPad issues are buggy DHCP issues, not bandwidth problems. But bandwidth is good. in reply to bengrey #
- @russgoerend I think that's a way to do it. I seem to recall "site updates," too. But I might have made that name up. in reply to russgoerend #
- @smartinez Thanks much. in reply to smartinez #
- We need more websites like this one. http://youknowi.ly/ #
- A #reshare Perhaps late. Still helpful to me. Thanks, @snbeach http://bit.ly/bzknGz #
- Another #reshare While not a blog post, this is what I think about when I think about teaching and learning lately. http://bit.ly/b90EI7 #
- @fceblog Yeah. I know. They've been on my mind for a while. And will continue to be. in reply to fceblog #
- @fceblog Say more. Please. in reply to fceblog #
- @acarvin I'm thinking way too many teachers know nothing about that requirement. Which is too bad. in reply to acarvin #
- @acarvin It's there. But no real teeth. So it stays there. Too bad. eRate will require proof of Internet Satefy (cont) http://tl.gd/uu4s2 in reply to acarvin #
- Today's moment of Quinn. http://twitpic.com/1h45s0 #
- Librarians who use Accelerated Reader: Why do you do that? #
- @tabor330 How? in reply to tabor330 #
- _Time_'s online versions of their print articles are hyperlinked-referenced. Cool. #
- @tabor330 Common Sense Media? Why them? in reply to tabor330 #
- @bengrey @crafty184 Was expecting and hoping for that. in reply to bengrey #
- @karlfisch Not sure of that, either. Good point. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch But I don't want this to turn into a standardized test thing. Let's assume for a moment that kids who (cont) http://tl.gd/uusor in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch I've not yet. That's next. in reply to karlfisch #
- @ChristianLong How does one sit in on a session with Rives? in reply to ChristianLong #
- @karlfisch Im starting a line of inquiry here – not coming to any conclusions yet. Just got a big pile o' cognitive dissonance here. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch I'm starting a line of inquiry here – not coming to any conclusions yet. Just got a big pile o' cognitive dissonance here. in reply to karlfisch #
- Second time this month where I messed up a footnote and obliterated a post – but no one could tell. I just looked silly. My bad. #
- @karlfisch You might want to reread my post now that the middle bit is actually in the body of the text. Sheesh. #bloggingishard in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch It might've been. I think Fryer wonders that, too. I'm investigating. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch I am, too. That's what's really, really bugging me. I'm still curious. (Was that unclear in the (cont) http://tl.gd/uv0p2 in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch I don't know, but I'd welcome the link. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch I've got a copy of the study on my blog. It's hidden in he footnotes. (PDF) http://bit.ly/byIrzi #
- @elliottjb So what's "right?" Can you describe it? Maybe a blog post somewhere? in reply to elliottjb #
- @elliottjb Sounds like it's time. Thanks. in reply to elliottjb #
- The grill is hot. The ribeyes are ready. Soon now. Soon. #
- Dinner. http://twitpic.com/1h5psu http://twitpic.com/1h5ptk #
- Glee. Bum bum bah bum. #
- Lots of lukewarm AR responses. Thinking I've some homework. http://bit.ly/csi0SS #
- @msstewart I'm wondering about deleting that statement. Think the important pieces are covered elsewhere. What say you? in reply to msstewart #
- Spending the day with a language arts curriculum alignment committee. Talking about change. Change is okay. #
- My response to the prompt from this morning's curriculum alignment meeting. In case you were curious. (editable) http://bit.ly/dqGEAe #
- @ladyvolhoops I'd love to see it. Thanks! in reply to ladyvolhoops #
