Sunday, July 5, 2009

Nicole's website

Classmates website & Blog discussions:

Answer to question # 1:

Nicole’s website.

OMG! I really enjoy your color choices. I see that you’re trying to make a “trade” mark by the images that you have posted. I am not sure I know, yet it is very pleasant. How did you create the background? What do images and the funny girl mean? Very good choice of your picture. I think many of us chose pictures for our bio in which we are too serious, and too professional. I think your is the perfect one. You’re smiling and enjoying the moment. Isn’t it?

Your tech assignment page is clear and organized. In your class final project, I wonder if you could add a little description of each of the social network. In other words, the viewer does not need to jump into unless he/she wants, but he/she can read about it.

I also enjoyed your animations. Why did you chose nature? They are great.

Each one of your assignment pages follows the same “pattern.” I really like the colors and how easy is to navegate from one page to the next. It is not confusing and it see how useful it could be.

One aspect that I have written in other classmates and I include myself is related to the font, colors, audio and video “settings” that we choose. In other words, we create our website in either PC or Mac and we think it is going to be like that for others, but when other people view our websites sometimes the colors have been changed, the font is different and the audio and/or video does not work.

I opened your website with my Mac computer and everything works, but once I open the website with my other PC vista, it changed some settings and I couldn’t hear the audio or see the videos.

I think each one of us has to work on making our websites “readable” for all. I invite you and all my classmates including myself to explore that issues.

-Ab

Sharon's website Question # 1

Classmates website & Blog discussions:

Answer to question # 1:

Sharon’s website


Her website has a very appealing homepage. The white colors and restful gray provide an sense of tranquility and calm. It invites to explore it. Sharon use nicely the tables. Her audio is pleasant and videos are appropriate. As much as it is beautiful, it may come across as not very appealing for students. Your biography is pretty short. I will suggest to make it longer. Since you are a pianist, I bet you have a lot of things you have done and performed. Try it will make it more exciting. You also have a section title “about me.” I understand this is less informal information for your viewers. Do you want to expand this one more? Do you want to make just one and include this in the general biography? I wonder why you make two different sites? I am not sure if I saw it correctly, but I think you need to work on your tech resources assignments page. You’re missing some items like videos, music concrete, literacy, and pod cast page.

His website title “Music Garden of the My Piano Students” is the NYU class project. I really like her idea. She was to provide a online resource space for herself and her students.

Shanron’s blog is filled with a lot of entries which are pretty interesting. Her Pink color makes it look like a real online journal.

One aspect that I have written in other classmates and I include myself is related to the font, colors, audio and video “settings” that we choose. In other words, we create our website in either PC or Mac and we think it is going to be like that for others, but when other people view our websites sometimes the colors have been changed, the font is different and the audio and/or video does not work.

I opened your website with my Mac computer and everything works, but once I open the website with my other PC vista, it changed some settings and I couldn’t hear the audio or see the videos.

I think each one of us has to work on making our websites “readable” for all. I invite you and all my classmates including myself to explore that issues.

Generally speaking, it is a very good website and it will be very useful for your teaching career. I highly suggest to keep working on it.




Saturday, June 27, 2009

Social networks


Julie- on Social networks (cell phones)

Julie,

I'm very impressed by your last entry. I can't believe how far we have gotten with cell phone use. I think in America we will go in the same direction than Korea, but I personally feel that American are so afraid of identity theft and other related issues.

I see many advantages and wonderful things that cell phones are doing in education. I am extremely impressed that Korea school system are using them to take attendance. wow. What's next?

One disadvantages that I see among students is how cell phones is an avoidance or shield device.

Let me explain. As much as the cell phone helps to keep people connected, it also allow avoidance among each other. Have you ever being in a situation in which you don't want to talk to a person and you pretend you are busy on the phone? Are you ever been online or waiting in the doctor's office and pretend you're making important phone calls?

A few years ago, we could "pretend" to make a phone call, now you don't have to. Cell phones like iphone have every single imaginable application that can keep a person "busy" while waiting online.

In my previous years as a student, I have see how many students avoid talking to one another or ignoring each other by "always" being answering their phone. IN general , I always think that technology and in this case cell phones are great tools. Yet it can become a blessings or curses in the life of a person.

A well known mantra says "tantum quantum." In other words, use it if it helps you or leave it. I wonder where is the balance.
~Ab

Tech Resources class: 3rd Question Final

3. In educational settings, discuss how technology enhances the teaching and learning environment. What do the viewpoints of Dewey, Bruner, Elliott, McLuhan, and Eisner provide for our consideration when thinking about technology, performing arts, and the process of teaching and learning.

