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Only connect! That was the whole of her sermon. Only connect the prose and the passion, and both will be exalted, and human love will be seen at its height. Live in fragments no longer. Only connect, and the beast and the monk, robbed of the isolation that is life to either, will die.
E.M. Forster, Howards End

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Edu-speak bingo

Both Cherrie and Artichoke have recently noted the love affair educationalists have with jargon. Here's Cherrie on edu-speak:
…there is so much jargon all over the place when it comes to education—too many cliches that people think they understand, but don't. It's ironic really, because it's a lot like school—if you remember the keywords to write in your answer, it mostly doesn't matter whether you understand it or not.
Meanwhile Artichoke, who is busy defending her reputation for anticipating edu-speak trends, is seriously considering bagsing Communities of Practice for 2006. For what it's worth, my money's on that perennial favourite: collaboration.

Monday, November 07, 2005

Storytelling across the pond

From Bryan comes news of another e-twinning project. Trans-Pond leverages storytelling as a medium for cultural exchange between school kids from the North East of the United Kingdom and those in Canada (see the Frappr-powered Trans-Pond map). The project is the brainchild of Steve Thompson who writes:
…I'll be shaping open source blogging software to create an interface that will allow 20 (10 UK, 10 Canada) schools to have their own blog… We'll also be using our community media archive software developed here at Teesside Uni to allow a range of multimedia objects to be utilised in the storytelling.

Friday, November 04, 2005

More than my 2 cents worth

I’m excited to have discovered Cherrieland thanks to David Warlick who added his 2 Cents Worth to a comment Cherrie left on his blog. (Funny how someone 10000 miles away can connect you with someone 100 miles away!)

Cherrie posts some very insightful observations on education from the point of view of a student. Her latest post, a comparison of formal and informal learning, makes sobering reading for teachers.

Of school Cherrie writes "you help each other but they call that cheating", in life "you basically never have to remember because [answers are] in books, pamphlets and websites." She continues, in life "everything is related", in school "English is in period one, Economics period two, maths period 3…"

Thursday, November 03, 2005

I love Lucy

The folks at QUT and ANU are running an interesting project that connects isolated rural school children across the globe. Australian Aboriginal students from Cherbourg State School are learning about their Chinese counterparts in Fanchong Primary School through the sharing of digital stories (via Lucy’s Blog).

ZoomIn' marvellous!

Just when I resigned myself to New Zealand getting Google Maps street level coverage sometime in 2010 the folks at ProjectX, who were less patient, have written their own AJAX-ed map of New Zealand (via Second pOst). ZoomIn Maps is bloomin' marvellous!