All I need to know I learned in EDES 545
April 8th, 2009 by katkin and tagged education, learning, new literacies, teacher librarianship, technology, Web 2.0All I really need to know about information technologies for learning (at least for the moment), I learned in EDES 545
(a guide for Teacher Librarianship)
All I really need to know about how to blog and what to post and how to build knowledge, I learned in EDES 545. Collective wisdom is not constructed alone, but there on the blackboard of WebCT.
These are the things I learned:
- Share everything
- Play podcasts
- Filter less.
- Rethink what you’re doing in your school library right now.
- Build a learning community that meets the needs of your learners.
- Don’t post pictures without permission.
- Say you’re sorry when you delete somebody’s wiki comments.
- Respect intellectual property and privacy
- Update.
- Asselin and Valenza are good for you.
- Create a balanced plan – read some and question some and gather info and analyze and synthesize and create and share and connect every day some.
- Take a break from the online world every afternoon.
- When you go out on the web, watch out for inequity, and bridge that digital divide.
- Be aware of wonder. Remember the little videoclip on YouTube: your video goes up and the world downloads it and nobody really knows how it embeds, but it’s just like that.
- Web 2.0 applications like blogs and wikis and voicethreads – they’re all social. So are we.
- And then remember the post you accidentally deleted and the first word you learned – the biggest word of all – SAVE.
Everything you need to know is online somewhere. AASL’s standards for the 21st-century learner and ISTE’s NETS for students and teachers, and Ribble’s nine elements of digital citizenship. Asselin’s and Doiron’s technology and critical literacies, and ethics and social responsibility.
Take any one of those new literacies and transform your practice for 21st century learners and apply it to your school life or your library or division or your department of education and it holds true and clear and firm. Think what a better world it would be if we all – the whole world – practiced Asselin and Valenza 24/7, when logged on to our laptops to learn and collaborate with each other. Or if all districts had as a basic policy to put teacher librarians back in all our schools to build and sustain a culture of inquiry.
And it is still true, no matter how savvy a digital native or immigrant you are, when you go out on the Web, it is best to hold virtual hands with a teacher librarian and stick together.
[With respect to the original "All I really need to know I learned in kindergarten" by Robert Fulghum]
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