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TOP 10 TOOLS 2008
Shelley Krause

My name is Shelley
Krause, and I am a storyteller and a
matchmaker, both by inclination and
profession. At this point in my
life, that means that I work as a
college counselor in an independent
school in New Jersey's Delaware
Valley (USA). I spend my autumns
coaching essay-writing, my winters
modeling and preaching patience and
perspective, my springs getting to
know a new group of students as I
help them get to know themselves,
and my summers
thinking deeply about each of my
rising seniors in turn as I write
letters in support of their
candidacy for university admission. I sometimes blog about my work at
relaxnoreally.blogspot.com.
At home, I am happily partnered and
the mother of an inspiringly curious
6 year-old. Those hijinks are
chronicled at
butwait.blogspot.com
Shelley's Top 10
Tools as at 31 March 2008
-
Blogger
- I started
blogging in 2003 when I was job-hunting
and wanted to be able to keep my parents up
to date on my process without calling them
every day. Somewhere along the line, other
folks started reading it, too, and I started
making blogfriends, some of whom I've
actually met in meat space now. If you've
got
something to say and share, Blogger is
still a great FREE way to have a 24-7
presence in the world.
-
del.icio.us
- What
Jenny Luca said. My tagged pages are
over here:
del.icio.us/butwait
-
haikuworld
-
A few years ago I made a
commitment to being a life-long learner when it
comes to haiku-writing. Haikuworld runs a
monthly kukai, a poetry contest where
anyone who enters is then given an opportunity
to distribute a finite number of points amongst
the other participants. I have learned more
about haiku from this montly conversation than I
have from any other single source. And
this month one of my haiku was granted 12
points, which felt nice
-
Google Reader - Google Reader really
changed my on-line reading habits. Now I can
subscribe to and follow blogs even with
intermittent entries or content that is only
occasionally relevant to my current interests.
Keeping up? That's a whole 'nother story.
-
PBWiki - In my work, I belong to
an association of college admission counselors
who periodically post lists of colleges to an
association listserv. The search function on the
listserv is weak. A colleague got into the habit
of collating some of the more useful lists into
an annual Word document. I worked with him to
translate it in to a wiki. Wiki's are a terrific
way of creating and disseminating information
within a community of interested participants.
Our little college lists wiki is cooking along
nicely over here:
collegelists.pbwiki.com And of
course I produced this list on my personal wiki.
-
Princeton Public
Library's online features
- The distance between
hearing about a book I might want to read and my
actually reading it has been dramatically
shortened by the advent of online card catalogs,
online book reservation system, online
intra-library loan system, and online book
renewal. It's been good for my budget, too! My
favorite pieces of plastic in my wallet are my
library cards. The university library system
also rocks, but that's not available to
everyone, so the public library gets top
billing.
-
TED
- TED stands for
Technology, Entertainment, Design.
It started out (in 1984) as a conference
bringing together people from those three
worlds. Since then its scope has become ever
broader. The annual conference
now brings together the world's most fascinating
thinkers and doers, who are challenged to give
the talk of their lives (in 18 minutes). This
site makes the best talks and performances from
TED available to the public, for free. I rarely
watch television anymore, and TED and my RSS
feed are largely to blame. That and the
parenting gig.
-
Twitter - Twitter is a social
networking tool that enabled folks to create
mini-blog entries through which they can share
their lives with the world... 140 characters at
a time. I'm a relatively new user, but I can
already tell that it's going to be a great entry
point to some new connections to other learners.
You know a technology is working for you when
you feel spontaneously compelled to evangelize!
(Twitter
Newbies FAQ) Follow me at "butwait"!
-
YouTube - i learned how to post
a video of our snow day online via a YouTube
tutorial. And then my son taught himself
this breakdancing move by watching YouTube
videos. 'Nuff said.
-
Ze Frank
- Ze Frank is a creative and good-spirited
explorer who specializes in online connections
and is fueled in part by a seemingly endless
curiousity. I use him as a human filter for cool
and heart-warming internet-enabled interactivity
adventures. Through Ze, I have
hosted a total stranger who was traveling across
America on goodwill alone, recorded
a team theme song, and discovered artists
like
David Horvitz.
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