THIS BLOG IS MOVING!!!!

March 28, 2008

Soon we will be moving this blog onto another domain and onto our own servers so we can enjoy all the other features and benefits of wordpress…. polls, more multimedia, podcasting, etc.

pointing-finger.jpg

You can get a preview of the work in progress and update your blogrolls and feeds at: http://blog.prometheanplanet.com


Google Earth and Google Maps; Ultimate education resources?

March 9, 2008

Google Earth continues to expand in power and usefulness and is awesome on the Activboard.

The latest version is now supported by an increasing number of immensely useful features, many organised under a section called “Geographic Web” – when photographs and wikipedia articles relating to the places you are flying over can be accessed with a simple click. Special links to video clips from sources such as the National Geographic or Discovery mean that the experience is completely multimedia.

Many 3rd party “layers” can also be downloaded – and these can overlay Google Earth with live weather information. historical features or create virtual tours charting the life and travels of famous individuals.

If you have Google Earth installed. here is a great example – a tour of the ancient sites of Rome.

Another impressive feature of the web based Google Maps is ‘Street View’ – once you find a city (currently US) – you can transform into a pedestrian and enter a virtual world where you can travel along streets in a fully photographic way. With full image panning and zooming – it is true virtual reality…. walk along the streets of New York to visit Times Square or any of the many historic places – and shift between, map, image and street views to fully reinforce the understanding of maps. Awesome! Why not visit Disney!

On my one visit to San Francisco the Golden Gate Bridge was shrouded in thick mist – now I can see what I missed!

Are these tools the new ‘digital atlases’ that children need to be using in the age of GPS and anytime, anywhere connectivity?


Google Docs – Live Document Collaboration on your Activboard

September 30, 2007

This neat video (a lesson idea in itself) highlights how the latest Google docs application offer a way for students in a classroom with net access and an e-mail address can collaboratively create a document on the Activboard.

After the lesson – the students can continue the activity, perhaps collaborating with each other at home (the Google Docs has a secure chat room built in) to construct a presentation for when they next get together as a group.


Google Earth looks skyward!

September 15, 2007

Google Earth needs renaming…to Google Galaxy.. The latest version lets you view the sky above as well…

Search for constellations and stars, animate the orbit of the planets – or if you are feeling ambitious – perhaps simulate how early navigators used stars to cross the oceans!

For those of us living in the Northern Hemisphere a visit ‘down under’ can be surprising – I remember my first night camping at Mount Cook on the Southern Island of New Zealand – and waking up before dawn to an amazing starfield I simply had never seen before… It was like I had stepped onto an alien planet – no familar ‘plough’ pointing the way north!

Take it from me – you ain’t seen the milky way if you have not seen it from there!

Now I can relive the experience on my Activboard!


EDAs and ‘Beaming’ files in class… blending personalised and group learning

September 15, 2007

I have been having a great few weeks since my last post…

We have immersed ourselves in the ‘mobile learning’ agenda over the Summer break – and armed with two Fujitsu-Siemens EDAs, and a mobile phone with a camera we set out to see what approaches and ideas we could discover that we could apply with the Activboard for when term time came round.

In a previous post we had been discovering ideas for student phones.. but these EDAs really take it to a different level.Some of things we have been doing…

  • Setting a series of tasks to do ‘in the field’ – the kids tick ‘em off as they complete them (they loved this and have not tired of it yet!) – and it beats a clipboard and soggy, ripped photocopy sheet anytime in the coolness stakes.
  • Interviewing people (audio or video).. default 30 second time limits really focussed the conversation
  • Photographing specific things in ‘photo scavenger hunts’,
  • Drawing maps and diagrams of ‘real things’!,
  • Setting waypoints and points of interest using GPS then estimating and working out distances between places,
  • If we were near home or a WiFi hotspot – getting online to use Google maps or to answer questions as they arise… (we now know that Quinine comes from the bark of a tree – courtesy of Wikipedia – as we sat in a restaurant pondering what was it in tonic water that apparently had something to do with preventing malaria and my son says – why not find out now!)

