A New Diigo Vision and Call for Advice: On Students Teaching China to the West
Wednesday, 23 December 2009 Clay Burell
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I’m a 21st Century Education Rip Van Winkle with a twist: I only went to sleep for a single year’s sabbatical, but the changes over that year make 2008 seem like 1808. This post is long, but I hope some of you will plod through it and advise me on what helpful solutions I’ve slept through. I put my pleas along those lines in red.
Feel free to skip to section three for what’s really the meat of this post. I’d love feedback there especially.
I told my students in the just-concluded semester-long Chinese History course that I gave myself a B/B- for the way I taught it this first time out (call it the Beta version). This post will return to my early “teacher think-aloud” habit on this blog to reflect on ways to raise that grade for the second semester
Since a B supposedly signifies “above average” without signifying “excellent,” I’ll justify that grade first by listing what I thought were the course’s strengths and weaknesses. Then I hope I’ll have enough steam left to dump the brainstorm of how to re-figure the course — using Diigo to heighten the academic rigor, and an “in medias res” narrative structure to heighten the engagement and provide the essential purpose for studying Chinese (or any) history at all1 — that’s been brewing in my mind over the last (typically post-midnight) hour.
Strengths, Weaknesses, and Future Improvements
1. Replaced the textbook
Strengths: A week before the course began, the returning teachers arrived to work and I was finally able to see the resources and scope of the course. The textbook, to put it generously, was great for 12-year-olds, but not my 16-year-olds in this supposedly “rigor”-driven school — so I tossed it and replaced it with the China chapters from an introductory Asian History college textbook (Rhoades Murphey’s excellent A History of Asia).
Weaknesses: Murphey’s text led to an embarrassment of riches: there was simply too much information in it for a brief survey course. I was also concerned that its readability level was too challenging for some students, but I did a Poll-Daddy poll and found 33 of 36 responded from “It’s a bit challenging, but I can handle it” (my definition of the Zone of Proximal Development for reading) to “It’s just right for my reading level” to “It’s easy.” Still, for the three who couldn’t handle it, alternate texts or resources were necessary, and I didn’t have them.
Another weakness was in the photocopied packet I made of the Murphey readings. I didn’t include the Index in the copies, so it was surely difficult for students to be able to locate information from the text for review purposes.
A final weakness: It had been four years since I’d used the text, which means I’d forgotten most of it, and spent the semester “two days ahead of the students” in terms of content mastery. (Students seem to think teachers remember everything they’ve ever known, which is interesting, since a brief reflection on their own forgetting of content from courses from prior years should demolish that idea. They seem to think the adult brain is of an entirely different model, some new design inserted in the skull upon college graduation or something. So here’s a dirty teacher secret, kids: Our brains are at least as limited as yours.)
Future Improvements: I’ve ordered The Cambridge Illustrated History of China to be the textbook next year. An Amazon “Reader Reviews” and “Look Inside” perusal satisfied me that this is a reasonably solid high school China history text. (We’re looking at ABC-CLIO database as a possible digital replacement for paper textbooks altogether for next year, when we go 1:1. Anybody know how feasible this is?)
2. Replaced Blackboard with Ning
Strengths: I haven’t written about it yet because I’m waiting for the video to be released, but I gave a keynote speech at the Learning Technologies Conference in Australia last month, and during it I declared a “pox on Blackboard.” I meant it. It made my first month trying to get to know my students’ backgrounds, preferences, and literacy skills utter hell. First I assigned an “About Me” forum that most students put a lot of effort into, apparently….. “Apparently” because I never saw it. Some glitch in Blackboard didn’t save the things, so I never got to read them. That damned me to fogginess about the general skills of my class for the first couple of weeks. Later attempts to use the forums, once the glitches were ironed out, were still clunky due to Blackboard’s horrible user interface (in all fairness, my school is using an old version, and I think later ones have copied enough from Moodle to be more intuitive). Example: answering a forum in Blackboard confused most of my students because of the language of the User Interface. Instead of hitting “reply” after my prompt — no “reply” link existed — they had to somehow just know that to simply reply they had to click on “Start New Thread.” Talk about unintuitive.
