This is a project in which I'm aiming to design and collate plans for facilitating learning online for use by people teaching online. Please browse around and see if you can find anything useful. If you have any ideas, feedback or have tried an activity and would like to say how it went please please please leave a comment!

In the end it might become a book or it might not... either way, all of this will remain online.

Cheers, James


Who I Aggregate

Who Aggregates Me (and has shared their OPML)

Education
Technology

[alterego]
autounfocus

Bill Brandon

Blog.IT
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teachnology
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tmt, tlt
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Other

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Unbound Spiral


<< edublog list >>


Tuesday, May 25, 2004
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Mmmmmm... tasty... Feed2JS... render me!


2:31:26 PM    comments  trackback


Monday, May 24, 2004
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Cool! Good wiki teaching article from Kairos:

"... I used an instructionist and fill-in-the-blanks approach, whereas, what I would have rather have done is for the student to identify the blanks themselves, and build from there. In other words, it's as if I had installed a blog, but only for myself to publish to the class, and allowed them to only make comments. To really use blog to it's fullest potential, the participants need to be writing their own posts and making comments on each other's pages. To really use a wiki, the participants need to be in control of the content- you have to give it over fully..." [Heather?]


12:30:25 PM    comments  trackback


Thursday, May 13, 2004
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More Wikis... enterprisey ones

As Tom Suggested, Confluence looks pretty neat, it's a one off US$2000 enterprise wiki system (Acad. price). It's certainly pretty and it's got among all the basic functionality you'd expect RSS and all! I also like the 'breadcrumbing' structure. Not to sure about the price tho' and what it makes up for in prettiness it seems to lose (on a VERY brief exploration) in simplicity. Hmmmm... interesting...

Hell, if I'm going to start thinking about these then it's also worth looking at Courseforum which is a kinda wiki-based courseware management system... it has a free system, which is cool and is dead simple to use (and includes RSS :O). But again... I'm not sure if we wouldn't be overshooting the mark with a course system and, politically, whether we'd be seen as encroaching into territory the Uni's already paid $$$$$$s to set up.


11:03:40 AM    comments  trackback

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Tom wonders about the intuitiveness of editme and whether "more "sophisticated" wikis are going to become progressively less wiki-like."


9:42:50 AM    comments  trackback

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How cool is this! Via Peter who posts about the potential uses of this in reflecting over, say, a term or so.

 

"The purpose of this site is to allow you to send mail to yourself or others at a specified date and time.. in the future!"


9:25:09 AM    comments  trackback


Tuesday, May 11, 2004
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Wooo hooo! RSS-Edu News-ticker in Operation!

Hey, Stephen's made my morning... RSS_Edu News Ticker now operating :o)))))

A new Addition to my homepage! I've even change my page to white so it fits in (dunno how to get it in without a white background and was kinda getting sick of the yellow :o)

So... now to get it customizable :o)

Thankyouuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu!


10:12:57 AM    comments  trackback


Monday, May 10, 2004
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Swiki, Teaching Wiki - free hosted wiki services for your educational pleasures

First I found Swiki (and wrote a bit about it before losing it (ed. not the swiki - my posting!) grrrrrr) and now here's Teaching Wiki:

"Hi! Welcome! Teaching Wiki aspires to be a community for college-level faculty. We imagine our primary audience to be faculty who are interested in writing instruction, perhaps technorhetorians but (as we invoke the wiki way here), we invite all college faculty and instructors to be wikiteachers with us...  We invite you to use Teaching Wiki to support your teaching efforts." [Teaching Wiki]

So... if you wanna do something with Wikis but don't have the server, tech know-how or webspace to install one... use these!!!


1:00:26 PM    comments  trackback


Friday, April 23, 2004
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This is worth a mention as it's justabout the easiest bulletin board creator you could ever get... and could actually be useful too as you can invite people through email (a la Chatzy) and participate through email too (a la Yahoo Groups). Now all it needs is RSS :o)


10:43:31 AM    comments  trackback


Monday, March 29, 2004
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OK, so a little re-branding to reflect what's been going on with the plans, get better search engine relevance and perhaps get me burnin' on them again, gone is 'incorporated subversion: the book and here is teaching online lesson plans (which, much as I'd like to avoid 'teaching' and use 'facilitating' probably makes about as much sense as my continued wish to call 'blogs' 'personal and collaborative publishing tools' ;o) 


9:09:12 PM    comments  trackback



facilitating learning online with...

(click on the links...)

discussion boards

email and email groups

weblogs and RSS

chat rooms & MOOs

IM & Video Conferencing

Wikis


Other Stuff

About me

About incorporated
subversion





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