Simpsonize Me

April 14, 2008

I found a site that will turn an uploaded portrait into a Simpson’s character.

Simpsonized me

All you do is upload a picture of yourself, answer a few questions, and it creates the character.

Even though I was wearing glasses in the picture I used, I had to add them manually. And, it turned my soul patch into a massive goatee, so I had to change that back.

I uploaded two different pictures and it gave me the same guy. If you try it out, email me the resulting picture. I’d be curious to know how many different characters they select from for each go.

… perfectly legitimate way to spend your time.

Michigan Merit Curriculum @ NHS

May 11, 2007

Starting with the class of 2011 (next year’s incoming Freshman), every student who graduates from a Michigan high school must have a (documented) minimum twenty hours of online learning experience.

MMC

To satisfy this landmark state graduation requirement, the Social Studies department at Niles High School will incorporate “blended learning” into their curriculum next year.

As part of the planning process, I met with my department chair this afternoon to discuss the logistics of such an undertaking. I thought it might be helpful to others if I share my thoughts and findings:

  • I’m serious when I say that the twenty hours of online learning needs to be documented.

    It is up to each district as to how to track the 20 hours of experiences. It is suggested that a district use the same manner of tracking online learning experiences as they currently do in tracking a student’s community service hours … These online experiences may take place between grades 6-12 to meet the graduation requirement.
    Online Experience Guidelines: Companion Document

    To do this, I will probably pull a complete monthly log from Moodle’s reports. However, this is still a messy plan considering sense will have to be made from those logs. I’ll have to spend some time thinking about this one!

  • Simply having a learning management system on your server is not enough to qualify a school as providing an online learning experience. Specifically, even if a school has Moodle and requires every teacher to use it, those teachers must be able to demonstrate how they are using the Internet to promote online learning skills.
  • Schools must show that teachers and students are building working relationships online. The best example of this would be a school that provides a wiki that all students are required to contribute to, and that is guided by the input of the teachers.
  • The online instruction must align with the Michigan Technology Standards and Expectations.
  • A school’s plan for providing online instruction must include instructional goals, objectives, strategies, and assessments that are aligned with content area state standards, benchmarks, and expectations.

Two months ago, my department chair and I were under the impression that online research fit the bill for this new requirement - well, it doesn’t if that online research is exactly like library research, but on the web!

If schools want to embrace this legislation (which they should), then they need to make a wholehearted effort to train their teaching staff in the use of Web 2.0 tools and give them the time to brainstorm how such tools can be applied to enhance their classroom lessons.

What is Web 2.0?

April 9, 2007

Interesting.

Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us

Edit: I have replaced the video with it’s original found on YouTube. 10:50am EST April 11, 2007

Social Constructionism

March 8, 2007

I have become an activist in my school for online learning. In this role, I have lauded the Internet as an educational tool for a variety of reasons (some of which I actually believe).

I think that the Internet can make school work worth doing. If for no other reason, because others can see the work that students have produced.

For example, what is the point of writing a paper that only your teacher will read? For the elite, the point is a good grade. For others? At this very moment, I am writing about work. I am gathering and developing my thoughts as an educator. Without being asked, I am reflecting on myself. Why?

My students understand the audience potential of the Internet even better than I do. They appreciate the fact that their world can bump into the worlds of other people on the Internet. They know that what they write here can be read.

I believe that education serves its purpose best when pursued for its own sake. I frequently tell students they should produce only to produce; to make mistakes; to then make corrections. This, after all, is learning, is it not? Why not make those mistakes for others to find? Why not grow in the world, instead of merely in the classroom? Why not exist for the sake of existing?