Wiki Pedagogy

Wiki is not a new technology; many of us, if not all, have been using Wikipedia as a rich source of information. How this emerging tool’s potential can be harnessed for our classrooms is a question we will all ask.
This article by Ren�e Fountain gave some thoughts into the use of wikis for pedagogical purposes. The abstract is as follows:

This article endeavours to denote and promote pedagogical experimentations concerning a Free/Open technology called a “Wiki”. An intensely simple, accessible and collaborative hypertext tool Wiki software challenges and complexifies traditional notions of – as well as access to – authorship, editing, and publishing. Usurping official authorizing practices in the public domain poses fundamental – if not radical – questions for both academic theory and pedagogical practice.
The particular pedagogical challenge is one of control: wikis work most effectively when students can assert meaningful autonomy over the process. This involves not just adjusting the technical configuration and delivery; it involves challenging the social norms and practices of the course as well (Lamb, 2004). Enacting such horizontal knowledge assemblages in higher education practices could evoke a return towards and an instance upon the making of impossible public goods� (Ciffolilli, 2003).

Access the full article here or here.

E-learning (Version) 2.0

E-learning has been around for 10 years(?) and where are we heading from here? This article by Stephen Downes writes about just that. Trends such as changing demographics of learners (operating at “twitch speed,” expecting instant responses and feedback), the “read/write web” (where learning is created instead of just content delivery) are touched on in the article.
Check it out now 🙂

Alice – Learn to Program with Interactive 3D Graphics

Learning to program a computer is hard.

Alice makes learning to program easier. And it’s fun.

Alice makes programming more accessible to girls as well as boys.

This is what Alice is about. A wordy version of the about goes here.
The focus of the Alice project is now to provide the best possible first exposure to programming for students ranging from middle schoolers to college students.
You may want to check out the demo videos to see what Alice is capable of before downloading the software 🙂