Then there was Blackboard’s use of Frames, so cutting-edge in 1995, and its general “why click once when you can click ten times for the same task” workflow. The tool was as schooly as its name. It took way more of my time than necessary on Moodle to deliver a look, feel, and functionality less satisfactory than Moodle’s. A month into the course I’d had it. I left Blackboard for Ning. (I wasn’t about to install and manage my own Moodle. Been there, suffered that. Anybody have solutions along these lines I don’t know about?)
The strengths of Ning: It’s way more straightforward. The Main Page is a one-stop overview and link-list for all necessary tasks and documents for the week. Videos, photo slideshows, forums, blogs, RSS feeds of China News from Google News and from my Diigo China bookmarks in widgets on the sidebars for any advanced student wanting to read more. Hell, even student birthdays announced on the sidebar (it never hurts so sing Happy Birthday in class). So good riddance, Blackboard.
I kept things pretty minimal, as far as assignments went. Rotating groups of four or five students had to blog each week on the prior week’s content — open, whatever idea struck their fancy — and the others had to reply to two that appealed to them (authentic audience response awards students with the best ideas, hopefully stirs those whose posts elicited cricket chirps to reflect on how to do better next time). It was hard for me to participate in the blogs and forums as much as I’d have liked because of the afore-mentioned “two days ahead of the students” reading the textbook.
Weaknesses: Organization. I’m not going to beat myself up for this one, because I had to design the airplane while I was mid-flight in the semester. But I need to set all forums so that replies are threaded under the comments replied to, which isn’t the default, for one thing. Also, having 36 students on a single forum got unwieldy. I didn’t want to use groups because I wanted richer conversations between the two class sections, but this made navigation of forums difficult. I also need to figure out how to instruct students to subscribe to email notifications when somebody replies to their comment or post. I’m not sure this finely-tuned of an option is even available. If not, that means students are getting 40-odd notifications every time somebody replies to the forum they replied to — which means they understandably delete them all, as I do, without looking at them. Clunky. (Help?)
Future Improvements: Frankly, I’m still puzzling over this one. I‘d love to have students use Diigo to comment on other students Ning blogs and forum readings, but since the site is locked and the content is dynamic, I’m not sure Diigo highlights would be visible to other students visiting the pages. Anybody know? [Update: Well that was easy. Diigo told me on Twitter, while I was writing this, that the highlights will indeed show. They also set me up with an Education Account within 20 minutes of my applying for it, which will make class registration much easier. So cool.)
3. Content Organization: From "From the Beginning" to "In Medias Res" (or, "Teaching History Backwards")
Strengths: Covering the 4,000 years of Chinese history from the semi-legendary Xia Dynasty of 2,000 BCE to the present in a semester course was no easy task -- especially since China, unlike Europe, doesn't have any gaping 1,000-year Dark Age through which to conveniently fast-forward, but instead boasts an unbroken string of literate centuries across four millennia. Survey though it was, the students did receive an education in the broad (and with Murphey's text, often impressively deep) flow of Chinese history from the Xia, Shang, Zhou, Qin, Han, Sui, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties, and on into the 20th century's Nationalist and Communist regimes -- right up to the present day. (And though I know they couldn't know how skinny their "education" in Chinese history would have been had I just used the old textbook, and thus didn't have the perspective to appreciate just how superior their introduction to that history was in terms of depth and scope, I'm still pouting over the lack of a single expression of appreciation for the bang they got for their semester's buck. I know, I know: Cry me a river. Then send me to a shrink for expecting gratitude from teenagers.)
Weaknesses: The pacing was too fast. Again, I'm not beating myself up on this one because the textbook was new and I'd never used it as the primary text for teaching Chinese history before.
