21 de septiembre de 2010

Wikis

El Wiki permite centralizar contenidos, creados, resumidos o seleccionados por un grupo de personas. Es simple de usar y facilita la creación y la accesibilidad de todos, en forma colaborativa.

Se puede armar un wiki de la escuela, donde centralizar todos los contenidos, temas con sus recursos recomendados, material producido por los propios alumnos (videos, articulos, proyectos), material sobre campamentos, salidas, fotos, etc.

Todo aquello que quiera ser compartido y/o creado colaborativamente. Maestros, alumnos, padres.





Ver aquí un articulo sobre wiki en la escuela

20 de septiembre de 2010

Blogs


Los blogs son una forma de crear y compartir contenidos en internet. Pueden ser personales, o construirse en forma colaborativa teniendo varios autores. Se  pueden compartir a un grupo o quedar accesibles para todos.
Ejemplos de blogs en la escuela:  Blogs de una actividad (campamentos, proyectos), Blog sobre un tema en particular, Blog de un grupo.

Se pueden hacer con www.blogger.com, www.edublogs.org  o  www.kidblog.org, etc.

¿Qué es un blog?

Moodle


Moodle es una plataforma virtual de aprendizaje que facilita la gestión de cursos, el aprendizaje colaborativo, la interacción entre estudiantes y docente y el acceso a materiales de estudio de cada materia.
Ya está siendo utilizado por muchas instituciones.

Prezi - Presentaciones

Es una herramienta libre, para crear presentaciones online.
La gran ventaja que tiene es que permite hacer presentaciones no-lineales, en lugar de tener N slides (como Power Point).
Consiste en  un único "lienzo" (como que fuera un pizarrón) donde uno puede navegar, hacer zoom, ver parte, verlo completo. Se puede insertar videos, etc.
    Si se usa la versión gratis, las presentaciones quedan visibles para todo el mundo. Hay una licencia especial para centros educativos. 

    Sitio Web:  www.prezi.com    Ejemplo de presentación hecha con prezi:



    YouTube: Uso de videos

    1 - Selección de Videos educativos

    Existen, ademas de los portales uruguayos de educación, otros sitios con videos educativos interesantes. La idea está en tener una lista de los mejores para cada tema, esta es una lista "viva",  cada vez surgen más, y para eso es importante tener personas que los estén recomendando. (padres, docentes, alumnos, etc)


    Si se tiene un wiki de la escuela, en ese mismo wiki se pueden tener la listas de videos, y  recomendarlos,  rankearlos. Los mismos alumnos pueden votar y decir si les gustó, si les sirvió.

    Uno de los más nombrados últimamente es Khan academy, que  viene teniendo buenos resultados.
    En febrero de 2011 su creador dio una charla en Ted 2011. En el Plan Ceibal están en contacto con ellos y haciendo una campaña de voluntarios para traducir los videos al español.

    Khan academy

    Algunos otros  a evaluar: (ademas de los portales educativos de Uruguay)
    Utubersidad
    Videos Educativos
    Educ ar
    100 Incredibly Useful YouTube Channels for Teachers

    Hay una pagina aquí  con  recomendaciones.


    2 - Ver clases en casa, ejercitar y aplicar conocimientos en clase.
    Una idea es dar vuelta las cosas que se hacen en clase/en casa. En lugar de exponer en clase, ejercitar en casa. Dar vuelta esto. La técnica es:  tener algunas exposiciones/explicaciones grabadas en youtube y que los alumnos las vean en casa.

    Esto tiene la gran ventaja que  permite que c/u vaya a su ritmo, pueda ir para atrás si no entendió, para delante, volver a recurrir a una explicación, etc.

    La clase se aprovecha para practicar, aplicar esos conocimientos, para la parte donde la interacción da un valor importante.





    En este articulo de  Daniel Pink (reconocido escritor sobre nuevas formas en que trabajamos y aprendemos), plantea este tema y pone ejemplos de el profesor Karl Fisch que lo aplica.

    Juegos

    Los juegos de computadora, tienen la gran virtud de hacer cosas complejas, de manera simple.
    De esto depende la sobrevivencia de los que hacen videos juegos, es la clave de su éxito.

    ¿Cómo hacen los juegos para enseñarse de manera fácil cosas complicadas?
    La forma es  lograr en todo momento un equilibrio entre desafío y dificultad: ser lo suficiente desafiante como para motivar, atrapar y aprender, pero no ser demasiado complejo, de forma que el jugador no se abrume y abandone.  Eso es justamente lo que se quiere con la educación.

