City-wide wireless

A couple articles have surfaced in the last week or so about large scale wireless deployments in Seattle and Taipei. These cities may be on the cutting edge, but the wireless revolution is coming to a city or town near you within a few years.

According to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer article, Speakeasy is planning a WiMAX system that will cover the downtown area using only four basestations with speeds up to 3 Mbps. WiMAX, which stands for Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access and carries the IEEE 802.16 label, has much greater range than the more common 802.11 systems. WiMAX is getting quite a lot of buzz these days as the up and coming standard that could finally put a wireless network cloud over huge areas.

The Taipei project will use already common 802.11 technology and will require an extensive network of 20,000 basestations. The Yahoo! News article reports the cost of the network will be $70M, but could be profitable in five years.

Whatever the technology, the important message for educators is that universal broadband is coming and we’d better get ready. One of the teachers in my district related a story to me recently about a lesson she was teaching. At one point during the lesson she asked her 4th grade students how fast they could answer two questions: who was the fourth president of the U.S., and how much does a blue whale weigh? The winning times thanks to Google and good keyboarding skills? Four seconds and seven seconds respectively. Do you think these kids relate to information differently than their parents and most of their teachers? Digital immigrant teachers beware, the digital natives aren’t waiting for you to catch up.

Wikipedia critiqued by encyclopedia veteran

Robert McHenry was once Editor in Chief of Encyclopædia Britannica and his experience brings credibility to his recent critique of Wikipedia. He certainly doesn’t pull any punches:

The user who visits Wikipedia to learn about some subject, to confirm some matter of fact, is rather in the position of a visitor to a public restroom. It may be obviously dirty, so that he knows to exercise great care, or it may seem fairly clean, so that he may be lulled into a false sense of security. What he certainly does not know is who has used the facilities before him.

It’s not surprising to find that someone so closely tied to a traditional encyclopedia would find a lot wrong with Wikipedia. I get much the same reaction every time I explain what wikis are all about to a group of teachers, and I’ll admit the concept does seem counterintuitive. McHenry’s chief complaint seems to be that with no one in charge, there’s no way to ensure the accuracy of the information. He also points out that group editing doesn’t always produce the best quality material by pointing to a the Wikipedia article on Alexander Hamilton and highlighting a less than stellar sentence:

All these arguments aside, the article is what might be expected of a high school student, and at that it would be a C paper at best. Yet this article has been “edited” over 150 times. Some of those edits consisted of vandalism, and others were cleanups afterward. But how many Wikipedian editors have read that article and not noticed what I saw on a cursory scan? How long does it take for an article to evolve into a “polished, presentable masterpiece,” or even just into a usable workaday encyclopedia article?

So what does this mean for a classroom teacher who would like to utilize a wiki as an instructional tool? Not much if you’re having students creating their own wikis as a knowledge building tool. Teachers already know what good writing and good learning look like, and I expect they will apply those same standards to their students’ work. If students are using Wikipedia for research, that’s a different story. I never encouraged my students to use any encyclopedia, even the Encyclopædia Britannica, as their primary research tool. The teachers I know and work with push their students to use primary and secondary sources and fall back on encyclopedias for general knowledge only.

Whatever its faults, Wikipedia beats Encyclopædia Britannica hands down in the timeliness department. Comments on Slashdot about McHenry’s article point out that Wikipedia had a thorough article describing the prison scandal at Abu Ghraib in Iraq within days of the news story breaking. However carefully edited, a traditional encyclopedia can never keep up with the real world.

A Meadowbrook teacher hits the road

Susan Johnson is a 1st grade teacher at Meadowbrook Elementary School here in the Hopkins School District. She has been honored to receive a place in this year’s Fulbright Memorial Fund Teacher Program and will be blogging about her experiences on a newly created blog, Mrs. Johnson’s Journeys. She has invited her students to interact with her during her trip to Japan over the next few weeks using the comments on her blog.

This is a fantastic use of blog technology to be sure, and I’m really looking forward to following her adventures. But there’s another angle here. I sat down ith Susan for at most 45 minutes about a week before she left on her trip and explained the very basics of using the MovableType software. I didn’t go into a theoretical discussion of blogs, RSS, or any of those things. It didn’t matter to her. She’s not particularly geeky. What mattered to her was the connection that would be created between a teacher and her students from half a world away. The potential goes way beyond a single teaher and her class, of course. I expect that she will have an entire school of students watching this trip develop, and perhaps classes of students from other schools who may discover her blog. I don’t want to put too much pressure on her, but Susan’s trip could do more to promote blogging in this school district than all of the little talks I’ve done around here so far combined.

