MT Use in Education
Movable Type in Education Al Delgado has a new Typepad site up. The topic is the use of Movable Type in education. Al is the author of the very useful Disruptive Technology weblog…
Movable Type in Education Al Delgado has a new Typepad site up. The topic is the use of Movable Type in education. Al is the author of the very useful Disruptive Technology weblog…
http://lewiselementary.org
I have been working on a web page for Lewis Elementary School. I have just recently started working there as the principal. Lewis is located in Portland, Oregon, and is part of Portland Public Schools. I am using Movable Type to run the site, but for the most part it will not be a weblog, but rather I am using Movable Type as a content management system. It is very much in the beginning stages, but hope to incorportate RSS feeds and such in the near furture.
Google News Alerts are sent by email when news articles appear online that match the topics you specify.
This is very nice. I have one set up to alert me to articles about my school district. Another to alert me when the sky is falling…
Weblogg-ed Vol.2: Using Weblogs in Education
Will Richardson points to a response by Seb Fiedler to Liz Lawley’s experiments with MT as a CMS for one of her courses. I found Seb’s point about mastering easily transferable tools (Examples include MovableType, Manila, Typepad… ) to be very similar to my own thinking.
I would rather spend my time mastering skills for the use of personal Webpublishing technologies than working my way through one of the industry packages that I will never be able to afford for any small scale project I might be interested in. Personal Webpublishing is about the empowerment of the individual and small teams… what do you personally get from mastering WebCT, BlackBoard, etc.? Will they travel with you? Will you be able to use them for your own interests once you have left your R1 institution?
I am the principal at Lewis Elementary School in Portland, Oregon. I use this site mainly to make notes to myself about technology and how it can be used by teachers and students to gain a greater understanding of their world, and as a means to tell their stories…
Questions or comments can be addressed to
tim at lauer dot com
Books and Publications
“Innovative Approaches To Literacy Education: Using The Internet To Support New Literacies” (International Reading Association), Contributor, Chapter 10, Bee Stings, Wooden Blocks, and Web Browsers
“Bringing Children and the Internet Together (Bill Harp Professional Teachers library)” Tim Lauer, Kathy Betancourt
Scott Foresman Internet Guide:
ISBN 0-673-62225-8
Recent Articles/Interviews
“What is a Blog? Educators Discover the Newest From of Immediate Communication“,
by Craig Colgan , American School Board Journal, July 2005
“Google Maps inspire creativity”
by Corey Murray, eSchool News Online, June 15, 2005.
“How do you communicate with students who have grown up with
technology? Schools are looking to technology for the answer.” by Kevin
Delaney, Wall Street Journal, Jan 17, 2005, pp R4.
Recent Presentations
Lessons Learned: A Panel Discussion about Creating Educational Communities Online,
National Education Computing Conference - June 30, 2005
Effective Weblogs in Education: How to Create, Manage, and Communicate!
National Education Computing Conference - June 28, 2005
Remixing Wikis with Rendezvous, Web Services and SchoolTool,
O’Reilly Emerging Technologies Conference - March 16, 2005
Oyez! The Supreme Court, Now on MP3
Mr. Goldman, a professor of political science at Northwestern University, is taking the original audio recordings of the Supreme Court and turning them into MP3 files for free distribution on the Web.
Something else to add to my iPod playlist…MP3 files of Supreme Court arguments from oyez.com.