Beginning today (April 12) at the University of Adelaide, I will be presenting a ‘show and tell’ on Using Web 2.0 in your teaching: ideas, applications and affordances for enhanced educational outcomes.
I am going to look in detail at the following applications:
- xtimeline – great collaborative timeline tool
- listphile – lists and database tool
- slinkset – ‘open’ social news builder
- posterous – blogging flexibly
- mind42 – mindmapping collaboratively
- quizlet – flashcards are more than you think
- reviewbasics – co-annotation of documents
- springnote – wiki for personal and group use
- knol.google – publish your knowledge
- wiggio – great groupware
These and more are summarised in the handout for this presentation.
Formal abstract
The presentation focuses heavily on the way that a wide array of Web 2.0 / social media applications can be used in higher education, whether in distance or on-campus learning. The presentation will demonstrate the ‘top 10’ innovative applications which exemplify the different ways in which Web 2.0 can make a difference for university learning. Designed to provide practical, usable ideas, the presentation emphasises how the technologies which might be chosen must be understood in terms of their relationship to the content, assessment, outcomes of learning, and the particular context provided by students and the subjects they are studying. The presentation will involve detailed visual display of various applications. It moves beyond general discussion of blogs, wikis and social networking into consideration of unusual and valuable online services and sites which are not well known to educators.
Thanks to Elaine Tay, Tama Leaver and all the people at the 14+ universities who have helped organise this; thanks to the generous support of the ALTC





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