- "It's hard," and "We can't," are not terribly different statements. But only one of them results in accomplishment. #
- Or can. #
- @poh Privacy issues, though. All traffic goes through their servers. And breaks encryption. Don't do your banking in Opera on iPhone. in reply to poh #
- Reminded today of my informal finding in Nov. That interesting project-based work often happens in semi-school spaces. http://bit.ly/4arnEb #
- Thinking about what that means for common district assessments that are performance-based. Hmm. #
- @poh Yes, I believe so. It's how Opera delivers stuff so fast. They compress websites. in reply to poh #
- @suzieboss We should talk. in reply to suzieboss #
- Yep. That's pretty important. #coloradostandards http://twitpic.com/1hc8w5 #
- New Google Docs editor is nailing complex Word table uploads. Awesome. #
- Caught up with @milobo. She learned lots in Cupertino. She also brought me a pen. I just made more work for her. Her gift was better. #
- @jenwagner We do. http://blogs.stvrain.k12.co.us in reply to jenwagner #
- How is your curriculum a conversation?Should it be? #
- Tonight's moment of Quinn. http://twitpic.com/1hebve #
- Spring rain. Awesome. #
- Setting up the last round or so of poetry prompts for this year's NPM. Have you written a poem this month? http://budtheteacher.com/blog #
- .@wfryer @cbell619 Isn't that kind of a silly question, akin to "What's your favorite way of using chalk (cont) http://tl.gd/vekk5 in reply to wfryer #
- @milobo @wryer @cbell619 Isn't the answer to that one "Make lots of art?" in reply to milobo #
- @cbell619 Not trying to get a "just" anything. Apologies. I may have an itchy trigger finger this evening. in reply to cbell619 #
- It should rain more often. #goodforwriting #
- @RickTanski Aye. in reply to RickTanski #
- Just went Pro on Evernote. So useful. #
- http://twitpic.com/1hfw8m There are so many things wrong with this pending comment, left by a seventh grader. (Forgive the language.) #
- @SVVSDLibraries Good news – I can't find the leak! (Or, we're secretly in big trouble tomorrow.) in reply to SVVSDLibraries #
- @shareski Yeah. But I only have his school name, grade and email address. (Think that's enough?) in reply to shareski #
- @timstahmer Yeah. I'm trying it out. If it doesn't do what I need it to, I'm good with their refund policy. What're you needing? in reply to timstahmer #
- @timstahmer I'm trying to figure out if I need both Evernote and Dropbox. Seems like some overlap. in reply to timstahmer #
- @monk51295 They allow us to learn from and with each other. Helpful. in reply to monk51295 #
- @willrich45 Don't believe so. Sigh. (iBooks bookmarks plus Kindle notes plus sharing notes with others plus a (cont) http://tl.gd/vnttm in reply to willrich45 #
- @monk51295 Alas, not a one. Skype is awesome, except when it doesn't work. in reply to monk51295 #
- Walked into a meeting and it was raining and gloomy. Walked out of the building to Colorado sunshine. #ilovethisplace #
- @ELanghorst Thought of you when I saw this. http://bit.ly/cac0Qq in reply to ELanghorst #
- http://docs.com Because there's nothing more fun than sharing documents with friends. #
- @johncr8on I suspect you're in for a good and useful session. in reply to johncr8on #
- @jenwagner Or Facebook as the sharing environment? in reply to jenwagner #
- @willrich45 @teddyb109 Yeah. Because nothing's more natural than reading/annotating in one place and then going (cont) http://tl.gd/vq5ma in reply to willrich45 #
- @courosa Oh. Man. in reply to courosa #
- @willrich45 iBooks almost does that with their highlights – but not notes. I'll take another look. #stillprettyhardtoshareanAmazonbook in reply to willrich45 #
- @budtheteacher @willrich45 #actuallyprettyimpossibletoshareanydrmebook #freethereadingfromtheereaders in reply to budtheteacher #
