I am thrilled to have almost made my way through the Web 2.0 course (I just have to add some comments to the Web 2.0 wiki). I have enjoyed participating in this course enormously and would like to thank the team of incredibly talented educators for designing such an engaging learning experience. I cannot begin to understand how you have managed to make Web 2.0 so understandable - this must have truly been a labour of love. I hope you will consider designing other courses as Web 2.0 e-Learning tools continue to evolve.
Exploring the Wetpaint wiki site was great. I was very interested to learn about COPPA - ie. websites that are collecting information from children under the age of 13 must comply with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). I also learned that, if setting up a Wetpaint wiki for educational purposes, you are able to ban advertising pop-ups from appearing on your wiki which is great. I will be setting up a Wiki for my Kindergarten class for next term that will hopefully provide parents with a better insight as to the learning that takes place in the classroom - hopefully they will feel comfortable enough to share some of their comments on the wiki.
Looking at Bloom's Taxonomy and how it connects to Web 2.0 was very interesting. The link to Andrew Church's article clearing married each taxonomy to a variety of e-Learning tools and applications that exist as part of Web 2.0. Where would I place Second Life, flikr and mind mapping in relation to Bloom's Taxonomy?
Very simplistically, using Second Life involves evaluating - hypothesising, detecting, reviewing, commenting. Using flikr involves applying - sharing, editing, uploading, categorising. Using mind mapping involves analysing - organising, structuring, linking. However, I'd have to say that the connection between Bloom's Taxonomy and Web 2.0 depends on the learning goals planned by the teacher. For example, while I've linked mind mapping to one of Bloom's higher order forms of thinking (analysing), simply navigating your way around the application requires the ability of remembering how it works - the lowest form of thinking as detailed by Bloom. I guess the bottom line, from an educator's point of view, is ensuring that Web 2.0 e-Learning tools are integrated into the curriculum meaningfully - in a way that helps students develop their higher order thinking skills.
Even though this is a reflection on Module 10, I intend to return to this blog and hopefully share some of the experiences I have when actually implementing what I've learned from this course.
Until then - take care - Cara