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TOP 10 TOOLS 2007 & 2008
Gerry Paille

Gerry is currently employed
by School District 60, Peace River North, in Fort St. John,
British Columbia. He is seconded full-time to the
Instructional Development and Research Group at Thompson
Rivers University, which is located in Kamloops, BC, but
continues to reside in Fort St. John. His current focus is
in teacher training related to using technology in the
classroom, and in instructional design for web-based and
other courses. Gerry was also recently honoured by being
chosen as part of Apple's Distinguished Educator program,
Canadian class of 2007.
Gerry's Top 10 Tools as at
30 March 2008
-
Safari - Safari
is my window into the Web. It runs very quickly on my Mac,
most of the javascript issues are gone in the newest
releases, and works great on my ipod touch.
-
Mail for ipod touch - Apple's mail app for the ipod
touch/iphone is great and it allows me to be not so tethered
to my laptop.
-
iChat - iChat
gives me a quick connection with colleagues, friends and
family, and the video quality seems to be far superior to
any other messenger application I have tried. I used iChat
extensively to collaborate with, and get help from,
colleagues when working on projects and have also used it
with teachers and students in conjunction with Elluminate for
teaching calculus at a distance.
-
Blogbridge - Blogbridge
is my RSS reader and is where I start my day, most days. It
helps keep me current with what is new in technology and how
exemplary educators are apply those technologies. I also use
it to read about topics of personal interest.
-
del.icio.us - For me, del.icio.us seems
to work best for keeping track of and sharing web sites of
interest. I also like that I can use RSS to easily see what
others are finding interesting and that the del.icio.us RSS
feeds allow me to generate dynamic content on a Web page
based on predefined tags. I have been showing teachers how
to do this to created dynamic resource lists for and with
their students.
-
flickr - I am
not a very creative person, but Flickr provides me with an
outlet for the little bit of me that just might be creative
at times. I like the feedback that I get on my photos and
Flickr also allows me to follow what friends and colleagues
are doing in the spare time
-
Google Mobile Apps - Google
has done a great job making these apps work well on the ipod
touch and I presume on the iphone as well (not available in
Canada yet). I especially like Google Reader on my ipod
touch and I also use gmail and iGoogle. Google Maps and
Youtube links come installed on the ipod touch and iphone
and they work great as well.
-
Wetpaint - I
have used Wetpaint's free wiki application for creating
sites related to presentations I have given and to encourage
collaboration after the fact. The collaboration part has not
always been that successful, but most find Wetpaint really
easy to use. It has support for "widgets", but there is
advertising. I have also in the process of copying a course
from WebCT into Wetpaint and I think it is pretty
functional, although I have not run this through any
students at this point.
-
iTunes - My
music collection and podcasts live here and on my iPod
-
Google Maps - I have been having some fun with my GPS
(new Garmin Colorado) and geotagging photos and videos from
YouTube to associate them with a map. Google Maps will read
Flickr's geofeed
and place the photos on a map. I think there are some
interesting possibilities for using these technologies in
learning.
Gerry's Top 10 Tools as at 9 August 2007
-
Safari -
Safari is my window into the Web, so it
is open all the time and is a companion
to my RSS reader. It also runs very
quickly on my Mac
-
Firefox -
I use FireFox
when Safari
fails me (has
problems with
javascript and
ajax at times)
and for several
add-ons such as
the video
downloader
-
iChat -
iChat gives me a quick connection with
colleagues, friends and family, and the
video quality seems to be far superior
to any other messenger application I
have tried. I used iChat extensively to
collaborate with, and get help from,
colleagues when working on projects and
have also used it with teachers and
students in conjunction with
Elluminate
for teaching calculus at a distance.
-
Blogbridge
-
Blogbridge
is my RSS
reader and
is where I
start my
day, most
days. It
helps keep
me current
with what is
new in
technology
and how
exemplary
educators
are apply
those
technologies.
I also use
it to read
about topics
of personal
interest.
-
del.icio.us
-
For me, del.icio.us seems to work best
for keeping track of and sharing web
sites of interest. I also like that I
can use RSS to easily see what others
are finding interesting and that the
del.icio.us RSS feeds allow me to
generate dynamic content on a Web page
based on predefined tags. I have been
showing teachers how to do this to
created dynamic resource lists for and
with their students.
-
flickr -
I am not a very creative person, but Flickr
provides me with an outlet for the little bit of
me that just might be creative at times. I like
the feedback that I get on my photos and Flickr
also allows me to follow what friends and
colleagues are doing in the spare time
-
GarageBand
-
A great tool that I use for creating and editing
podcasts and enhanced podcasts
-
Wetpaint
-
I have used Wetpaint's free wiki application for
creating sites related to presentations I have
given and to encourage collaboration after the
fact. The collaboration part has not always been
that successful, but most find Wetpaint really
easy to use. It has support for "widgets", but
there is advertising.
-
iTunes -
My music collection and podcasts
live here and on my
iPod
-
Pageflakes -
I like the ease by which a Web page can be
created by dropping flakes or widgets on the
page. There are thousands of flakes
available that make it easy for anyone to
aggregate content, including RSS feeds, for
many practical applications. I have been
encouraging teachers to create activities
for their students that use tools like
Pageflakes to create dynamic and
collaborative learning experiences.
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