    Para lograr esto, los juegos se estructuran en niveles. En cada nivel se aprende algunas cosas nuevas. Pero lo que se aprende en un nivel, no se acumula simplemente a lo aprendido en el nivel anterior, sino que el mecanismo es diferente. Cuando en un nivel se  aprende algo, en realidad eso es provisorio, ya que en el siguiente nivel  se muestra que eso que se aprendió no estaba del todo bien y tiene que modificarse, corregirse y ampliarse.

    Esto permite ir incorporando conocimientos, pero no de forma simplemente acumulativa, sino que el nuevo conocimiento, corrige y amplía el anterior. Esta es una estrategia para hacer que algo complejo, sea simple de entender, aprender y sea entretenido.

    Un ejemplo de esto:  Un simulador de manejo.
    En el primer nivel  solo hay que mover el volante.
    En el segundo nivel, hay que acelerar (ya solo con mover el volante no andamos...)
    En el tercer nivel se agrega algun cambio (ya solo con mover el volante y acelerar no funciona el auto)
    etc.

    Esto  en la vida real no se puede hacer. O sea, si tengo que aprender a manejar en la vida real, tengo que aprender todo de una, sino no puedo manejar. Esto es lo fantástico que nos brinda la tecnología.


    resumen (mio) de una charla de:  Gonzalo Frasca, experto en video juegos. Ver aquí una entrevista a Frasca.

    19 de septiembre de 2010

    Twitter, Skype, Celulares

    3 herramientas para las cuales se pueden encontrar muchos usos en clase:



    Twitter, para interactuar alrededor de algún tema, seguir a los expertos en twitter o a "hashtags" de algun tema que se investiga. 

    Es una fuente de contenido muy útil. "Twittear" eventos, o avances de un proyecto.




    Skype, para comunicarse con otras escuelas, personas que hablan en otros idiomas en forma nativa. Hacer una clase en conjunto  con otra escuela. 





    Celulares, Cámaras de fotos.   Para grabar entrevistas, fotos, para proyectos, o documentar cosas. (Ej:  Fotos al pizarrón para registrar algún problema/razonamiento y subirlo)

    Aquí un artículo sobre estas herramientas en una clase


    y hay más...

    18 de septiembre de 2010

    Edu 2.0 y otras herramientas para evaluar



     7 fantastic tools for Teachers 

    Educación a prueba de futuro


    ¿Cómo educar para un futuro que no se conoce, donde los conocimientos técnicos se duplican cada 2 años, para usar tecnologías que no se inventaron, y para trabajos que aun no existen?

    Educación a Prueba de Futuro.



    17 de septiembre de 2010

    Jugar para Aprender


    En algún momento (alrededor de los 6-7 años) el entusiasmo de aprender, y la creatividad, disminuyen.  Este período justo coincide con el ingreso a la educación formal.

    ¿Casualidad o causalidad?



    16 de septiembre de 2010

    15 de septiembre de 2010

    ¡A iniciar la revolución del aprendizaje!


    Conferencia TED 2010 de Ken Robinson sobre la revolución del aprendizaje
    Ir aquí para verla con subtitulos en español.







    Para

    14 de septiembre de 2010

    ¿Las escuelas matan la creatividad?




    Ken Robinson en las conferencias TED 2006
    Ir aquí para verla con subtitulos en español







    13 de septiembre de 2010

    La escuela del futuro

    Alvin Toffler habla sobre algunas características de la escuela del futuro.
    Aquí el link original en Edutopía.








    Forty years after he and his wife, Heidi, set the world alight with Future Shock, Alvin Toffler remains a tough assessor of our nation's social and technological prospects. Though he's best known for his work discussing the myriad ramifications of the digital revolution, he also loves to speak about the education system that is shaping the hearts and minds of America's future. We met with him near his office in Los Angeles, where the celebrated septuagenarian remains a clear and radical thinker.


    Edutopia.org: You've been writing about our educational system for decades. What's the most pressing need in public education right now?


    Alvin Toffler: Shut down the public education system.

    That's pretty radical.

    I'm roughly quoting Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, who said, "We don't need to reform the system; we need to replace the system."

    Why not just readjust what we have in place now? Do we really need to start from the ground up?

    We should be thinking from the ground up. That's different from changing everything. However, we first have to understand how we got the education system that we now have. Teachers are wonderful, and there are hundreds of thousands of them who are creative and terrific, but they are operating in a system that is completely out of time. It is a system designed to produce industrial workers.

