Search for search help

Over breakfast yesterday I asked our boys if they had ever been shown how to use a search engine. I know that they use Google all the time, but wondered how much they knew about advanced search features, Boolean operators or even vertical search engines. Both answered that they had never been shown how to do a Web search nor had any of their teachers discussed how to use Wikipedia. I see them on Wikipedia for almost every homework assignment, so I’m sure that it’s more widely used than any other reference source.

Let’s face it, search engines aren’t that new. I was using Altavista in 1995 and now, 12 years later, our local teachers are not helping students understand these powerful tools. We are in an age of search and if schools don’t cover these tools, then who will? I know that I will tutor our boys but what about everyone else? Will mentioned this weekend that we need role models for social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook. We also need role models for digital information literacy.

Here is my question to the community at large – is there a suite of websites or especially videos that parents can use to help their children master the basic tools of the web? I’m thinking of the excellent Commoncraft videos on RSS, social bookmarks and wikis. Is there something similar for advanced search? So far I’ve found:

Google Advanced Search help page

How to Choose a Search Engine

Google WebSearch for Educators

… but no cool videos yet.

Learning Signal

There’s a new aggregation site that ranks learning-related blogs, called Learning Signal. It has some similarities with Technorati, and I’ve received a couple of e-mails from the company but haven’t followed-up, as I wasn’t sure if I wanted to add to their intelligence gathering (though it seems benign):

Just in case there was any confusion, I had one more thing I wanted to clarify with you…

The posts you’re seeing listed on LearningSignal.com are not random.
We’re actually assigning a score on every post based on a math algorithm.

Learning Signals could be a practical site for someone trying to get the pulse or zeitgeist of the field, but human-driven services such as OLDaily may provide more context.

Reflections

Last week I headed to the West coast for a conference, all full of energy. A few 16 hour days, some jet lag and a couple of evenings with a couple of glasses of wine, and I was a bit tuckered. Then a quick trip across the Confederation Bridge to PEI and back and now I’m home, having just cleared out my aggregator.

Both conferences were a chance to see people who I was loosely connected to, as well as meet some new friends.  I was ready for a little F2F reinforcement, having spent most of the year as a virtual colleague/friend/associate.  One of the advantages of being a free agent is the ‘luxury’ of reflection. I have had time to read books in depth, think long about my blog posts and follow online discussion threads to their murky depths. The past week showed me that I really don’t want to lose this perspective.

It seems that most of us are in a hurry today, and I meet few people who have had the time to read even a few good books and reflect upon them. Fewer still have taken the time to digest new ideas and discuss their learning with others. There has always been a need to balance action and reflection, but the latter seems to be losing out in many of our workplaces.

Discussions this week centered around new tools, new literacies and perhaps even a new pedagogy, but few (yes, there were some) were demanding more time for reflection. As the digital surround engulfs us, it may become critical to carve out more reflective time and space. One way to help our children is to stop homework, but what is the equivalent for the rest of us in the working world?

Literacies in Learning Landscapes (NML_UPEI)

Currently sitting and listening to Will Richardson’s keynote address at UPEI for the New Media Literacies in Learning Landscapes conference. You can follow live at EdTechTalk and I’ve added some photos (more to follow).

Will touched on themes such as “the web as classroom” and “who are the role models for using MySpace and Facebook”. He also asked the educators in attendance if anyone was teaching reading and writing in in hyper-linked environments. Not many hands were raised. Also check out the Flat Classroom Project that Will mentioned.

Over lunch Dave Cormier described his experiences in working with the OpenSim project, which shows great promise.

Update: Will Richardson neatly summarizes the conference.

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Photo: Cynthia Dunsford and Dave Cormier discussing something very important, while I snap a quick picture with my computer webcam.

Heading back from BH Conference (IIL07)

I’m just getting ready to catch my early morning flight back to the East Coast, with an overall positive impression from my experiences at the Brandon Hall Conference this past week. I’ll have some time to reflect and will post my notes in the next few days. In the meantime. take a look at the Hitchhikr site that Janet Clarey set up for the conference. I’d recommend this aggregation tool for any conference (that’s a hint, Dave).

New Media Literacies in Learning Landscapes Institute (NML_UPEI)

Edublogger Dave Cormier is behind the New Media Literacies in Learning Landscapes Institute, a participatory learning event for professionals, which starts this coming Saturday morning at 9:30 am in the Wanda Wyatt Hall on the University of PEI campus.

Will Richardson will be the keynote speaker. Both the Saturday session of the Institute and the online only Sunday session will be streamed live by Jeff Lebow.

There’s still room for further registrations but register by Thursday, September 27th. The registration table will open at the Wanda Wyatt Hall at 9 am Saturday: the $20 fee (can’t beat that) gets you a lunch ticket as well as entry into the prize draw.

Informal Learning with Tomoye (IIL07)

Eric Sauvé, of Tomoye, presented on informal learning in the enterprise. Tomoye’s clients include the US Army. Initial questions from the audience were:

  1. How do you prove that informal learning has value?
  2. How do get management’s buy-in?
  3. How do you ensure accuracy of content?
  4. How do you track legal issues & HR units/credits?

Eric views informal learning as something that adds value or augments formal learning in an organisation (I would say the opposite, but I’m just a learning radical). He also discussed the notion of employing workers/learners as a primary source of learning content; or the “YouTube-ification” of content. Other advice for implementation of Tomoye’s system, which looks like a blog/discussion forum mix for your Intranet, is to keep you tools simple . This follows the Web’s small pieces loosely joined design philosophy. Other points were to add a mechanism for positive reinforcement of good content and to use informal environments to validate the formal training that has been conducted.

Eric closed with a short discussion on collective intelligence or the wisdom of crowds. Overall this session was quite practical advice with some examples of one way to facilitate some aspects of informal learning.

e-Learning 2.0 with Stephen Downes (IIL07)

Stephen is addressing the conference with his opening keynote this morning. I’m sitting way back in the audience of about 500 people:

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This conference is an excellent mix of presenters, vendors and participants. I’ve found the level of conversation more in-depth than larger conferences I’ve attended. Stephen has set up a back channel with an ad hoc chat he’s set up on his web site. We’re starting to get several comments coming up on the dual screens. I think that the back channel is very new to many in the audience and there’s some confusion with multiple sensory inputs. Of course, it’s normal for anyone doing collaborative learning on the web.

Life in Beta and learning as flow, are my own recurring themes here. Stephen is talking about connectivism and network learning (as well as unworkshops, unconferences, messiness, etc.). Good themes to launch this conference.

Innovations Outside of Learning (IIL07)

Tom Crawford opened the conference today with ” Innovations Outside of Learning: How external forces are changing our world”. It was a great way to get the ideas flowing and people thinking about the last 100 years of technology and learning. Tom listed his top 10 nine technologies of the past five years that have affected learning. I really liked his first pick, as I think that we have only touched the tip of the iceberg with performance support on the Web.

  1. Performance support
  2. Gaming and simulation
  3. Self-publishing
  4. Collaboration
  5. Web services and mash-ups
  6. High bandwidth to the hand
  7. New input devices (e.g. wii)
  8. Video and image search
  9. Embedded devices

Innovations in Learning Conference (IIL07)

I’m in Santa Clara for the Brandon Hall Innovations in Learning Conference. Last night we went to Santa Cruz for seafood on the pier, with the sound of sea lions around us. It was too dark to get a photo of these interesting animals, but I thought this sign was kind of neat. We did not feed the birds.

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Janet and I will be presenting our workshop tomorrow. For pictures, go to the Flickr group, and if you’re attending, please post and share.