Ed-Tech Insider debuts

I posted about it before, but it’s official now. The eSchoolNews Ed-Tech Insider is live and was announced via email to all eSchoolNews subscribers last week. The main eSchoolNews site has a link and is putting teasers from the ETI blog on its homepage. You can even get a look at my ugly mug.

I feel privileged to be included in the gang of ETI bloggers. I’ve learned a lot already from the posts that I’ve seen there and I hope that everyone will enjoy the site. In case you hadn’t noticed, my posts to the ETI blog are pulled right from this site via RSS. I’ve noticed a couple small bugs, but the system seems to work quite well. I really have no idea how many people read what I write here. I just hope I can come up with something interesting to say once in a while.

Dial-up doesn’t cut it anymore

The most recent survey of students in our school district indicated that nearly 90% of them had computers in their homes and the vast majority of those had connections to the Internet. Unfortunately, I don’t think that information tells the whole story. If we’re really concerned about the digital divide and providing an equitable education for all students then we need to be asking about the speed of their Internet connections.

I moved into a new house about a year and a half ago and had to go without my high-speed Internet connection for several weeks. It was painful to say the least. Are students using dial-up really on equal technological footing with students who access the Internet at speeds that support a full multimedia experience? I don’t think so. The latest figures I can find show that about 50% of Americans with Internet access use high-speed connections. That leaves millions of students who have either no connection at all or one that allows only basic Internet use. Maybe WiMAX will be the answer. At the very least, let’s change the questions on those student surveys so we get good information about what our students can and can’t do with technology at home.

IT Conversations is a must hear

My commute isn’t awful, but 30 miles and roughly 45 minutes each way is probably a little longer than average for the Twin Cities. At least we have outstanding public radio here. In the weeks since I discovered podcasting I’ve been mixing the MPR listening with various podcasts and have come to appreciate the IT Conversations podcasts most of all. A short list of some of my favorite IT Conversations sessions includes presentations by Steve Wozniak, Wil Wheaton, Malcolm Gladwell, and Janine Benyus; interviews with Bruce Schneier and Phil Zimmermann; and fantastic panel discussions from Gnomedex 4.0, PopTech!2004, and Bloggercon III. The content on IT Conversations alone justifies the price of my iPod.

So how about the educational conferences? I’m presenting a workshop and a couple sessions at the TIES 2004 Education Technology Conference in December. I think I’ll record my presentations and podcast them. Wouldn’t it be great if educational conferences started embracing this? How could this technology be used for professional development in a school district? What if someone recorded short interviews with master teachers and made them available as podcasts? What a great way to share knowledge among teachers.

Firefox 1.0 has arrived

The news is all over the net today, but I figured I would join the chorus and point out that Firefox 1.0 has been released. The quickest way to get a copy is to grab it from the mozilla.org ftp server.

So why should you care? Standards, performance and security. The gecko rendering engine (the underlying browser technology behind Mozilla and Firefox) is arguably the most standards compliant. Proponents of the Opera browser will disagree, and they have a strong case, but Firefox is free and it costs $39 to get a version of Opera without the banner ads. Users accustomed to IE will notice a much quicker browsing experience when using Firefox. It’s not that the pages are downloaded more quickly, just that the page is rendered more quickly. It makes a difference. Finally, by separating the browser from the rest of the system the user is insulated from most of the really nasty IE security vulnerabilities. I know of many individuals and even entire businesses who are switching all of their users to Firefox for the security protection alone.

Give it a try. If you find that you like it, do yourself another favor and explore the many Firefox extensions that are available to add all sorts of additional capabilities to the system. But that’s a topic for a future post.

A room full of iBooks

A room full of iBooks

Less than a week after placing the order, an incredulous delivery guy showed up with a truck full of 650 Apple iBook laptops. We had a pretty good idea where we were going to store them, but weren’t entirely sure how much room it would take. The stack you see in the picture (click for a larger view) accounts for almost 600 of them.

We hired the technician who will be responsible for doing the inventory and installing the images on those machines. He didn’t run screaming from the room when he saw them so I’m optimistic that he’ll work out.