In his article, “Dewey and Technology” (Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, v42 n3 p222-26 Nov 1998) Bruce Bertran, “calls for a reexamination of foundational ideas in education. Discusses technology and John Dewey's conception of learning. He lists some centers based in the United States concerned with technologies for learning resource. Essentially, Bruce insists that technology cannot be ignore in education. Dewey’s conception of learning includes technology itself.

Some scholars consider Jerome Bruner as perhaps best known for his work in education, most of which he undertook during his years with the Center for Cognitive Studies. Bruner “held the position that the human species had taken charge of its own evolution by technologically shaping the environment. The passing on of this technology and cultural heritage involved the very survival of the species. Hence, education was of supreme importance. As Bruner admitted, he was not fully appreciative of this importance until he was drawn into the educational debate gripping the United States following the launching of Sputnik, the first satellite, in 1957 by the former Soviet Union.” (Source: answers.com)

A question may arise: How do these authors like Elliot, Bruner, Dewey, and Kohn make us understand the use of technology, arts, and teaching and learning process  in the classroom?

In the classroom today, exposure to technology and the arts is of essential importance.  Gone are the days when technology should be taught strictly in classes such as "machines for business," "typing," or "introduction to computer programming."  Gone are the days when arts was taught solely for “filing out time periods.” Rather, our modern existence is permeated with technological devices with which we have to interact constantly, from lap top computers, to data phones, to iPods, to digital media systems.  We use these for our own work, and we use them to network with others with whom we have to communicate, cooperate and interact.  There is scarcely a subject taught in schools that cannot or should not integrate the latest technologies into the process of instruction, learning, research and evaluation.

 Even traditional subjects (English, Math, Science and E.S.L.) can be approached through technological media which are appealing to the younger generation, and also help to equip them with a tech savvy skill set that has application far beyond the classroom.  Often one finds that students are more advanced than their teachers in understanding and using the latest technology.  This provides a great pedagogical opportunity, where students can be empowered to teach their teachers and peers, while teachers channel these skills into their particular subject area.  The networking that is possible with technology, to transcend the classroom walls and the time of a class period, holds the potential of elevating a class into a more authentic and organic learning community.  While students most often will be quite adept at using the latest types of technology and some of the more common programs (and programs less common, but related to their interests in things like music downloading, video creation, and social networking) teachers may do well to familiarize themselves and keep up-to-date on the applications that lend themselves uniquely to the discipline they teach.  

The synthesis in the classroom (and beyond) of student's aptitudes and familiarity with technology and the teacher's expertise in his/her discipline and with the programs most relevant to it, holds great potential for everyone's mutual advancement of skills, content knowledge, and real-life application of it.  Without this kind of integration of technology with curricula of all kinds, schools fail to develop in their students the requisite skills for the modern work place, and fail to give an outlet to the creativity, curiosity and talent that young people today seem to express so very much through technology.

-Ab

Tech Resources class: 2nd Question Final

2. Discuss some ways that you can use your art to enhance students acquiring English literacy skills.

John Dewey’s book Experience and Education is a “lucid analysis of both traditional and progressive education.” (Alfred L. Hall-Quest).  Dewey believes that neither the old nor the new education is adequate. However, both need of each of other. If we were to teach English literacy in the “old ways,” the teacher would be limited to pen, paper, book and blackboard.  If we were to teach English literacy in the “new ways,” it would mean endless number of possibilities.  The teacher can use technology to enhance learning. Videos and music as part of the daily interaction or engagement  with the language.  We can go beyond that and we can use the arts. For instance, a arts and craft teacher, can ask students to use different vocabulary words to describe what they make. A paint teacher can ask students to describes the different colors, themes, symbols and gestures that they see in a particular painting.  A music teacher, can use music symbols, notation, and listening exercises that allow the student to express himself.

In his book, Music Matters, Dr. David Elliot argues that arts, particularly music has tremendous significant in education. He opposes the old and traditional belief that  reduce music to an aesthetic experience. He states, “…This set of beliefs is commonly known as the philosophy of ‘music education as aesthetic education’ or MEAE for short. Unfortunately, there are compelling reasons to believe that the MEAE philosophy is theoretically and practically unsound, as several philosophers now argue. (Elliot,  pg. 5).

Furthermore, many educators would agree that music is language. Therefore, it must not be teaching only in the traditional way. It needs a life giving-acting experience. This is the same of English as a language. It must use the arts in order to make a “jump” between the abstract concepts of the language and the actual use of it.

