Feb
01
2009
For any teachers who like to;
- be kept up to date
- save time whilst looking for quality resources
- learn from a whole world of educators, literally
- have fun
- be challenged in your thoughts
- ask for help, guidance or suggestions
- vent, rant and argue (140 limit! yee ha)
- have interesting links delivered to you
- break free from the educational echo chamber AND
- find out how others teach and learn
then twitter is the application for you.
After a tentative tweeting start, I am now seeing the enormous quality and professional value of twitter.
Thanks tweetees, you know who you are, so does everyone else now!
Nov
09
2008

An annoying ad for a certain cornchip cried a decade ago
‘CC’s, You Can’t say No.’ Fat kids resulted.
Now the world can’t afford to say ”NO” to two vital 21st Century CC’s.
One CC stares our planet in the face, hope they’re listening, Al is.
The world trusts BO is THE new energy and will urgently address climate change.
The other vital CC is forcing 19th century proponents of copyright to seriously rethink their views on sharing in the digital age.
Creative Commons AU, is a worthy cause and worth searching for.
For those still unfamiliar with CC, this explains it simply.
If you also like CC sharing, would you mind CCing this to all your contacts? You really can’t say no, you know?
Aug
02
2008

NSW DET considered the benefits of open source applications in previous contracts between 2004 and in December 2006. I just wonder how fast and how far they may want to move public schools onto more open sources if these become more common or if in fact open source is still even on the agenda.
As Tim Anderson reminds us on ZDnet moving DET to something new is not an easy task.
DET has one of the largest IT infrastructures in the country with 1.3 million users spread across 2,500 locations. Its desktop fleet consists of 250,000 devices of which 160,000 are PCs. Microsoft is the dominant platform with DET standardising on Windows XP, however, because of the size of the organisation there are some Windows 98 and Windows 2000 legacy systems.
Steve Hargadon summarise the benefits for schools and learners when he says;
Schools around the world are discovering the benefits of Open-Source Software. Not only does Open-Source Software save money, it allows schools to extend essential educational software to students’ homes and into after-school programs, providing extended learning opportunities at no cost.
- Are you looking for ways to provide more technology with less money?
- Could your teachers benefit from a Virtual Learning Environment (Moodle, Sakai)?
- Do you want a solution for all of your students to access their school work from home?
- Is your school community looking for ways to increase student engagement and learning?
- Have you thought about developing an Open-Source Software strategy to increase technology access while controlling costs?
The K-12 Open Minds Conference is the first of its kind – an International event specifically for K-12 educators designed to make OPEN SOURCE software and OPEN SYSTEMS more available and easier to use.