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New Learning in 2010

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01/06/10

My Favorite Web 2.0 Tool Today

Wallwisher

My favorite Web 2.0 tool (today!) is Wallwisher. I envision using it for brainstorming with students (maybe along with a SMART Board). I like how you can save Wallwisher as a Web page and invite others to add to it later -- a sort of collective intelligence tool, a continuation of the learning.

On David Warlick's February 20, 2009 blog, David writes about the disappearance of the period in the writing of the Net Generation. On a wiki or e-book entry, a written sentence doesn't stop after the writer adds the period. It can be taken up and added to by the next reader. Saving the Wallwisher brainstorming to a Web page, allows for that to happen. This is what David wrote:

"... this got me to thinking, back to the original question about reading on the Web and reading in print -- and I think it's the period. According to WordNet from Princeton, a period is 'a punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop..' It is the end of the sentence. It's all been said. If you don't get it, then go back and re-read the sentence. In a sense, to folks who have been raised on the Net, there are no periods. Certainly, there are sentences and they end in periods. But you can always go further -- deeper. You can dig, hyperlink, right-click and dictionary a single word or phrase. Under some circumstances, you can re-write the sentence, and ask for clarification from the original author. I just wonder how important this is; how this three-dimensional, ever-expandable, and even alterable reading experience affects our student learners and how they learn. If so, how do we leverage it."
~ David Warlick Deeper Info Habits

See my Wallwisher example below -- I invite any of you to add your favorite Web 2.0 tool (today) to my "Wall." Just click on "post a sticky," and then double click on my denim wall to add your sticky (and favorite Web 2.0 tool).

You can create your own Wallwisher at https://padlet.com/.

Click here to read BrendaDee's Daily Learning in 2010 on Posterous.




About the Author

Brenda Dyck, a former middle school teacher, is a sessional instructor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Alberta, Red Deer College, and an Educational Technology Coordinator/Consultant for the Calgary Regional Consortium. Brenda is the author of "The Rebooting of a Teacher's Mind and writes Click Here! a regular column for Middle Ground magazine (a publication of the National Middle School Association).









 





Author: Brenda Dyck
Education World®
Copyright © 2010 Education World

02/05/2010



 
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