- @bengrey @willrich45 Thats one thing I love about the nook. It paginates based on the print pages of the book. (cont) http://tl.gd/vqcl8 in reply to bengrey #
- @injenuity #perhaps in reply to injenuity #
- @teddyb109 Yet. But you're right. #freethereadingfromtheereader in reply to teddyb109 #
- Selling is so exciting. (And if you're a teacher and you don't think you're selling anything, you're wrong.) #
- So pumped that I rediscovered this series of books. Homework reading. Teacher Research in the DLC next year. http://twitpic.com/1hlrih #
- @dhudgins @clifmims It helps to do some communicating. And to spend time in classrooms. And to bring teachers to the Help Desk. in reply to dhudgins #
- @dhudgins @clifmims Here's our Help Desk. http://blogs.stvrain.k12.co.us/helpdesk in reply to dhudgins #
- @RickTanski What? in reply to RickTanski #
- I am tweeting from my phone to model that I can. Why in the world would anyone do this? (Talking to a class.) #
- @beverson Indeed I was/am. Thanks. in reply to beverson #
- Sometimes, folks who are really good at talkng are really awful at saying anything. #
- Thinking about bringing in an ethnographer and teacher researcher to help us tell our classroom teaching and learning stories. Thoughts? #
- I have Returned the Library Books. #ontime #nofines #
- @skajder Agreed. We have time and structure. Trying to figure out process. in reply to skajder #
- @wdeihl Thanks much! I'll take a peek. in reply to wdeihl #
- TweetTweeting from my nook. New firmware includes browser and apps. Interesting use of touch interface. #
- Not perfect. But neat. Potential. #nook #
- @fceblog I want to extend these types of conversations beyond hunches and into full on qualitative studies. http://bit.ly/9UETXN in reply to fceblog #
- Plug an iPad into a projector. Navigate to an embedded video – Youtube or Vimeo. Play the video. Watch what happens. Cool. #
- @micwalker For what? It's okay by me – but I wouldn't issue them to students for a bunch of reasons – durability is low on that list. in reply to micwalker #
- @fceblog My students, in this case, are teachers. Telling their stories. Of and with students. in reply to fceblog #
- I love the rain. #
- @micwalker Sort of. I'm thinking it's not the device – but I'm always thinking. And I like the nook for what it does. in reply to micwalker #
- @chrislehmann Did you just announce what I think you just announced? in reply to chrislehmann #
- @MathEdnet I believe I would. Thanks. Still chewing through ideas, but would love to talk. in reply to MathEdnet #
- It's snowing. #ilovethisplace #
- @chrislehmann So. That's pretty cool. And all. in reply to chrislehmann #
- I heard the leak was fixed. #heardwrong http://twitpic.com/1htac2 #
- Wait. It's raining. No. Wait. Now it's snowing. Oh. Now rain. It's snoraining. #ilovethisplace #
- @donmilleris Looking forward to hearing you speak in Fort Collins this evening. Welcome to our neck of the woods. in reply to donmilleris #
- Perhaps snrainowing. #
- @JSW_EdTech Nice. And indeed. in reply to JSW_EdTech #
- @jenwagner The trick is, it isn't one crowd. in reply to jenwagner #
- So @milobo walks in to my office, and starts Joe Purdy's "Just Can't Get It Right Today" playing in my office. And leaves. #
- Constructive criticism or something deeper? #
- @nctplarry Yeah. That's about right. in reply to nctplarry #
- @nawalnader That sounds like a fun course. And my major personal preoccupation lately. Keep us posted. in reply to nawalnader #
- @cnansen @milobo I's like a mirror option. in reply to cnansen #
- @cnansen @milobo Right. I'd like the ability to turn that on or off as I needed it. in reply to cnansen #
- @nawalnader We can talk. Don't know if they're what you'd need, but perhaps. in reply to nawalnader #
- In the audience for @donmilleris. Should be good. #
- "The beat that we march to is narrative. Story."
