Welcome! This is a website that everyone can build together. It's easy!

EMail Is For Old PeopleThis is a featured page

Developing Our Own Digital Literacy (Session Overview)


Email has been around for almost two decades and has served us well. Through email, we stay connected and share information and documents. It would be difficult to conceptualize our work without it. Yet, the internet has evolved over the past two decades from a place one visits to a place in which one interacts, offering new opportunities beyond email. Numerous web resources such as social bookmarking, social networks, RSS aggregation, blogs, and Twitter can be used to keep school board members, administrators and teachers up to date on emerging technology, teaching resources, and support networks. This session will provide an overview of Web 2.0 applications for personal learning and instructional use.

Key Questions

• How do Board members, administrators, and teachers communicate professionally and personally? More importantly, how do they share professional information?
• How is that different from how students communicate and share academically and personally?
• How could web applications be leveraged to facilitate professional and instructional collaboration, connections and communication?


Web2.0_apps


bwatwood
bwatwood
Latest page update: made by bwatwood , Nov 18 2008, 8:47 AM EST (about this update About This Update bwatwood Edited by bwatwood

6 words deleted

view changes

- complete history)
Keyword tags: None
More Info: links to this page
Started By Thread Subject Replies Last Post
Timmism I am an Oldie but now I text and update Facebook 0 Aug 8 2009, 8:50 PM EDT by Timmism
Thread started: Aug 8 2009, 8:50 PM EDT  Watch
I work in a big Student Services department in a mature age age called Canning College in Western Australia. Most of us communicate with each other by talking to each other and by email. Most of us professionals have mobile phones yet we rarely text each other. I can usually go and find anyone I need to talk to within 10 minutes, at the most. If I want to talk to a student - I can visit them in person, if they are there! If not, I can ask my receptionist to call them by phone/mobile. I do this sometimes but mostly I send them a text message usually asking them to reply to my text. I can invite to come and see or agree on a place we can meet to talk. Texting students works really well. I get a reply very quickly and then I am not left hanging wondering what's going on for them. I also text my wife who works in another school, when I need to let her know something. I can't recall the last time I sent her an email except if I am forwarding on some word documents etc.

Here's a question? How many people's work email program notifies/SMS's their Mobile phone or Facebook or My Space or Twitter to advise they have received an email? Most email programs I have used, require YOU to do the checking - there are no notifications! The exception to this is my iPhone. I get home email, phone, text, Facebook or Twitter notifications; all in the one place...Fantastic!!! No need to check my email inbox.

I really believe we professional oldies need to embrace that technology that enables us to talk to our customers that carry their mobile phones everywhere they go. Text, instant messaging, Skype, AOL, Twitter all offer immediacy. Our customers will get the message we send them. After all - isn't that the point of all this!


Do you find this valuable?    
Anonymous Funny Perspective 0 Aug 4 2009, 10:52 AM EDT by Anonymous
 
Thread started: Aug 4 2009, 10:52 AM EDT  Watch
It is funny that you express this perception -- I agree! I think it will be a long time before people/businesses move away from using email...But with text messaging, instant Facebooks updates, etc. the world of immediate communication just got faster than email even....Blueprint Education (the company I work for) is just stepping into the Social Media world with Facebook and Twitter accounts. And, the discussion has begun about text messaging/instant messaging to meet the needs of our "customers" which are mostly teenagers!
Do you find this valuable?    

Anonymous  (Get credit for your thread)


Showing 2 of 2 threads for this page