Talk on "Use of Web tools for teaching:
bogs, wikis, podcasting and other web 2.0 tools"
Sponsored links
by Dr Hiran Amarasekera
Senior Lecturer and Head, Department of Forestry and Environment Science,
University of Sri Jayewardenepura
The web is, and always has been, an exciting place for education in terms
of the possibilities it offers for research and collaboration. Now, it is
even more exciting, with the appearance and development of new tools which
have become collectively known as Web 2.0. The purpose of this talk, is
to provide an introduction to Web 2.0 to academics and researchers who are
not too sure of what it is all about.
The aim of the talk is not to be comprehensive, which is impossible in a
sense: there seems to be new tools appearing every day. It is, in fact,
to encourage you to explore these things in teaching new generation of students.
Institute of Biology, and Department of Forestry and Environment Science,
University of Sri Jayewardenepura organize this talk on 27 March
2007 at 2.30 pm at Forestry Auditorium, University of Sri Jayewardenepura,
Nugegoda.
Contents
Introduction to eLearning
Introduction to new WWW (web 2.0)
Tools for developing and delivering online learning: Static and dynamic
content web sites, Virtual Learning Environments, RSS feeds, Blogging, Photo
Sharing, Podcasts, Webcasts, Video Blogging, Wikis, Social Bookmarking
Recommended web sites for lectures and students.
Poll to evaluate your knowledge on web 2.0
Before register, please take a moment to vote on web 2.0 sites, that you are
familier with:
Folksonomies (or social tags) - A mechanism to allow authors
to highlight other similar content to a reader, using informal, keyword
tags; particularly effective for sharing bookmarks.
Our social tags at http://del.icio.us/
Podcast - This is an audio recording that you can subscribe
or download and listen to on a computer or an mp3 player. It takes its name
from the iPod – but you don’t actually need an iPod to either make or listen
to a podcast. There are lots of educational podcasts freely available.
RSS feeds - Usually taken to stand for Really Simple Syndication,
RSS is what makes it possible to subscribe to podcasts and blogs. We use
search engines to find informaiton. But, with RSS, we are training the information
to find us.
VLE (Virtual learning environment) - software which allows
teachers to track students’ progress, manage course content, and so
on.
Web 2.0 - There’s some debate about exactly what
it means! Until recently the world wide web has been seen pretty much as
a static publishing medium, now it has become a participatory platform with
blogs, wikis and other tools. Hence it is not not merely another way in
publishig, but anyone can contribute to an ongoing “conversation” in which
knowledge is both discovered and constructed as it goes on.
Wiki - A web page that can be edited in situ by anybody who
has been granted access to it. This is a great tool for collaboration of information
in teaching.