But more importantly, despite the oomph of knowing the highlights of all of China's major dynasties, at a certain point it starts feeling like a stuck record. Most of China's classical dynasties follow very similar "Dynastic Cycle" patterns in which a new dynasty begins, implements some impressive reforms in its first century or so, and over the next century or two becomes complacent and corrupt, and finally loses "the Mandate of Heaven" in the eyes of its subjects, and falls to whichever rebel or neighbor state emerges triumphant in Ye Olde and Verye Predictable Ende-of-Cycle Civille Warre or Forynne Invasionne. It brings to mind the title of an old Bowie song: "Always Crashing in the Same Car."
Most importantly, that almost-never-ending 3,000 years of dynastic cycles becomes, without a purpose for knowing it, an exercise in what Jared Diamond calls "history as one damn fact after another." Diamond insists on what most history buffs would assent to: that there are patterns in history that point towards essential understandings of who and what we are -- and those understandings, of course, separate the naive and ignorant from the educated. More importantly, they separate the citizen who you pray, for the sake of democracy, will not vote, from the one you pray will always vote.
Future Improvements: The course fell into the One Damn Fact Trap because I covered it chronologically: "In the beginning....." Tonight I think I arrived at a better approach.
I'm going to start the next course with the end of the dynastic era in 1911, when the Nationalists threw out the Qing -- more accurately, when the Qing just collapsed due to its own decrepitude -- and went through a painful and practically literal "crash course" in modern governance: nationalism, socialism, dictatorship, fascism, and democracy all in a stew from 1911 until 1949, and then totalitarianism and various shades of communism from 1949 to the present.
But before doing any of that, I'm going to assign the final exam essay questions in the first week of class, and have the students Diigo the hell out of our readings and forums on Ning for the rest of the course in order to arrive at their "answers." Here are the questions:
Essay Questions:
1. Western Liberal Democracies in Europe and (especially) the USA typically criticize the PRC for its lack of human rights – freedom of speech, religion, and assembly – as well as for its one-party dictatorship. Based on your knowledge of Chinese history in the “long view,” how valid do you think these criticisms are? Give as many specific examples from Chinese history as you can to support your arguments.
2. Mao Zedong waged the Cultural Revolution as a last-ditch attempt to prevent party Moderates (Zhou Enlai, Deng Xiaoping, and others) from implementing capitalist reforms to China’s economic system; Mao believed instead that a planned economy relying on the social spirit of the people was the path to prosperity and justice for all. Based on your understanding of the effects of the Moderates’ reforms from the rise of Deng Xiaoping around 1980 to the present day, to what degree do you think Mao’s resistance was justified? Use as many specific details from the successes and failures of the planned economy during the ‘50s and early ‘60s (the First Five Year Plan, the Great Leap Forward), and from the successes and failures of the Four Modernizations to the present, to support your argument.
Why Diigo highlights and sticky-notes (online, on-site, on specific segments of text annotations) instead of simple forum and blog responses? A discussion on a Diigo forum last year that Cliff Mims started -- see my highlights on it here -- sold me. Diigo's Maggie Tsai said it most succintly:
Fundamentally there is a difference between Diigo's annotation and traditional blog commenting. Diigo in-situ highlight and sticky note allows fine-grained discussion to specific part of a webpage - which opens up the possibility for more meaningful exchanges...
So in a nutshell, as students read, they'll be highlighting and bookmarking the evidence to answer our semester-long "essential questions" that traditionally I would have sprung on them as "surprise" cram-questions at the end of the course. This will very much raise the "rigor" bar, and provide a similar routine for individual research projects. But uh-oh: what about pdf files? How can students highlight, bookmark, annotate those? Any work-arounds, dear teacher-geeks? (Much of our content is in pdf format.) [Update: Re: highlighting and annotating pdf files: http://a.nnotate.com does with pdf’s what Diigo does for websites. A good find. (They tweeted after I called for help on Twitter.)]
