Stuff about using computers to help people teach and learn better.

News

TETC 2007 Presentations

I have 3 presentations at this year's Tennessee Educational Technology Conference. Click the "read more" link to find out more about them.

Another $100 Laptop

Microsoft's $500 laptop

Online a friendlier place than Real Life

Looking in the Wrong Places

The Challenge

We in the field of educational technology need to pay more attention to finding ways to provide students in teachers with the tools that they need to increase identifiable learning outcomes. Too often we can be pulled in by the sirens of cool toys or be convinced that if only we could train teachers to understand how to use them, students would learn better. I posit that teachers and students now know quite well how to use computers to increase learning, but that the computers they have do not provide even the simplest supports that they need to do so.

Bibus and OpenOffice.org Looks like Endnote to me

A student wanted a Linux laptop so that he could run Bibus, a F/OSS reference management tool that talks to OpenOffice.org. It's not part of Ubuntu, but there's a Debian version, so it installs with a couple of clicks. It took me a minute to figure out how to insert citations, but I did. It looks pretty easy. And it created what appears to be a correctly formatted bibliography. I can't get the BibTeX import to work (I keep my stuff in BibTeX), and the export that JabRef did of my database (of some 2000+ references) didn't seem to include the journals. This may still be a decent tool for me when I'm forced to create word processing documents, and it's likely a worthwhile tool for you if you don't already have 2000 items in a database using another tool that you really, really like.

Laptop Lashback

Dangerously Irrelevant has a piece called $2,000 pencils where he links to a piece about a a "Laptop Lashback". It seems that throwing laptops in schools doesn't really change things and that what we have are $2,000 pencils.

On the Cover of the Rolling Stone

TechTrends came today. The cover says: "Also in this issue: Open Source Software," and it's my article: "It's Time to Consider Open Source Software." Before I post a copy online, I suppose I need to re-read the thing I signed to see how many of my rights I gave away to them.

Update

And this is interesting. The thing has been picked up by LinuxInsider. It's in Two parts and they provided links for everything. The electronic version of the original TechTrends article is now available to subscribers or to UT people..

Now I really am on the cover of the Rolling Stone

So I submitted the article to Slashdot, "News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters." My article is on the front page. Since the article's not on my server, I don't suppose I'll get Slashdotted, but I do suspect I'll get a bit more traffic tomorrow than I usually do.

In which we learn that handwriting isn't what it used to be

On Redefining Education

I've been thinking lately about the problem with schools (actually, I've been thinking about that since at least the 6th grade). I'm still trying to refine the argument, but I think it comes down to the fact that there is no so much information in the world that is ever-rapidly being produced that old ideas of learning "the basics" just don't make sense anymore. It used to be that you could learn how to design bridges, heal the sick, or, maybe build cars (probably using very few skills that you learned in school) and be set. Now, however, the job that you'll be doing in five or ten years, especially if you are a high school senior, probably doesn't exist.