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Entries in Shameless Self Promotion (15)

Thursday
Aug202009

Shameless self-promotion department

 

While I certainly remember sweating over it last winter, I just never checked to see if Saywire had ever made the white paper I wrote for them available. But what do you know? Here it is: Connections for Learning, 2009. I've read worse, I guess.

That, in combination with the guidelines I've been working on with Jen Hegna, suggested that the topic of the smart use of (social) networks might be of interest to conference goers and the subject of a new presentation. So, here are my three (new) 2009-10 presentations/workshops:

Change Your Image: 13 Simple Tools to Alter Digital Photographs

While much of the appeal of digital photography is in being able to edit images, Photoshop is a program that just takes too long for most of us to learn. But that doesn’t mean you can’t have fun with images -- thanks to some easy-to-use online tools. Learn 13 simple program features and websites that allow you and your students to manipulate, change and use digital photographs. Create posters, customized images, and other creative products. Fun even for the beginner.

To Friend or Not To Friend: A Guide for Teachers Using Social and Educational Networking Sites

Should you friend your students on your Facebook page? Will writing a blog cost you your job? What expectations should you have of your students who discuss issues on your class Ning? Learn some practical guidelines for using both social and educational networking tools that will both improve your teaching and prevent possible problems with your administration.

Change from the Radical Center

While the Radical Center political movement has been around for thirty years, I suggest that leaders in educational technology and school library media programs adopt a similar view on hot button topics. While polarized views of reading methodologies, filtering, DRM, Open Source, copyright/copyleft, constructivism, e- books, computer labs, fixed schedules, Mac/PC/Linux, and the One Laptop Per Child project all make for entertaining reading and a raised blood pressure, radical stances rarely create educational change or impact educational institutions enough to change kids’ chances of success. This presentation suggests 10 principles to follow from the Radical Center of Education that will actually result in positive change.

On a related note, it's tough dropping old presentations from my oeeuvre. They are like old shoes - comfortable, familiar, reliable, and still (I think) with value since I do update each regularly. But I did whack a few. I do believe Guy Kawasaki when he advises:

Kill the cash cows. This is the only acceptable perspective for both intrapreneurs and their upper management. Cash cows are wonderful—but they should be milked and killed, not sustained until—no pun intended—the cows come home. Truly brave companies understand that if they don’t kill their cash cows, two guys/gals in a garage will do it for them. Macintosh killed the Apple II: Do you think Apple would be around today if it tried to “protect” the Apple II cash cow ad infinitum? The true purpose of cash cows is to fund new calves.

He's right, but it's hard to kill your cow if you've named her Bossie.

Wednesday
Apr292009

Shameless self promotion...

In today's e-mail...

May's Cable in the Classroom has an article about educational blogs and your Blue Skunk blog is the second one listed. Thought you might like to see the article if you haven't already: http://www.ciconline.org/cicmagazine-may09 Click on Bookmark This!

Cool and totally unexpected.

Except now I feel the pressure to actually live up to the hype.

Damn!

 

Tuesday
Jan272009

Speech contest

 

This came as a comment to a blog post from early last summer, Everything I know in 15 minutes:

Hi, Doug-

I don't know if you know anything or not about high school speech, but I do an event called Oratorical Declamation, which is basically a student giving a commencement address or a famous speech by someone else as if they were the author. I have used your speech all year and I can't tell you how many comments I've received on how fantastic and original the speech is! In fact, I've taken first place at three tournaments with it. I hope you don't come after me for using it without consent, but I just thought you should know that your message is being spread, at least throughout Illinois, and that everyone loves it (especially the part about the gods punishing your hubris by giving you Brady)!

Mitch

As a former high speech contestant and speech coach, this comment was truly a compliment and a very, very nice thing for this young man to write. I have great hope for this generation. Isn't cool that world really is full of kind and thoughtful people - especially young ones?

Although my now iconic stature makes me feel about as old as it is possible to be.