The Beauty of a Real Project: Interpreting Modern “Communist” China, from an Historically-Informed Perspective, to China’s Historically Uninformed Western Critics
Wordy, I know, but that says it. China might not have made the finals for George W. Bush’s “Axis of Evil” award, but I’ve no doubt it made the short-list. Add to that the endless refrain, from at least the days of Ronald Reagan, of the evils of “godless Communism” and the blessings, historical and contemporary evidence aside (Iraq anyone? Or Afghanistan? or or or?) of one-size-fits-all “Democracy” and “Capitalism,” and you’ve got all sorts of articles of Western ideological faith to complicate with those lovely things called facts.
And please notice I said “complicate.” That’s the beauty of the idea: easy answers to the above essay questions, if pursued across a semester, with all evidence nicely aggregated on a simply-tagged Diigo page, will surely give way very quickly to the type of answers our future adults should have when considering modern China: and I mean nuanced answers.
Now my last two questions:
1. Assuming students will be able to offer valuable evidence and insight into the questions above — questions I’m convinced are relevant enough to the real world to deserve an audience — what’s the best way to present their findings to the world via the web?
2. How can I keep the project alive after its first iteration? Different questions for each successive class?
A million thanks for any who took the time to read and respond. If you see any beautiful ways to extend or enhance the idea further — Skypecast interviews from my students in Singapore with American students about their stereotypes of China and its government, for example? More? — please pitch those in the mix too.
- it reminds me of David Warlick’s occasional pitch to “teach history backwards,” though my approach is a little more complicated [↩]
- Creating Critical Readers: A Too-Easy Diigo-Google News-Student Blogging Project
- How They Do Surprise Us, These People We Call Students
- “Lies My Teacher Told Me” Author Censored in China
- New Tech Teaching Habits
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No. 1 — December 31st, 1969 at 11:59 pm
Terrific @cburell reflective post on Beyond School http://bit.ly/7VEyC7 fav part: fnl exam ?s guide student-led learning from beg
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No. 2 — December 23rd, 2009 at 6:28 am
Clay, if I’m understanding your PDF sharing/annotating needs correctly, I’d offer two suggestions:
1) http://bookgoo.com supposedly offers these services (I say supposedly because the reviews say so, but I haven’t been able to get the site to load)
2) This takes a little more virtual elbow grease, but if you only want students to share w/each other and you, as opposed to the whole web, get them free Evernote accounts, let them annotate in Adobe or some similar offline program, then save their PDFs to Shared Notebooks (Mashable has an overview of the service here: http://mashable.com/2009/06/25/evernote-shared-notebooks/ ). Depending on the settings you use, students can share just with small groups or with the entire class (set up different Shared Notebooks for each purpose).
.-= Damian´s last blog ..The Fine Print =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 23rd, 2009 at 6:44 am
Thanks for those, Damian. Book-goo (horrible name!) isn’t loading for me either, so what we’re to make of that is up to us.
Evernote is a great idea, though. I’m looking at the link you gave and will let that brew for a while. Group eds are available only with a premium account, so maybe I need to finally rethink my cheapskate approach, since I’ve heard such great things aboout EN. (I have an account, but force of habit has prevented me from using it much at all. Diigo seems so easy by comparison.)
Another option I thought of post-post is to convert the pdf’s to text, and copy those to Ning. That way they can be annotated and highlighted.
But definitely good to consider EverNote in the mix.
God I’m rusty. Thanks for the help!
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No. 3 — December 23rd, 2009 at 6:53 am
Re: highlighting and annotating pdf files: http://a.nnotate.com does with pdf’s what Diigo does for websites.
A good find. (They tweeted after I called for help on Twitter.)