All I would add though – is that the device itself does not magically make them start thinking of things to do with it… It was clear that without guidance and set tasks – kids see little use other than playing ‘Bubble Breaker’… The role of the teacher is most definitely safe! But what was surprising though was how often they were the ones who prompted us when we should use it to solve problems and questions as they arose as we travelled around…. ‘Why not use Google maps’ (when I got lost in the car), ‘why not go online’ – when we were intrigued by a rather bright and colourful caterpillar we found (apparently it was a tussock moth) – The kids were thinking ‘mobile connectivity’ as the norm – I was still having to remind myself!

tussock moth caterpillar

So back to the Activboard – armed with a memory card full of stuff!

Wow… Bluetooth rocks… if used appropriately!

I have used a Bluetooth slate in the past and was pretty unimpressed with the performance in the classroom - it would suddenly decide to stop working or would have seconds where it would just go really sloooooowwwwww – but clearly the real benefit with Bluetooth is quickly and easily transferring files between devices. Pairing the EDAs to the laptop connected to the activboard was effortless.. and a simple click would see a file beaming its way to the screen.

What really made this so great was sending the incoming files straight to the Promethean Collections folders… When an incoming beam was detected – you are prompted to choose a location – just choose the Documents > Promethean > Activstudio3 > Shared Collections – and everything beamed to the PC can be found in the AS resource library for instant use in flipcharts – neat! The pocket painter app was particularly powerful – kids can create their own drawings, images, concept maps, etc. and simply beam them to the board as images… ready to drag and drop into the lesson.

Of course – with the Activboard working with devices that allows kids to contribute content – a whole new pedagogy is revealed… by beaming work to the board – THEIR work becomes the focus of discussion, group tasks such as making a flipchart magazine become easy – EDAs can get all the image and text work done independently and a few minutes beaming files – and you can organise all the content in a flipchart!

All those Export options in Activstudio suddently come into their own too… save the flipcharts as a powerpoint or PDF and you can view it in alls its glory on the EDA.. Go to Google Maps and focus on an area for a fieldtrip.. annotate a path on it using the activpen in desktop mode and save the combined page as an image – beam it – and on the EDA the kids have a simple map to follow!

Hardknott Fort - The route we took

The future is not personalised learning, with no class or group work – it has to be a clever blend of these amazing technologies!


Google ‘my maps’

July 3, 2007

Most people will have some idea of how great Google Maps and Google Earth are on an Activboard… You can zoom around the world with a simple touch or slide of the pen. Whether searching for secret military bases in the deserts of America [here] for a creative writing exercise or for indications of deforestation in the Amazon rainfoest [here]- the board really brings the content to life.

What is new from Google is just how easy it is to create customised maps that let you add you own infomation and images/links at any location on the planet.

Go to http://maps.google.com and try out the ‘My Maps’ options. Once you have signed in (you need a free Google account) you can start adding your own points and information on a map.

Here is a great example – The Earth as Art – using Google maps and Images from Space

When you have finished you can save the link to embed in a Flipchart so you can use it as a teaching resource again and again or share it online. You can even download it as a KML file to open in Google Earth.

Some of the things myself and my wife are planning to use this for in class:

  • Roman Cumbria” – Exploring key sites and using the lines and shape tools of Google maps to overlay old borders or roads leading to places such as in this example tour of Vindolanda
  • Geography visual glossary” – Find examples of key natural features around the world – glaciers, ox-bow lakes, hanging valleys, etc.
  • Invaders” – charting the story of a young Viking’s first raiding mission across the North sea.. using the locations to drive the narrative

There are number of important 21st century skills to develop and explore with students – making sense of map directions on web sites, looking for visual or physical evidence from digital sources and making informed inferences from data. Overall the map element helps make the abstract concrete for students.

From an Activ software skills perspective – you can use the ‘camera tool’ to clip bits from Google maps directly into a flipchart for discussion and notetaking.