"You become the character you play in the story that you believe." – @donmilleris # - That was time well spent. Thanks, @donmilleris. I needed your talk. #
- That I don't understand isn't the interesting bit. That I keep trying to is. Maybe. #
- @ChristianLong All the best to you toda!. Many happy returns. in reply to ChristianLong #
- There are too many good folks and not enough time. #
- Off to Monument for the weekend. Packed a sled because, you know, it snows in April and they got a foot of the stuff. #ilovethisplace #
- Today's moment of Quinn. http://twitpic.com/1i4ohi http://twitpic.com/1i4oho #
- @willrich45 Aw. Heck. You're right. That is kind of a big deal. in reply to willrich45 #
- @karlfisch @willrich45 Agreed. The company holding the info is a problem. And I hate buying ebooks from Amazon. But their app is sweet. in reply to karlfisch #
- @willrich45 @karlfisch They do. Of course – you're not buying a book from them. Just a license to access the book. #whichiswrong in reply to willrich45 #
- @ijohnpederson @karlfisch @willrich45 Soon enough, other folks will have that function. Suppose Evernote supported ePub. Uh oh. Look out. in reply to ijohnpederson #
- .@evernote Any chance you'll support ePub and notes in books anytime soon? #
- @willrich45 @karlfisch True. One of your commenters suggests a feature I suggested to Apple recently – shared (cont) http://tl.gd/10onol in reply to willrich45 #
- @karlfisch ePub is a file standard for ebooks. It's open and flexible. Can be DRMed or not. http://bit.ly/cEJy3q iBooks and nook can read. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch Many other readers can handle it, too. Most. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch Suppose Evernote hosts the book like it does any other file type. And it holds the notes, too, in a structure in the file. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch And allows those to be searched. Skips the uploading. The ecosystem includes the notes. And the sharing of the books. Both. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch Assuming you own a book free and clear – without drm. in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch Of course, then you're still beholden to one company – but I suspect it'd be a popular option and (cont) http://tl.gd/10oqqt in reply to karlfisch #
- @karlfisch Of course, ideally we have standard notes and host our libraries on our own spaces that we can access and share as we want to. in reply to karlfisch #
- @cfraser150 eBooks didn't. Not at all. in reply to cfraser150 #
- @karlfisch I don't know how. in reply to karlfisch #
- So. SB191. What a mess. And a beautiful example of how RTTT works. (Not sure yet if it's successful.) http://www.denverpost.com/ci_14953971 #
- Seems like Colorado is going to make some big changes and figure out the details later. Unfortunately, (cont) http://tl.gd/11345u #
- David Tennant. Sir Patrick Stewart. Royal Shakespeare Company. _Hamlet_. PBS this week. Online after. http://to.pbs.org/cjQX49 #
- Yep. http://twitpic.com/1iehp8 #
- "Learning to teach is inseparable from learning to inquire." – Dewey as paraphrased in Hatch et al. p.4 http://twitpic.com/1ieim9 #
- @fceblog Sorry. Here's the source. From the introduction. http://twitpic.com/1ielhb in reply to fceblog #
- How did I miss this book? It's an edublogger's call to action. #
- You can find the intro of the book I'm reading right now here: http://goingpublicwithteaching.org/ Also – teacher research examples. Cool. #
- @poh What're you going to do? in reply to poh #
- @poh Sounds important. Say more? in reply to poh #
- Ani's an artist. And I'm okay with that. http://twitpic.com/1iepgy #
- @michellek107 What do you believe the purpose of RTTT to be? Seems to me the purpose was to use a little bit of (cont) http://tl.gd/1145jj in reply to michellek107 #
- @poh A good question. I keep seeing them working in those semi-school places. "How in school?" is important. in reply to poh #
- @michellek107 You didn't get to a purpose there – what is the purpose of the grants? in reply to michellek107 #
- @michellek107 And what should they be hearing? in reply to michellek107 #
- Same source. This is what we are building with the DLC. Publication opportunities and time to talk/think/explore. http://twitpic.com/1ieta3 #