According to Elliot, “the original meaning for the art had much more to do with the PROCESS than with the PRODUCT (Elliot, pg. 22).” In other words, Greeks were interesting in the process of making certain object beautiful or magnificent.  How did the sculpture, painter or musician came to such inspiration? How did he  choose the colors, shapes or notes? Likewise, arts can provide the essential tools for students who find themselves limited in the traditional teaching ways.  

~Ab

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Creating Tables: A nightmare!

When I began working on my website. I thought that it would be very simply coding. In fact, it is, yet it is very laborious work. Even if the tables are simple enough, each table requires enormous amount of concentration and focus in order to avoid missing any important symbol.  

A simple (") quote or (=) sing can make the website disappear.  However, it seems that our web-pages are more professional done. 

The basic formula for a table is as follow:  

One row, three columns table:



   
   
   

5th Meeting Red Team

Aurora and I met for our fifth time and we kept moving in our discussion of our website.  It is clear that Aurora has a vision and goal for her website. I think this will be the driving force for creating it. Sharon hasn't communicate in the last few days. 

I find myself continuing working on my website. There is never enough! There are always things to change, adopt and modify. I think it is great, yet it is also time consuming. 

AB

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Podcast !!! The new generation

I never knew what Podcas was all about! Wow!  

If you don't have much space, you can always use YouTube as source and reference. 

What is the meaning of Podcast? What is its use? Who uses it?

podcast is a series of digital computer files, usually either digital audio or video, that is released periodically and made available fordownload by means of web syndication.

The syndication aspect of the delivery is what differentiates podcasts from other ways of accessing files, such as simple download orstreaming: it means that special client software applications known as podcatchers (such as Apple Inc.'s iTunes or Nullsoft's Winamp) can automatically identify and retrieve new files in a given series when they are made available, by accessing a centrally-maintainedweb feed that lists all files currently associated with that particular series. New files can thus be downloaded automatically by the podcatcher and stored locally on the user's computer or other device for offline use, making it simpler for the user to download content that is released episodically.

Like the term broadcastpodcast can refer either to the content itself or to the method by which the content is syndicated; the latter is also called podcasting. A podcaster is the person who creates the content.

The term is a portmanteau of the words "iPod" and "broadcast",[1] the Apple iPod being the brand of portable media player for which early podcasting scripts were developed (see history of podcasting), allowing podcasts to be automatically transferred from a personal computer to a mobile device after download.[2] Despite the source of the name, it has never been necessary to use an iPod, or any other form of portable media player, to use podcasts; the content can be accessed using any computer capable of playing media files.[3] As more mobile devices other than iPods became able to synchronize with podcast feeds, a backronym developed where podcast stood for "Personal On Demand broadCAST."[4][5][6]  

Souce: Wikepedia.com 


Sound Track Modification! The Hidden Secret has been revealed!

Have you ever wonder how films, performance, videos, or music files are so perfect? How come Celine Dion, Michael Jackson, Britney Spears and others are always on pitch?  

I really doubt that this musicians have perfect pitch. I do not mean to be critical of their musical skills. However, after playing around with Audacity software, I realize that you can sing as a frog and still come out with a wonderful recorded song. 

Audacity has the capacity to change pitch, tempo, rhythm, fade in and out. It generates silence and noise. Endless number of capabilities are possible for your mp3 music file. 

Can this kind of software be the answer for terrible singers? I think so. 

I recently modified the song "Don't Give Up" by Josh Groban. Check it out! I copied and past certain selection and I made it more dramatic. Hope you like it. 

I can imagine the GREAT NUMBER OF USES THAT WE CAN DO WITH THIS SOFTWARE IN THE VOICE, PIANO OR DANCE PERFORMANCE. 

You can record your own song and the change the pitch or you can modify the song that you need for your dance piece. If your choreography is only 3 minutes and your song is 5. BINGO! Audacity can help you to shorter it and make it nicer! Don't need to change the song that you REALLY want to dance. 

4th Meeting Red Team

Aurora and I met and we discussed the relevance of our website.  Sharon, Aurora and myself have agreed that we would like to present our class project through our website. We all agree that this website will be very useful for us and for those to whom we wish to serve. 

Work on Process: 
a. Each team member has to create the main page for their website. 
b. Each member has to develop a general outline of their website related to their specific area: voice, piano and dance performance. 
c. Each member will provide with different link and resources. 
d. The project will be presented on Thursday evening (last class).