Monday, October 25, 2010

Fun new application -- voice sharing avatar Voki

The power of blogs! One of my students just shared this fun app with me via her blog, and I'm passing it along. It's called Voki, and allows you to create an avatar for yourself and have this share what appear to be essentially tweets using the voice of the avatar or you can record your own. I could see this be a fun app especially to get kids to be engaged in sharing reports about their work. If you have them type their message and have it translated into computer-speech (text-to-voice) this "tricks" them into writing and getting writing practice, and allows them to have their writing heard rather than read (which can benefit self-conscious writers).

Here is my first Voki attempt. Of course I look just like this::)

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Converting a web page or any other document into a PDF

Ever found a web page that you really liked and wanted to keep on your computer for future reference (for use when you are off line, or in case the original disappears?)? Or do you have a PowerPoint or Inspirtation document that you want to share with others who don't have PowerPoint or Inspiration? Well, there is an answer... you can convert it to a PDF!

This topic just came up in our department  because we (the faculty) have to provide electronic (but not web-based) copies of our syllabi to the examiners for our upcoming NCATE accreditation visit. Most of us now use Moodle as our course/content management system (CMS) and have our syllabi as web pages, rather than as Word documents. At first everyone thought that they had to convert their Moodle web page syllabi into Word docouments (which can be done, but is a hassle). But there is also the option to turn in syllabi as PDFs -- which is easy to do! I thought I'd share how to do this here on my handy-dandy techno-blog in case you wanted to know how.

If you use a Windows computer, go to http://www.pdfforge.org/pdfcreator and download the free application to enable you to do this (Windows users, jump in here using my comments box if you have a better tool or suggestion for Windows users). I believe this PDFForge app has a guide on how to do this (I suspect it will be similar to on a Mac).

If you are a Mac user, this feature is standard. To convert a web page (or any kind of document) into a pdf.

  1. Open the web page (in this case, your syllabus in Moodle) or whatever document you want to convert to a PDF
  2. From the "file" menu, select "print"
  3. When the Print dialog box opens, instead of clicking on the "print" button as you normally would, click instead on the PDF button (bottom left side of the printing dialog box) --> then from the drop down menu, choose "Save as PDF"
  4. Save this to your computer (naming it something that will make sense to you later!).
Here is a screen shot that shows you how to do this on a Mac. Windows users, is this the same concept with the PDF creator from http://www.pdfforge.org/pdfcreator?


Happy pdfing! :)

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Reflections on the Uses and Abuses of Social Networking

This past couple of weeks have been emotional for me and have had me thinking a lot about the power of social networking on the Internet -- the good, the bad, and the ugly.

I'll start with the good. I don't know if any of you know about the website http://www.caringbridge.org/? The purpose of Caring Bridge is to provide free websites that enable people who are experiencing serous health issues to connect online with family and friends. When a person is critically ill, family and friends really want to know how this person is doing, and also want to be able to send messages of support. Using a personalized website, which is essentially a blog, provided free (supported by donations) through Caring Bridge, the family can post updates and photos about how the patient is doing, and visitors can leave messages of support.

Although I am a big fan and user of a wide variety of social networking tools (Facebook being my favorite!), until a friend of ours became critically ill a few months ago, I never truly appreciated the importance of social networking in being a life line to some people. When our friend Cathryn was hospitalized and it because clear (a) that she was going to be there for a while and (b) that many friends and family members wanted to know how she was doing and be able to send regular messages of support to her, her daughters and a couple of close friends started a Caring Bridge site for her. Every day, and sometimes twice daily, they would update the site, letting us know the latest on Cathryn's progress. All of us, in turn, were able to send encouragement to Cathryn, her daughters and other care givers (and we also were able to coordinate efforts to help provide donations towards the astronomical cost of her health care).

The outpouring of love and support for Cathryn were a lifeline for her and her caregivers, helping support them on this harrowing journey (during the two months on her illness, her site got nearly 30,000 hits -- and this was just from her network of family and friends!).  They knew we were all there for them, and Cathryn knew that even if we couldn't all visit her in person, we were with her every minute in cyberspace. For those of us unable to make the trip to the Mayo Clinic to visit her, these updates helped more than I ever could have imagined. Even though the news each day was often really hard to read, at least we knew what was going on, right up until the very end (yesterday) when she finally lost her heroic battle. Even now her Caring Bridge site continues as we all use it to show our love and support for her family, reaching out to them in their grief. How different this would be for them, and would have been for Cathryn, had we not had this Caring Bridge connection. Thank you, thank you to Cathryn's daughters and her friends for helping us keep connected. And thank you Caring Bridge for this amazing social networking tool.

And then there is the other side of social networking ... when its power is abused in the most horrific ways, to spread intolerance and prejudice through at best thoughtless, insensitive and deeply painful comments, and at worst intentional and targeted hatred. I was deeply shaken by the tragic suicide of a gay college student, 18 year old Tyler Clementi, who took his life after his roommate used the Internet to post video that he had secretly filmed of Tyler having sex in what Tyler had thought was the privacy of his room. This kind of cyberbullying fills me with horror at how the worse side of people can be unleashed through the power of the Internet. I also know that it is essential that every one of us stand together and speak out to stop this intolerance in its tracks (you can read more about my plea for GLBT people and our allies to speak out in my letter to the UMD Statesman on this issue last week).

I think I'll save my ranting and thoughts about cyberbullying for another blog entry. But I want to end with a plea to everyone out there to take very, very seriously the immense responsibility that comes with our right to free speech and our use of the very powerful social networking tools here in cyberspace. The tools themselves are just tools -- neither good nor evil. They can be used both to save and to end lives. The choice on how we use them is up to us.