    Let's look back at the history of public education in the United States. You have to go back a little over a century. For many years, there was a debate about whether we should even have public education. Some parents wanted kids to go to school and get an education; others said, "We can't afford that. We need them to work. They have to work in the field, because otherwise we starve." There was a big debate.

    Late in the 1800s, during the Industrial Revolution, business leaders began complaining about all these rural kids who were pouring into the cities and going to work in our factories. Business leaders said that these kids were no good, and that what they needed was an educational system that would produce "industrial discipline."

    What is industrial discipline?

    Well, first of all, you've got to show up on time. Out in the fields, on the farms, if you go out with your family to pick a crop, and you come ten minutes late, your uncle covers for you and it's no big deal. But if you're on an assembly line and you're late, you mess up the work of 10,000 people down the line. Very expensive. So punctuality suddenly becomes important.

    You don't want to be tardy.

    Yes. In school, bells ring and you mustn't be tardy. And you march from class to class when the bells ring again. And many people take a yellow bus to school. What is the yellow bus? A preparation for commuting. And you do rote and repetitive work as you would do on an assembly line.


    How does that system fit into a world where assembly lines have gone away?

    It doesn't. The public school system is designed to produce a workforce for an economy that will not be there. And therefore, with all the best intentions in the world, we're stealing the kids' future.

    Do I have all the answers for how to replace it? No. But it seems to me that before we can get serious about creating an appropriate education system for the world that's coming and that these kids will have to operate within, we have to ask some really fundamental questions.

    And some of these questions are scary. For example: Should education be compulsory? And, if so, for who? Why does everybody have to start at age five? Maybe some kids should start at age eight and work fast. Or vice versa. Why is everything massified in the system, rather than individualized in the system? New technologies make possible customization in a way that the old system -- everybody reading the same textbook at the same time -- did not offer.

    You're talking about customizing the educational experience.

    Exactly. Any form of diversity that we can introduce into the schools is a plus. Today, we have a big controversy about all the charter schools that are springing up. The school system people hate them because they're taking money from them. I say we should radically multiply charter schools, because they begin to provide a degree of diversity in the system that has not been present. Diversify the system.

    In our book Revolutionary Wealth, we play a game. We say, imagine that you're a policeman, and you've got a radar gun, and you're measuring the speed of cars going by. Each car represents an American institution. The first one car is going by at 100 miles per hour. It's called business. Businesses have to change at 100 miles per hour because if they don't, they die. Competition just puts them out of the game. So they're traveling very, very fast.

    Then comes another car. And it's going 10 miles per hour. That's the public education system. Schools are supposed to be preparing kids for the business world of tomorrow, to take jobs, to make our economy functional. The schools are changing, if anything, at 10 miles per hour. So, how do you match an economy that requires 100 miles per hour with an institution like public education? A system that changes, if at all, at 10 miles per hour?

    It's a tough juxtaposition. So, what to do? Suppose you were made head of the U.S. Department of Education. What would be the first items on your agenda?

    The first thing I'd say: "I want to hear something I haven't heard before." I just hear the same ideas over and over and over again. I meet teachers who are good and well intentioned and smart, but they can't try new things, because there are too many rules. They tell me that "the bureaucratic rules make it impossible for me to do what you're suggesting." So, how do we bust up that? It is easy to develop the world's best technologies compared with how hard it is to bust up a big bureaucracy like the public education system with the enormous numbers of jobs dependent on it and industries that feed it.

    Here's a complaint you often hear: We spend a lot of money on education, so why isn't all that money having a better result?

    It's because we're doing the same thing over and over again. We're holding 40 or 50 million kids prisoner for x hours a week. And the teacher is given a set of rules as to what you're going to say to the students, how you're going to treat them, what you want the output to be, and let no child be left behind. But there's a very narrow set of outcomes. I think you have to open the system to new ideas.

    When I was a student, I went through all the same rote repetitive stuff that kids go through today. And I did lousy in any number of things. The only thing I ever did any good in was English. It's what I love. You need to find out what each student loves. If you want kids to really learn, they've got to love something. For example, kids may love sports. If I were putting together a school, I might create a course, or a group of courses, on sports. But that would include the business of sports, the culture of sports, the history of sports -- and once you get into the history of sports, you then get into history more broadly.


    Integrate the curricula.
    Yeah -- the culture, the technology, all these things.


