The Patience of Kudzu: 1001 Flat World Tales Update
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Quick updates on the 1001 Flat World Tales wiki world writing workshop:
- We’ve set up a Coordination Schedule on the 1001teachers project planning wiki. It’s an at-a-glance chart showing what schools plan on entering the project when. I like the efficiency this affords: All interested teachers can now go there, enter their basic info on the table (school, location, age group, number of students, teacher contact info, projected entry and exit times, and language the writers will compose in)–and find other world classrooms of similar age groups and time-frames to connect to. So it’s self running, practically.
- Chad Ball in Canada (thanks to Jeff Whipple for the hook-up) and Ms. Cofino in Malaysia are coordinating collaboration for their middle school writers.
- Michele Davis in Denver (Arapahoe) and I in Seoul are in our first draft peer response stage. Several of my students have expressed how much they enjoy this novelty on their free blogs. Thanks again to Karl Fisch for hooking us up.
- There has been one bump that we should learn from: we have to communicate better about students who don’t do the assignment before we assign cross-world peer teams. I had to re-do two hours work because a dozen students hadn’t done their “jobs” properly. (In the real world, they’d be reprimanded at best, fired at worst, for not meeting their deadline. Here, they just don’t get any connections with other students in other countries.)
- Miss Profe (virtual “Get Well Soon” card wished your way here
) has pushed the project into the multi-lingual by entering her Spanish 1 and 2 classes (ages 14-16) in the project. Any other Spanish teachers out there want to connect with her? (Ms. Cofino in Malaysia is looking into this.) - Jeff Whipple, tech coordinator in New Brunswick, Canada, and I Skyped a few minutes ago and he expedited the embedding of world clock widgets on both the 1001 Flat World Tales wiki and the 1001teachers wiki. Julie Lindsay’s and Vicki Davis‘ project was the inspiration for that one (and so much more–theft is flattery
). So now all teachers and students can know what time it is for their counterparts. - Tom Barrett and I skyped yesterday, England to Korea, about several things, ranging from safe use policies to wiki alternatives to multimedia “digital storytelling” tools. I hope he can get some of his primary classes hooked up with Mr. Smith’s fourth graders in Hannibal, Missouri, USA on the 1001 Tales project. Right now Mr. Smith’s kids are waiting patiently for other primary classrooms to write and reflect with. Any helpers?
- We teachers and coordinators are going to try to have a Skype conference call this weekend to just reflect on the road so far, get to know each other with voice, and play with ideas for the future. I’ll podcast highlights if all goes well.
Tom and I spoke about what’s at the heart of this project–writing and reflecting and improving as writers; making cross-world connections and learning through them; authentic publishing for only the best; and creating publishing opportunities through audio and visual media for students with intelligences other than the textual.
And we went back to why the “blook” idea is not some novelty (though it is that, too), but is instead a way to keep students writing, and gaining new audiences, on their blogs.
By publishing the successful stories on interlinked student blogs, each writer will see their real audience grow, in real time, every time they go to their blog. Simple widgets like Clustrmaps (Tom recommended GeoVisitors instead, which does sound cooler, so I’ll check it out), it bears repeating, are incredibly powerful writing motivators for students. [Update: Let's be honest: They're motivators for adult writers, too. Instant feedback from the world. Powerful.] So are reader comments, and the conversations and connections those lead to.
All of this proves, at a glance, that blogging ain’t just “writing for teacher.” And that good blogs–which means good writing–lead to rich connections with the world. All through authentic writing.
So yes, I’m excited. It’s been messy, but we’re going. More and more connections are being made. Teachers are learning that wikis are easy. Students are learning about other countries through them, and often making new relationships. And all of us are now just curious to see how this digital organism is going to grow.
Why am I thinking of kudzu?
Photo credit from Flickr.
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- Update on the K-12 "1001+ Flat World Tales" World Writing Project...
- "1001 Flat World Tales" Update: Marhabban, Hola, Ca Va, Ni Hao, Gruss Gott, etc: All Languages Now Welcome...
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Thanks for the enthusiastic comments about ClustrMaps as a motivator. As far as GeoVisitors being ‘cooler’, we’d prefer to think of it as ‘different’, mainly because we address a different niche (in particular the ‘gestalt’ that we can offer by combining impossibly large scale, depicting colossal numbers of visitors, in an imossibly small space, directly on your page).
There are indeed other great counters and mapping tools out there, and we love many of ‘em!
We also thought you might be interested in a very similar posting on Higgy’s Blog about ClustrMaps as Student Motivation at his school!
All the best, and many thanks for using ClustrMaps!
-CJ on behalf of the ClustrMaps Team
[Reply]
ClustrMaps Team
21 Feb 07 at 7:26 pm
I certainly enjoy ClustrMaps, and so do my students, so I agree.
But why hasn’t ClustrMaps answered any of the several tech support emails I’ve sent over the past five or six weeks?
[Reply]
Clay Burell
22 Feb 07 at 6:08 am