Collaboratively working in the cloud.
Posted by shanetechteach on July 16, 2009
My two previous posts have referred to a professional development session which I was fortunate enough to be invited to, discussing a framework for eLearning. At this professional development conference I had the opportunity to experience productive and collaborative collation of notes and resources with @jnxyz, @gayleenjackson, @checkingboxes, @hoyshane and a number of other conference participants, and demonstrate the power of this to other conference attendees. For me it was exciting to participate, and ultimately rewarding when I reflect back on the portfolio of information, links and resources we have developed.
Initially a conference tag needed to be set, and this can be seen in my previous posts. I have invested more of my time into consistently tagging my information across various platforms recently, and realise the convenience of setting and using such a tag. When we explained the tag to the group, my perception was that many did not understand what I was talking about. If you do not,search in google for #WTDW and you will see the benefits of a common tag for an event. @gayleenjackson set the tag, and we were away.
The collaboration consisted of tagged tweets in Twitter, public notes in Evernote, bookmarks in Delicious, a conference Ning and an etherpad. These allowed us to post links to resources, import RSS feeds and sort information for our liking. Through this whole process I see two significant benefits;
- All the information is stored in the cloud, and is therefore accessible to anyone.
- Collaborative memory is more extensive than individual memory.
My brain has been running since thinking how can I incorporate this in my teaching. Currently I use tags, and searches of tags, to provide feeds of information from my work to students. I could definitely use public evernotes to proide links to my notes. Currently I export Zotero notebooks to students who use Zotero. The same could be done for students using evernote. We do collaboratively research and store this in a wiki within BlackBoard, but this is generally typed, copied or links. I could expand this by educating students on RSS feeds and tags. However one main difference remains. In this collaborative experience, we each contributed how we were comfortable and then shared with each other. Some conference members were only comfortable sharing within the Ning blogs. What is important is the sharing, the collaboration. The location is simply a function of familiarity and choice. The colleagues I worked with on this day are more comfortable with the tools mentioned, and this is where I regularly interact with them. My students however collaborate in entirely different forums and environments. It is unreasonable for me to expect them to move to my way of thinking (as I have with Zotero) without similar adaptation in reversed roles. I should be learning about their environments more concentratedly, and exploring options to utilise that for productive communication, collaboration and learning.
The power of networked learning outperforms that of any individual. It was great to experience real collaboration (common goal and unrestricted sharing) and I’ve no doubtmy learning has benefitted.
The TPACK framework has inspired me to work within my own school to build and implement an eLearning framework – something which has been sadly lacking. I’m excited to work with @skhill_03, a senior English teacher who is our nominated Digital Pedagogy Leader (a regional program conducted by @djone91) and the Deputy Principals responsible for IT and Pedagogy. We will base the framework on Bloom’s Taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain as it is already instilled as a framework for our academic excellence program. We intend to develop a community approach to sharing productive digital pedagogy which ties in with the staff review and performance plans that will be implemented later this semester. As this project progresses I will undoubtedly report on it here.

