Archive for the ‘creativity’ Category
From TweetClouds to TagCrowds - Another Voluntary Meme
[Update: I added a complete novel you should be able to guess, just to give you an idea of what this would look like (h/t to Adrienne for the spark).]
Going Deeper with Post-Clouds
Since a lot of people seemed to enjoy the TweetClouds as Windows of the Soul meme, I thought this bit of serendipity snagged from some tweeted link might interest you as well. It might even have some classroom use as a reflective tool for student bloggers.
It’s called TagCrowd. In a nutshell, it takes any text and creates a tag cloud based on the text’s word frequency.
I decided to make a Tag Crowd of all posts on this blog for this month of April. I think I’ll make it an end-of-month ritual from now on. It will serve as a visual snapshot of my month’s obsessions. So here’s
April ‘08 on Beyond School*:
–at a glance, I can see this was the month of Ali, Lolita, Project Global Cooling, Diigo, Speech v. Talking, Twitter, and a Debate about Writing. That pretty much sums April up. Kind of cool. (What would REALLY be cool is feeding all posts and comments from an entire blog, but I know of no easy way to generate a text doc from an XML export. Anybody?)
The site suggests more uses - including educational ones - here:
TagCrowd is taking tag clouds far beyond their original function:
- as topic summaries for speeches and written works
- for visual analysis of survey data
- as brand clouds that let companies see how they are perceived by the world
- for data mining a text corpus
- for helping writers and students reflect on their work
- as name tags for conferences, cocktail parties or wherever new collaborations start
- as resumes in a single glance
- as visual poetry
The list goes on and continues to grow.
Update: Here’s that novel, complete 100-odd pages of text (but see Adrienne’s comment for a better idea).
It’s a voluntary meme, like the last one. No poetry involved.
*FYI: I couldn’t get the embed code to work on WP 2.5, so I just took a screenshot.
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Some TGIF Fluff: Tweetclouds as Windows of the Soul
It’s almost 6 p.m. here in Seoul, and that’s bedtime for this nocturne. Before curling up in Morpheus’ arms, I want to throw this screenshot of my Tweetcloud up here (thanks to Cathy Nelson for sharing that one). It’s an interesting little thing, this tag cloud of your most frequent tweet words. The largest words are most frequent from your tweet history, the medium fairly frequent, the smallest less so, but apparently still frequent enough to gain a space on your cloud.
The temptation to see it as a window to your soul - or your Twit-soul, anyway - seems a respectably objective hypothesis that, better still, opens up a bit of fun. So here’s the cloud, followed by a little playful (but sometimes pregnant?) poetasting:
The “self-promoter” (i.e., guy who likes to share his thoughts and seek yours in reply) inevitably tops the cloud with “New Post.” (Shamelessly) Guilty. (But note: We can promote others too, as below
)
But I’m happy to see the next most frequent tag is “Thanks,” next to the thanked-for “@dmcordell.”
There’s lots of poetry there too. I especially like:
From the obsessive AP Lit teacher:
Check classroom - college coming.
From the secular naturalist mystic:
Day’s delicious design.
From the army veteran who ain’t above a little spicy naughtiness now and then:
Doing @dswaters? Easy.
(Sue, I think I know you enough to know you’ll ROFL at that one!
)
From the 1001 Flat World Tales and Project Global Cooling guy:
Getting global, going google.
From the best teacher in me:
Learn learning.
From the guy who loves passionate students worldwide:
Life, @lindseak! Look! Love!
From the guy who likes the virtual cocktail parties:
Need network! Play, pln!
From the blogging evangelist:
Post posts, ppl!
From the Church of Poetry acolyte:
Reading real right.
From the guy who pines from Korea for his life’s love, China:
Send Seoul Shanghai.
From the guy who reads Dean:
Share @shareski.
From the guy who reads Sylvia’s tweets from late-night jazz clubs:
Sleep, @smartinez.
From the guy who tried to pull his network into his classroom:
Sorry, @sschwister: story (student stuff). Sure.
From the guy who knows a true teacher:
@taylorteacher, teach teachers teaching.
From the guy who knows a smart librarian of the futur(a):
@technolibrary: tell.
From the guy who knows mashups:
Things think.
From the guy who blogs (almost) daily:
Thinking time today.
From the guy looking for young fires wanting kindling:
Wait. Want. Watch.
From the lonely groom in exile:
Wedding week.
From the guy who Will makes chuckle:
Weird wiki, @willrich45!
From the wannabee Whitmanesque bard:
Wish! Wonder! Work, world!
From the guy who just passed 500 posts in 16 months, after 25 years of writing almost nothing:
Write years.
If you want to play likewise, call it a voluntary meme. Link back here so we can also see your “twit soul.”
