Monday, October 27, 2008

Shamu, Virtual Classrooms and Wiki-madness


From Amy Sutherland, author of, What Shamu Taught me About Life Love and Marriage, boiled down one key message that was, "what you get is what you reinforce". Meaning that if there is behavior that you do not want from a person, animal, or what-have-you, you should ignore (to the extent possible) the behavior altogether. Conversely, don't let behavior that you do want go unnoticed or unrecognized. So, basically reinforce what you do want and ignore the behavior you don't want.



From a veteran of virtual classrooms, Randah McKinnie, had the following tips.
  1. Prequalify your audience with pre-tests and reinforcement of that during the live virtual classroom.
  2. Find your own virtual style and pace. You may find it's different than your in-person style and pace.
  3. Anecdotes are very powerful learning tools but *only* if it contextually appropriate and contributes to the learning.
  4. Practice, practice, practice.
  5. Disclose lapses in communication. Like silence on the radio, it can be a killer so don't leave your audience hanging.
  6. Be specific with your questions. For example, if you think that's true, display a green check mark and if you disagree, choose a red x.
  7. Create a sense of expectations, by letting the students know you will call on them directly for input, and then follow up by doing so.

Sue Gardner, new Executive Director of Wikimedia Foundation described the remarkable reality of the Wiki sensation. The free, open, online encyclopedia is the results of harvested knowledge from the people of planet earth (my words, not hers). It is a remarkable, personal and self-driven collection of facts and trivia. Our assignment by Elliot is to edit at least one wiki page before the end of next week.

2 comments:

Susan Conrad said...

Great blog Mike. Looks like some interesting speakers.

Susan Conrad said...

I like your blog Mike. The speakers sound interesting.