- Not enough to publish. Must do so in an ecosystem of constructive critique and review. (There's that word again.) http://twitpic.com/1ieu6a #
- @intrepidteacher @thejlv We do what we must with what we have. If that's gangsta, so be it. in reply to intrepidteacher #
- @TheJLV Pretty sure, for the record, that's the first time I've been called gangsta. I like it. in reply to TheJLV #
- Thoughtful little study. Chapter 3. http://twitpic.com/1if3ac #
- A piece of this book I find terribly interesting is that it contains chapters that are reflections on web work – work about the work. #
- Sometimes we have ideas that go dormant, sleeper agents in our minds, resting for years. What great days when they reemerge, ready to go. #
- Page 96. Intellectual honesty. Young children think about "deep and tough" things. "Learning to (cont) http://tl.gd/1152g3 #
- @courosa Ha. Not seeing the ads via the iPhone client. Forgive the dissonance. in reply to courosa #
- @jimgroom @cogdog Write lots about that, won't you? I need some teachers on this. in reply to jimgroom #
- Data silo question: Do our tools allow us to see what gets looked at and what doesn't? #
- If a child takes a test, and no one ever looks at the data, can we fire the person who required the assessment? #
- @karlfisch Karl. Of course it did. It's just that it wasn't a terribly important or helpful one. in reply to karlfisch #
- @MathEdnet Yep. We are entering the age of using assessment measures on assessment measures. Fun. in reply to MathEdnet #
- @karlfisch My point is this – if you're not providing the time to use the data, don't bother to collect it. in reply to karlfisch #
- @MathEdnet @karlfisch One of them, sure. The "true?" Nah. in reply to MathEdnet #
- Think this through with me – Going to write a blog post. If I use images of the pages of quotes I'm quoting (cont) http://tl.gd/115o92 #
- Creates an accessibility problem, for sure. That's not necessarily good. #
- @Aaron_Eyler Yeah. Agreed. in reply to Aaron_Eyler #
- @Aaron_Eyler That's a classy way to do it. in reply to Aaron_Eyler #
- Today's moment of Quinn. http://twitpic.com/1ify3t #
- @JackieB @karlfisch I'm thinking it's time for y'all to just start writing letters back and forth and posting them to a blog somewhere. in reply to JackieB #
- @JackieB @karlfisch This is important stuff. in reply to JackieB #
- @techfacil Did you have to go to Denver to get your library card? in reply to techfacil #
- @karlfisch Exactly. in reply to karlfisch #
- @techfacil Yeah. Was going to call and ask about faxing. Thanks for saving me the trouble. in reply to techfacil #
- @techfacil I've a nook – plenty of options for me. Excited to try it out. in reply to techfacil #
- @karlfisch Fish sticks ARE pretty good. Then again, so are chicken, pork and beef. Good luck. in reply to karlfisch #
- @techfacil Most. But check first. Kindle just added PDF support. in reply to techfacil #
- @techfacil I keep a folder of
PDFs I want to read in Dropbox and sync it to my nook once a week or so. in reply to techfacil # - @karlfisch Not yet. But it's in the queue. in reply to karlfisch #
- Sleeping baby in my lap. Supposed to put her in her crib – but I'll wait. Just five more minutes. #
- Put down the baby. Loaded up with books. Reclaimed the baby. Afternoon with sleeping baby is on. #
- @hrheingold My children nap. Nothing old about that. Creative work is hard. in reply to hrheingold #
- Digging in to James Boyle's _The Public Domain_. #
- @val6dan I don't know. Believe it's sitewide. But have no knowledge to support that. in reply to val6dan #
- Krispy Kreme. The light is on. I had no choice. #
- When Krispy Kreme came to Colorado, they became just that bit more civilized. Colorado, that is. #
- Grabbed a favor for @milobo. But, alas, Krispy Kreme doughnuts don't last over night. #
- @milobo Would I really be THAT cruel?All I can say is that you should stop by the office before you head to DLS tomorrow. in reply to milobo #
- @joemcbreen What a kind thing to say. Thanks, Boss! in reply to joemcbreen #
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NPM 2010: Prompt 26

photo credit: surrealmuse
Today, write a poem for the fridge. And post it there. (And here.) Read it aloud at dinner.






