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Who am I and why am I writing here?
I am a teacher. I am a computer and technology teacher. I teach at an elementary school in Sacramento. I also blog about what I do at. Sometimes I'm witty, sometimes I'm insightful, but there are lots of blogging teachers, why me, why here? You can blame it all on Steve Dembo.
What is a DEN "Star" and what is their National Institute?
At this point, you may be wondering what is DEN? Discovery Educator Network is a professional development network that supports Discovery Education services. It has a number of employees (like Steve) who provide support in the form of presentations, ideas, and support, but the most important part is getting together, online (on blogs, in Second Life) and in person with fellow teachers who are using Discovery Education, to share our ideas and experiences.
What is a Star educator? Those educators are doing more with Discovery Education products and more importantly, with technology. The requirements for becoming a Star are pretty do-able. You view a video, answer an online quiz, fill out an application and report about two events (any "meeting" where you discuss Discovery Education services with three or more teachers).
Once a year, Discovery Education has a National Institute for their Star educators. It's a really great deal because they cover all expenses for the 5 day institute except for travel to and from the site. This year is was at the Headlands Institute in Marin, California. This is a short two-hour drive from my home, so I applied to go (the application usually comes out in Spring).
Why the National Institute?
Discovery Educator Network's National Institute is really a different gig than most of my other professional development experiences. It is at once so intimate (fewer than 100 educators, and we're all rooming together), and the schedule is so full (starting early at 8 a.m. and finishing after dark at 8 p.m. or later) that it truly is a morning, noon, and night experience.
It's also a great contrast between "play" and business. This in my second National Institute, and they started both with a group activity to get us all working together, and dorky though it was, it was a chance to get to know each other. The first full day we did a tour of nearby San Francisco. Last year, it was a night tour of monuments in Washington, D.C. Those activities, and doing them together, make it more of a group activity. While there is a definite structure, unlike district PD, there is no one taking attendance, so you do have the freedom to abstain, or do your own thing.
It has a variety of educators in terms of geography, age, experience, and technology expertise. DEN has everything from teachers relatively new to technology, to district tech specialist. For those looking for how-tos there are those, but for those with more advanced skills, we help by doing presentations, or in other ways.
My part was to help with the "documentation", but it was a was not my task alone. Dean Mantz, a DEN Star from Kansas set up a "live blog" using Cover It Live. I've used Cover It Live before but it has some new features that really made it shine in this instance.
Cover It Live is a way to live-blog that will self-refresh for viewers. This means that unlike, say twitter, new entries will come up in the live blog window when you add new info. It's not static. But that's just the start, you can add video from LiveStream, or UStream, or YouTube. So you can live stream video and type in comments. You can also pick up twitter feeds for search terms or hash tags or for specific users. This was used during Malcolm Gladwell's Keynote at NECC 2009, so that tweets with the tag #necc09mg could be included in a live blog.
Now all those options have a very heavy bandwidth load. I like to think of this as the F-15 dashboard approach. Lots of options, lots of shiny buttons to press. What about when you have a really lousy connection, cause that seems to happen more and more at tech conferences. That twitter feed can really save a Live Blog. If you are having "connectivity issues" with wifi, but you're getting cell service that will let you send out tweets, you can just have it pick up your twitter feed, and use that as your live blog. You can have multiple "producers" on a blog and have folks "back home" take care of the administrative details, like making the blog live (turning it on), putting it in standby, or ending it. Dean, who set up the Live Blog for DEN National Institute, wasn't at the conference, but he was outside making sure it all ran smoothly. It was a real labor of love on his part. This is a really important way to share and get some participation from folks like Dean that couldn't be there. I had many folks who gave me positive comments and thanks for the video feeds I managed to get out.
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