Audio
The radio has been around for a long time and has been used in
educational classrooms. Recent technologies have allowed classroom teachers to
stream audio over the internet. There are also webcasts and podcasts available
over the internet for students and teachers to download. For example, iTunes
has various podcasts available on a variety of subjects that can be downloaded
for free.
Video
Videos may allow teachers to reach students who are visual learners
and tend to learn best by seeing the material rather than hearing or reading
about it. Teachers can access video clips through the internet instead of
relying on DVDs or VHS tapes. Websites like YouTube are used by many teachers.
Teachers can use messaging programs such as Skype, or webcams, to interact with
guest speakers and other experts. Interactive video games are being integrated
in the curriculum at both K-12 and higher education institutions.
Research on the use of video in lessons is preliminary, but early
results show an increased retention and better results when video is used in a
lesson. Creating a systematic video development method holds promise for
creating video models that positively impact student learning.
Computers, tablets and mobile devices
Computers and tablets allow students and teachers access to
websites and other programs, such as Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, PDF files, and
images. Many mobile devices support m-learning.
Blogging
Blogs allow students and teachers to post their thoughts, ideas,
and comments on a website. Blogging allows students and instructors to share
their thoughts and comments on the thoughts of others which could create an
interactive learning environment.
WebCams
Video cameras that allow you can connect to the internet and see
other internet users. Allows students to become engaging and be able to see who
everyone is.
Whiteboards
Interactive whiteboards ("smart boards") allow teachers
and students to write on the touch screen, so learning becomes interactive and
engaging.
Skype,
The Internet is
making the world a smaller place for everyone, and teachers are discovering how
to use the latest video chat applications to break down classroom walls. From
hosting guest speakers to creating opportunities for homebound students to have
an online education, emerging tech is changing how schools
approach learning.
Three of the hottest
video chat apps are Skype, FaceTime and Google Hangouts, and here’s a few ways
that schools are putting them to use.
Skype
As an early VOIP (voice over IP) provider, Skype has become one of the most popular ways to talk for free over the Internet. Created by Europeandevelopers in 2003, the app was acquired by Microsoft in 2011.
As an early VOIP (voice over IP) provider, Skype has become one of the most popular ways to talk for free over the Internet. Created by Europeandevelopers in 2003, the app was acquired by Microsoft in 2011.
Skype is free to
download and calls to other Skype accounts are free as well. The company
operates a Skype in the Classroom website which offers
more than 2,700 Skype lesson plans and nearly 800 resources created by teachers
as well as organizations including NASA Digital Learning Network, Penguin Books
and the British Council.
Teachers can also
use Skype to connect with other teachers and classrooms. For example, Herrick
Park Elementary School in Tecumseh, Mich. has used the app to help students
make global connections. Last year, the second grade class skyped with a class
in Chile while third graders used the app to talk with students at a Haitian
orphanage.
“Both classes sang
songs while on Skype and were able to ask questions to each other,” said parent
Jennifer Cornish, who had a son participate in each chat. “It was a great
learning experience for my boys and the whole class.”
FaceTime
FaceTime could be described as Apple’s answer to Skype. It is a video chat app that is compatible with Apple devices such as the iPhone, iPod and iPad. Newer devices may come preloaded with FaceTime but for those who need to download the app, it costs a mere 99 cents.
FaceTime could be described as Apple’s answer to Skype. It is a video chat app that is compatible with Apple devices such as the iPhone, iPod and iPad. Newer devices may come preloaded with FaceTime but for those who need to download the app, it costs a mere 99 cents.
While FaceTime does
not offer centralized resources like Skype in the Classroom, teacher forums,
blogs and wikis are full of stories regarding how the app is being put to use
in the classroom. Examples include allowing parents to remotely view student
presentations and bringing in video guest speakers.
Danbury Elementary
School in Lakeside-Marblehead, Ohio is taking use of the app one step
further. According to the Peninsula News, the school
arranged to use FaceTime to allow a preschooler with a rare autoimmune disease
to participate in class.