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No. 4 — December 23rd, 2009 at 12:27 pm
I remain a big, big fan of Diigo. Thanks for the other tips, Clay. I especially appreciate the encouragement to consider consider substituting the use of Ning for Blackboard (Desire2Learn, WebCT, Angel, etc.). I’m going to give that some serious thought.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:54 am
Clif, a belated hi and thanks for starting that Diigo discussion. It was very helpful, and you moderated it well.
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No. 5 — December 23rd, 2009 at 2:56 pm
Clay–I love it when I hear teachers discussing databases. The ABC-CLIO is a great option! I can put you in contact with our humanities head who is also a great fan of this database. As you probably know you have the additional option to create tailor-made reading lists for your students. We are successfully using this with our 8th graders. We have had an excellent response from our students with this database—so good in fact, we have added Daily Life Premium: Daily Life through History, World Folklore and Folklife, Daily Life America.
We are not a 1-1 school, but since you are there are additional options. Have you looked at Proquest’s History Study Center? Berkshire Publishing has just published this year a a digital Encyclopedia of China, which looks quite good and they are open to a consortium pricing. And since you are discussing China history–have a look at my blog posting on Education about Asia; it is a worthwhile subscription. And any China syllabus must have Spence on it.
And BTW thanks for the suggestion A.nnotate. Diigo has wonderful possibilities, but it is currently blocked in China right now (OUCH!)
.-= beth´s last blog ..Looking East =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:32 am
Beth, I know I followed your link and commented there, but I just want to urge others to follow it too. It’s so very rich.
Thanks for the input and enjoy Tianjin! How long have you been there, anyway?
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No. 6 — December 23rd, 2009 at 10:00 pm
Hey Clay,
Regarding the .pdf dilemma . . . I clicked on the a.nnotate.com link that you posted & noticed that it could be quite pricey. Have you tried foxit reader? I have had great success with it–it is free for the reader & mark-up version, with upgrades available for a small(er) cost http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/reader/reader3.php (I am not affiliated with them in any way, just a teacher on the lookout for cheap/free stuff!)
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 24th, 2009 at 4:06 am
Will try indeed, Mrs. Fuller, thank you
I will say that what I’m liking at a.nnotate is the ability to socially bookmark the highlights. For collaborative research in the classroom, that has benes. I haven’t looked at pricing too much there yet, but from what I recall, it didn’t seem spendy at its lower tiers.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 24th, 2009 at 4:07 am
D’oh! It’s just for Windows, and I’m married to a Mac. Still a nice tool to know about, so thanks again.
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No. 7 — December 24th, 2009 at 6:24 pm
Dude, haven’t read the whole post (or all comments) yet, but will slowly make my way through. In the meantime, this is what has resonated so far:
“I only went to sleep for a single year’s sabbatical, but the changes over that year make 2008 seem like 1808. ” — OMG, my biggest stress about going back after my sabbatical, especially since this year, my school has switched from PC to Mac, and I haven’t had the time to play around on the Mac and feel as native with it as I did with my PC.
“Blackboard’s use of Frames, so cutting-edge in 1995, and its general “why click once when you can click ten times for the same task” workflow. The tool was as schooly as its name. It took way more of my time than necessary on Moodle to deliver a look, feel, and functionality less satisfactory than Moodle’s. A month into the course I’d had it. I left Blackboard for Ning.” — AGREED. Though this year our school will have installed the new Bb, over the past year I often considered “going rogue” and shifting just my classes — or even just my AP Lang classes — to Ning. But our school is very lock-step, not to mention obsessed with the “security” of its students (read: We.Must.Use.School.Protocol) that I’d probably get a big wrist-slap for doing so.
“Also, having 36 students on a single forum got unwieldy. I didn’t want to use groups because I wanted richer conversations between the two class sections, but this made navigation of forums difficult. ” — My solution to this in the past on Bb has been to create a single course page out of my two AP sections and then create cross-sectioned groups (with about 3 kids per section in each group). They’d then interact with a slightly smaller group that included kids from the other section, and at the end of the exercise I could open the groups up for them to see one another’s forums. Not 100% satisfactory (partly b/c of the Bb unwieldiness), but it had some benefits, including cross-pollination of ideas from one section to another in a relatively manageable way.