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Tune in to Melbourne’s Project Global Cooling uStream Today
This is pretty amazing.
From Jenny Luca and the students at Toorak College, an all-girls high school in Melbourne:
Yes, today is Friday and time for the customary school’s out post. This week it’s different, because school is definitely on for me and my students tomorrow as we stage our Project Global Cooling concert. Tune in to ustream (streaming live 3.00pm to 5.00pm Melbourne, Aust. timezone) to see the result of my student’s efforts. The concert has been organised with a budget of zero; our students have convinced artists to appear for free and many people in our school and wider community have given their time and donated goods to ensure that the concert can take place. The students are pumped - one has even just posted a comment on this blog to let me know how excited she is. Today we received an email from Peter Garrett, environment minister for our Australian Labor Party (current party holding government) and former lead singer of Australian iconic band Midnight Oil. Here’s what he had to say to us . . . . [click here to read the rest]
They only started organizing this event less than two months ago. Here are the world times for the uStream of their two-hour event. I hope you can find time to give them a visit, check out their event, and leave a “well done.” (We’ll be posting the concert video on the PGC website World Music Gallery soon, knock wood.)
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Edit Envy for “Fear Factor”: a New Video by Bill Farren
Is there an educator out there who has the digital story-telling* skills Bill Farren shows in this work? If so, I’m not aware of it. From the message (the use of fear in population control) to the medium (archival footage, skillful titling, rhythmic audio-video editing, original music, and so much more), I literally have not seen a better original digital story come out of the edublogosphere. I thought Bill’s “Did You Ever Wonder?” was strong. This out-leaps it twice over.
Shared with permission. Bill’s Education for Well-Being website has transcripts of the quotes used in the video and more, along with some of the most thoughtful and substantial content around. No echo chamber over there.
See Bill’s guest-blogging posts on Beyond School here.
Does anybody else in education have these kinds of A/V skills? Please leave links in the comment, if so. (Actually, Nathan Lowell is doing some great stuff, but I can’t find the exact links on his blog. Scott McLeod featured them last week on Dangerously Irrelevant, though.)
*Who came up with the term “digital storytelling,” anyway? Is it me, or is it far less sexy than - and far too schooly for - the good old word, “film-making”?
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Basketball without Borders Slam Dunk: Networked Learning Class Update and Video
It’s been about six weeks since my last update on the ten-week-old Networked Learning class I created with the help of so many of you in the initial Open Thread post and Twitter. Students are still grading themselves and justifying it - and showing the same fondness for grade inflation as so many of our colleagues.
They’re also reflecting up a storm on how messy learning is when it’s yours to create and pursue.
Lesson One: Natives Can’t Tweet, and Twits Must Sleep
I’m learning a lot too. I’m learning that students aren’t comfortable with Twitter - another strike against the Digital Natives concept - and don’t adapt to it easily. I’m also learning that the Twitterverse is so much fuller of good will and idealism than it is of time and energy that it’s often unreliable (and I include myself in this charge). I pulled back from that angle when I realized the absence of network input could be an excuse for not generating your own content from good old-fashioned writing (or new-fashioned blogging and multmedia).
Lesson Two: Failure Can Breed Success
But the favorite piece of learning I’m having is this: there is no unit testing involved, no chopping up of learning into opened-then-closed chapters. Instead, there is a lot of time for confusion, drift, frustration, and failure - without the option of quitting. And to me, that’s pregnant with more real-world learning than most stuff on the SAT or AP Literature exam.
Lesson Three: Fall Down Nine Times, Stand Up Ten — Then Slam-Dunk
And here’s some evidence: Jaeho and Younsuk have gone through a lot of challenges as they’ve tried to launch their Basketball without Borders website (I’m withholding the URL until the tell me it’s ready to launch). They’d
had a lot of leads for interviews that fizzled out, were delayed, fell through, and so forth, and had to traverse some really windless seas for a few weeks. We kept busy with more schooly writing exercises and such while waiting for fresh winds, but still - “inspired” and “motivated” are the last words to come to mind when I remember those weeks with this project.
But today they had a slam dunk: K.J. Matsui (Washington Post feature article here), an NCAA basketball standout from Columbia University, agreed to a Skype call from Korea to New York - during our class - to record for a podcast interview for their site. Younsuk skyped me at about 2 this morning to give me the news, chat about his interview questions, and so forth, which is, ah, unusual from almost any student. Then today in class, Matsui was on Skype as promised. (How cool is that from a world-class athlete, by the way?)
How do “inspired” and “motivated” fit these project creators now? You decide. I filmed them just as the interview ended, and interviewed them myself. It’s 4 noteworthy minutes, especially to those who can read body and facial language.
And me? I’m inspired, as a teacher, to help them write as well as they can on this site. I want it to succeed and grow long after they leave me.
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