    Like real life.
    Like real life, yes! And, like in real life, there is an enormous, enormous bank of knowledge in the community that we can tap into. So, why shouldn't a kid who's interested in mechanical things or engines or technology meet people from the community who do that kind of stuff, and who are excited about what they are doing and where it's going? But at the rate of change, the actual skills that we teach, or that they learn by themselves, about how to use this gizmo or that gizmo, that's going to be obsolete -- who knows? -- in five years or in five minutes.

    So, that's another thing: Much of what we're transmitting is doomed to obsolescence at a far more rapid rate than ever before. And that knowledge becomes what we call obsoledge: obsolete knowledge. We have this enormous bank of obsolete knowledge in our heads, in our books, and in our culture. When change was slower, obsoledge didn't pile up as quickly. Now, because everything is in rapid change, the amount of obsolete knowledge that we have -- and that we teach -- is greater and greater and greater. We're drowning in obsolete information. We make big decisions -- personal decisions -- based on it, and public and political decisions based on it.

    Is the idea of a textbook in the classroom obsolete?

    I'm a wordsmith. I write books. I love books. So I don't want to be an accomplice to their death. But clearly, they're not enough. The textbooks are the same for every child; every child gets the same textbook. Why should that be? Why shouldn't some kids get a textbook -- and you can do this online a lot more easily than you can in print -- why shouldn't a kid who's interested in one particular thing, whether it's painting or drama, or this or that, get a different version of the textbook than the kid sitting in the next seat, who is interested in engineering?

    Let's have a little exercise. Walk me through this school you'd create. What do the classrooms look like? What are the class sizes? What are the hours?

    It's open 24 hours a day. Different kids arrive at different times. They don't all come at the same time, like an army. They don't just ring the bells at the same time. They're different kids. They have different potentials. Now, in practice, we're not going to be able to get down to the micro level with all of this, I grant you, but in fact, I would be running a twenty-four-hour school, I would have nonteachers working with teachers in that school, I would have the kids coming and going at different times that make sense for them.

    The schools of today are essentially custodial: They're taking care of kids in work hours that are essentially nine to five -- when the whole society was assumed to work. Clearly, that's changing in our society. So should the timing. We're individualizing time; we're personalizing time. We're not having everyone arrive at the same time, leave at the same time. Why should kids arrive at the same time and leave at the same time?

    And when do kids begin their formalized education?

    Maybe some start at two or three, and some start at seven or eight -- I don't know. Every kid is different.

    What else?

    I think that schools have to be completely integrated into the community, to take advantage of the skills in the community. So, there ought to be business offices in the school, from various kinds of business in the community.

    The name of your publication is Edutopia, and utopia is three-quarters of that title. I'm giving a utopian picture, perhaps. I don't know how to solve all those problems and how to make that happen. But what it all boils down to is, get the current system out of your head.

    How does the role of the teacher change?

    I think (and this is not going to sit very well with the union) that maybe teaching shouldn't be a lifetime career. Maybe it's important for teachers to quit for three or four years and go do something else and come back. They'll come back with better ideas. They'll come back with ideas about how the outside world works, in ways that would not have been available to them if they were in the classroom the whole time.

    So, let's sit down as a culture, as a society, and say, "Teachers, parents, people outside, how do we completely rethink this? We're going to create a new system from ground zero, and what new ideas have you got?" And collect those new ideas. That would be a very healthy thing for the country to do.

    You're advocating for fundamental radical changes. Are you an optimist when it comes to public education?

    I just feel it's inevitable that there will have to be change. The only question is whether we're going to do it starting now, or whether we're going to wait for catastrophe.


    Books

    12 de septiembre de 2010

    Toffler, sobre la educación

    Alvin Toffler (1928) es un escritor y futurista estadounidense doctorado en Letras, Leyes y Ciencia, conocido por sus discusiones acerca de la revolución digital, la revolución de las comunicaciones y la singularidad tecnológica. Entre sus publicaciones más famosas se destacan El shock del futuro y La tercera ola, donde predijo la revolución del conocimiento.

    Algunas citas famosas de Toffler: "Los analfabetos del siglo XXI no serán aquellos que no sepan leer y escribir, sino aquellos que no sepan aprender, desaprender y reaprender."




    Abajo  un resumen de alguns reflexiónes de Toffler respecto a la educación:

    11 de septiembre de 2010

    Niños enseñan a los adultos



    Alvin Toffler:
    Como los niños enseñan hoy a los adultos, primera vez en la historia.