The document discusses how instructors can harness interactive web tools like blogs, wikis, RSS feeds, social bookmarking, videos, and mashups to engage students in learning. It provides examples of how these Web 2.0 technologies can be used for teaching, including demonstrating tools like Grazr for displaying RSS feeds and integrating resources into Blackboard. The document encourages educators to learn more about emerging technologies by exploring online courses and resources with additional ideas.
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
Harnessing Interactive Web for Instructors
1. http://www.slideshare.net/warters/
harnessing-the-interactive-web/
Harnessing the
Interactive Web
A Web 2.0 Toolkit
for Instructors
Presented by Bill Warters OTL Faculty Fellow
Wayne State University
2. Bring the World Into
Your Classroom
AOL Instant Message Traffic Snapshot
3. Online Teaching Now Common
Circa 2003
Image from http://www.studymentor.com/studymentor/
6. Web 2.0 Explained...
Stephen Downes portrays it as a shift
"from being a medium, in which
information is transmitted and
consumed, into being a platform,
in which content is created,
shared, remixed, repurposed,
and passed along"
(Downes, 2005 "E-Learning 2.0," ¶4)
12. Students Like Tech that
Supports Learning
http://www.educause.edu/LibraryDetailPage/666?ID=ERS0607
The ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students
and Information Technology, 2006
14. RSS Feeds
• Blogs really started the move toward
a “Read-Write” Web. Easy to write and
easy to subscribe to and watch others
• RSS is the XML “Glue” that makes it
all possible
From RSS for
• Uses for RSS haveexpanded greatly
Educators
as it has become a reliable standard
17. Blog Growth Report
Th Tec
e S hn
tat ora
e o ti R
• 70 million weblogs Ap f th ep
ril e L or
20 ive t
07 We
• About 120,000 new weblogs each b
day, or...
• 1.4 new blogs every second
• 3000-7000 new splogs (fake, or
spam blogs) created every day
• Peak of 11,000 splogs per day last
December
19. RSS for Educators
Explained
Lots of Examples and Ideas
for Use in Teaching
• RSS Ideas for Educators.pdf
• Quentin D'Souza shares many tools and
links via TeachingHacks.com
• See the Web 2.0 Wiki he’s got going
http://www.teachinghacks.com/wiki/
20. One Day on the WWW...
http://www.teachinghacks.com/wp-content/
uploads/2006/01/rsscomic11a.pdf
32. !
CiteULike
m
Ite
it
lk
o (the busy scholar’s friend...)
To
• CiteULike was launched in November of
2004 and has been steadily improving
since then
• It is free and privately managed by
Richard Cameron in the U.K.
• While your bookmarks are stored online,
you can export your library to either
BibTeX or Endnote for use when writing
33. CiteULike will automatically grab article
metadata when browsing these collections.
You can also input manually.
IoP Electronic Journals
AIP Scitation
JSTOR
Amazon
American Chem. Soc. MathSciNet
Publications MetaPress
American Geophysical Union NASA Astrophysics Data
American Meteorological System
Society Nature
Anthrosource
Physical Review Online
arXiv.org
Archive
ACM portal
PLoS
BioMed Central
PLoS Biology
Blackwell Synergy
Project Muse
BMJ
PubMed
CiteSeer
PubMed Central
CSIRO Publishing
Science
e-Print archive
ScienceDirect
HighWire
IEEE Xplore SpringerLink
37. Educational Content
• Wikipedia
• http://en.wikipedia.org
• Wikiversity
• http://en.wikiversity.org
• Wikibooks
• http://en.wikibooks.org
• Guidelines for class projects
• WSU Class book-writing example
38. !
m
Ite
it
lk
PBWiki - an Educator
o
To
Friendly Starting Place
http://xtremeweek.pbwiki.com
40. A Blog is...
• A shortened form of the
phrase “Web Log”
• Like a ship’s log written daily
by the captain of a vessel.
• A web site that is easily
updated by posting short
items. Ordered by date and
topic, with newest items at the
top. Often archived for
searching and reading later.
41. Blog Content includes
• News and Journalism
• Education
• Analysis
• Humor
• Personal observation and Opinion
• “Annotated Bookmarks”
• and More...
44. Some Typical Blog Features
• Comments (now comment spam is
becoming a problem)
• Feeds (others can subscribe to your Blog
and read it in a newsreader of their
choice)
• Trackbacks (“pinging” system lets you
know when others have commented on
your post at their site)
• Categories (often overlapping and loose)
• Site Search
• Permanent Archives
• Blogroll of other blogs
45. Free Blogs for Educators
and Students
• EduBlogs - http://edublogs.org/
• Elgg - http://eduspaces.net
(free hosted version)
Elgg (http://elgg.org) is an open source social networking
platform based around choice, flexibility and openness: a system
that firmly places individuals at the centre of their activities.
46. Using Videos & Photos
• Video Blogs (see iTunes for many
examples)
• RocketBoom
• Screencasts Online (macintosh-
focused)
• Google Video
• YouTube Video
• Flickr.com (social photo sharing
site)
47. !
m
te
tI
i
lk
Splashr.com - Build Photo
o
To
Shows in an Instant
• Pick a Flickr tag, plug it into www.splashr.com and
voila. Instant gorgeous slide show.
• http://splashr.com/show/reflect2/sciencefiction/25
48. Web-based Applications
• Gliffy (diagrams on the web)
• gliffy.com <http://gliffy.com/>
• Google docs
• Google Docs & Spreadsheets
<http://docs.google.com/>
• Slideshare (see next slide)
49. !
m
SlideShare
Ite
it
lk
o
To
• Slideshare - http://www.slideshare.net/
• Create Online Shows that work within
Blackboard
• Subscribe to content via RSS, can
follow a particular user’s content
Example
RSS feed for Slides by the
travelinlibrarian
http://www.slideshare.net/rss/user/
travelinlibrarian
51. Varieties of Mash-ups
• Audio and Video Mash-ups that mix
content from various sources to
create a unique mix
• Webjay playlists
http://webjay.org/by/campusadr/
conflicttheoryprimer
• Video Mashups
- SceneMaker
- Washington Post Correspondent Interview You
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/ content/video/2006/08/01/
VI2006080100794.html
• Maps & Books & Ebay & Timelines
and more are also used
53. The “Mother Load” of
Mash-up Examples
http://www.programmableweb.com/
• A growing directory of mash-ups
made by users of all skill levels
54. Mashups - Making Them
• Yahoo Pipes (for RSS)
http://pipes.yahoo.com
• Map-based tools of many
varieties now available
55. !
m
Ite
it
lk
o
To
Grazr - Get Your Fill
of Feeds
Grazr is a relatively new tool
for displaying RSS News Feeds
in web browsers. Simple to
use, highly customizable.
56. Example Using Sci-Fi
• Got Example Blogs from Technorati Directory
• Pointed GRAZR at this list
• Read and enjoy from a webpage
GRAZR on Sci-Fi Example
http://grazr.com/gzpanel.html?
view=s&fontsize=10pt&file=http://www.campus-adr.net/
sciencefiction.opml
57. Integration with
Blackboard
See how-to walk throughs at
http://xtremeweek.pbwiki.com
• Use Grazr Feed Display Tool
• CiteULike RSS Feeds
• Topix News Feeds
• WSU New Books Feeds
• Flickr picture slideshow
58. Interested in Learning More?
• Online “Course” on Emerging
Technologies for Scholars
• Links to Lots more ideas
http://snipurl.com/emergingtech
http://xtremeweek.pbwiki.com