Gonna keep reading to see if anything else twigs, but didn’t want any one comment to get too long.
.-= Jodi´s last blog ..Romancin’ the languages =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:54 am
Thanks for input on “cross-pollination.” I’ll see if Ning allows this kind of approach.
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No. 8 — December 24th, 2009 at 6:49 pm
Continuing:
“But uh-oh: what about pdf files? How can students highlight, bookmark, annotate those? Any work-arounds, dear teacher-geeks? (Much of our content is in pdf format.) [Update: Re: highlighting and annotating pdf files: http://a.nnotate.com does with pdf’s what Diigo does for websites. A good find.” — Thanks for this. V cool. Also, I have this vague inkling that the latest versions of Adobe allow PDF sticky-note annotation. But it may be something attached to pay-only versions…? Will have to play around with a.nnontate, as it’s also two-tiered.
That’s it for now. Funny, cause I had a dream last night that I was working at a new school that wasn’t 1-1 and it was so awkward, b/c I was trying to get students to share their responses to the work online with one another.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from Padova, Italia!
.-= Jodi´s last blog ..Romancin’ the languages =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:52 am
Hi Jody,
Adobe and other pdf readers allow annotation, but I want the social annotation a la Diigo for collaborative research and annotation discussions.
You should see a shrink if you’re dreaming about 1:1 schools while in Italy. I order you to instead dream of Petrarch and Botticelli.
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Jodi Reply:
December 31st, 2009 at 7:37 am
Yes, well… maybe it’s all the rich food and wine…
.-= Jodi´s last blog ..New Posts in the New Year! =-.
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No. 9 — December 25th, 2009 at 3:21 am
It’s good to see you back, Clay. Now if I could only summon the will to break from applications and schooly writing to post…
I think your questions are excellent will drive students to see that history, rather than being a set of facts, is nuanced and, at its best, controversial. To present their answers, it seems like a WordPress blog might be the way to go. In particular, I’d hope that you support a variety of media responses: written essays (which do still have their value), but also YouTube recordings of speeches.
Another idea, which might just stem from my enjoyment of argument, is to have Skype debates between your class and American students. Push for thinking based on facts, but keep students from simply posting facts without thought.
Also, about Blackboard/Ning: “I think later ones have copied enough from Moodle to be more intuitive” — I don’t think Moodle is, by any means, a standard against which usability should be judged. Its usability is questionable enough that I’ve considered making my own dozens of times. Depending on application results, I might end up making it this summer, giving you a potential alternative next year.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:46 am
Good suggestions, Morgante.
The problem I’d need help with on debating students in the US is the time-zone problem. We’re GST+8 here, the US is around GST-8. Do you think asynchronous debate would be worth the effort? If so, how would you do it? (Why am I thinking VoiceThread?)
What do you mean by “recordings of speeches”? Original student speeches, or historical ones? I don’t get it.
Moodle 2.0 is coming soon and sounds promising. Anything is better than Bb, and I do like Moodle well enough. But I’m not going to host it myself, so it’s moot anyway. I just looked at Edmodo or whatever it’s called, and it seems so minimal I’m not sure how it would do the job. What would you use? (If/until you make your own, which of course you will tell me about. That’s an order.)
Get back to your schoolywork now.
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Morgante Pell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:57 am
Good point on the debates; I forgot about the time zone issue. Asynchronous debates might work though, especially if spread over multiple days—record 1 speech, then 1 response, etc. VoiceThread could work for this, so could simple video uploads to YouTube.
By recordings of speeches I meant student recordings—presenting thoughts through oratory rather than solely writing.