Using an iPad hooked
to a SmartBoard, the preschooler can see her classmates and they can see her as
they participate together in activities such as singing songs and attending
school assemblies. During learning stations, an aide carries the iPad around
the class as the stations rotate. In addition to working on school tasks at
home, the preschooler uses FaceTime for social interactions to talk with her
friends and share details about favorite toys and activities.
Google Hangouts
A relatively new addition to the world of social applications is Google Hangouts. Like Skype and FaceTime, Hangouts offer a free way to video chat, but the service comes with one big advantage. The other services are limited to two participants, but Hangouts allow multiple people to talk at once.
A relatively new addition to the world of social applications is Google Hangouts. Like Skype and FaceTime, Hangouts offer a free way to video chat, but the service comes with one big advantage. The other services are limited to two participants, but Hangouts allow multiple people to talk at once.
Attached to the
social media service Google+, Hangouts were originally envisioned as a way for
groups of up to 10 friends to chat together. However, schools quickly saw the
potential of Hangouts to facilitate study groups, remote seminars and teacher
office hours. In response, Google expanded the number of participants allowed
in school sponsored Hangouts to 15.
Hangouts also have
an advantage over other videoconferencing options in that they can be broadcast
using the Hangouts On Air option. In addition, chat sessions can be uploaded to
YouTube to be accessed by other students at a later date.
Perhaps because
participants need a Google+ account to access Hangouts, their use seems to be
concentrated at the college level. Last fall, Google Students posted a video of
Ghetto Film School using the service for its master classes. A subsequent discussion of the video
found, among other uses, Hangouts were also being used by geography classes at
the University of Alabama to let distance learners sit in on classes.
Meanwhile, the University of Michigan reports on its website it has engineering
instructors who use the app to hold virtual office hours.
The latest apps are
doing more than allowing family and friends to connect with one another. They
are also opening up new educational opportunities for students at every level
and giving the term online schools a whole new meaning.
Digital library"An informal definition of a digital library is a managed collection of information, with associated services, where the information is stored in digital formats and accessible over a network. A crucial part of this definition is that the information is managed. A stream of data sent to earth from a satellite is not a library. The same data, when organized systematically, becomes a digital library collection. Most people would not consider a database containing financial records of one company to be a digital library, but would accept a collection of such information from many companies as part of a library. Digital libraries contain diverse information for use by many different users. Digital libraries range in size from tiny to huge. They can use any type of computing equipment and any suitable software. The unifying theme is that information is organized on computers and available over a network, with procedures to select the material in the collections, to organize it, to make it available to users, and to archive it."
There are many definitions of a "digital library." Terms such as "electronic library" and "virtual library" are often used synonymously.
- The digital library is not a single
entity;
- The digital library requires technology to
link the resources of many;
- The linkages between the many digital
libraries and information services are transparent to the end users;
- Universal access to digital libraries and
information services is a goal;
- Digital library collections are not
limited to document surrogates: they extend to digital artifacts that
cannot be represented or distributed in printed formats.
Google Earth is a desktop application for
Mac, PC, or Linux computers that allows you to navigate planet Earth from
multiple views. Google Earth combines satellite photos and maps with a search
engine to allow you search to find directions and specific addresses or general
locations and services.
Google Earth is a virtual
globe, map and geographical information program that was originally called
EarthViewer 3D created by Keyhole,
Inc, a Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) funded company acquired by Google in 2004. It maps the Earth by the superimposition of images obtained from satellite
imagery, aerial photography and geographic information system (GIS)3D globe. It was originally available with three different
licenses, but has since been reduced to just two: Google Earth (a free version
with limited function) and Google Earth Pro ($399 per year), which is intended
for commercial use. The third
original option, Google Earth Plus, has been discontinued.
Archive
a
collection of historical documents or records providing information about a
place, institution, or group of people.
In
general, archives consist of records that have been selected for permanent or
long-term preservation on grounds of their enduring cultural, historical, or
evidentiary value. Archival records are normally unpublished and almost always
unique, unlike books or magazines for which many identical copies exist. This
means that archives are quite distinct from libraries with regard to their
functions and organization, although archival collections can often be found
within library buildings.
No comments:
Post a Comment