Edmodo does seem too minimal, but I’ve also lost faith in the Moodle model: individual schools/teachers all hosting their own instance doesn’t seem the best way, especially if we want to see true global collaboration. It just seems to bring the restrictions of the school walls onto the web—and not in a particularly elegant fashion. I’ll certainly let you know if I get anything going.
Now back to studying for the SAT, since I’m on break.
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No. 10 — December 25th, 2009 at 10:37 am
Great post, very inspiring to read teachers reflect that honestly and openly about their teaching. I would love to see the teachers at my school of education do the same. I was just yesterday discussing with some of my friends how there seems to be a singular lack of concern for pedagogy (or andragogy) at schools of education… Do as I say, not as I do…
I have played a bit with Diigo, but never in a large group setting. I’d love to experience that. It’s something we’ve thought about experimenting with more at Peer2Peer University. I guess a lot has been written about it already, but I wonder how to best structure it. Do they only comment on the “curriculum”, or do they go out and find any resources that are interesting, and comment on them?
It’s also annoying with PDFs. I really wish all these online publishers could serve us with HTML, rather than PDFs… I am doing research for a paper right now, and I keep ending up with a download diretory full of PDFs with enlightening names like 3094032492034.pdf.
.-= Stian Haklev´s last blog ..Harper Valley PTA/Fru Johnsen/Fröken Fredriksson =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 28th, 2009 at 2:50 am
Hi Stian,
You did see a.nnotate.com as a pdf version of Diigo linked above, didn’t you?
I’ve never mandated Diigo before, so it’s going to be a first for me. I think the open surfing option is a good idea — but only if (and mostly in order to) website evaluation is required.
As for the honesty, I figure it was pre-emptive (bad word for an American like me to use in the post-Bush era) strike before my students might launch their own critiques
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No. 11 — December 25th, 2009 at 8:02 pm
[...] 3 Aufrufe Clay Burell beschreibt in seinem Blogpost A New Diigo Vision and Call for Advice: On Students Teaching China to the West sehr anschaulich wie er seinen Kurs über chinesische Geschichte weg vom Learning Management System [...]
No. 12 — December 29th, 2009 at 7:42 am
I know I’m late replying, but on a Mac, I think the simplest way to annotate PDFs is using Preview. You can highlight or at the very least circle / box text and add your own notes. When you save it, it saves all annotations. A.nnotate looks good, but a bit complicated if all you want to do is mark up a PDF and show it to others.
.-= Adrienne´s last blog ..Resuscitated: Assessment — For What it’s Worth =-.
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 29th, 2009 at 4:17 pm
I know how to annotate on a Mac, Adrienne. What I’m looking for is the social annotation equivalent of Diigo for pdf’s for the class. A.nnotate is the closest thing I’ve found.
Thanks for pitching in, though.
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No. 13 — December 29th, 2009 at 10:05 am
Your reflections on your teaching experience about China was helpful. In January 2010 I will be (co-)teaching Asian History for the first time. One of the countries I will be teaching is China. I have been reading everything I can get my eyes on about China. I have a tougher job than you. I will only have about 2-3 sessions to help my students grasp something worthwhile about China’s immense history. Do you have any suggestions for a very brief overview and analysis of China’s history that would be helpful for university reading level (EFL students in Indonesia reading in English, their second language)that I could have online access to?
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Clay Burell Reply:
December 29th, 2009 at 4:50 pm
Gosh, Tim, I have no idea how a person could do China in three classes. I guess I’d go deep on the PRC or the 20th C. to the present. There’s a good short textbook by Josh Brooman, China in the 20th Century (Longman) that might fit the bill, but even that would be tight.
Also google Fareed Zakaria Newsweek the rise of China for an article about China today.
PBS has a documentary online called Tank Man that’s a good watch on Tiananmen to the present. Transcripts included on site.
Zhang Yimou’s movie “To Live” is a great historical drama about one family from the 1940s to the 1980s that nails the main political events.
Of course, you’d need to do Confucianism too.
Hope that helps.
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