Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Welcome Fall 2009 Students!

Welcome to Digital Tools for Qualitative Research! I look forward to having you in this class and having a chance to share some helpful tools as well as learning from you in the process. Please feel free to browse this site before class begins as it has evolved over the three quarters that I have been teaching it. If you click the label "session" on the right hand side of the screen, you will see all five sessions for this course. Please let me know if you already have experience in any of these areas and we can work out an alternative assignment in something more pertinent to your work. We are all tight on time and my ultimate goal is for this class to be useful to you. Here's to a great quarter!

We will take this survey on the first day of class:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=uCYW_2bOZ84ruDN7yNhe9UEw_3d_3d

Monday, August 31, 2009

polleverywhere

A coworker at ODE sent me a link to this tool www.polleverywhere.com. It works like free clickers for the classroom. Students can text or use twitter to respond to questions as their answers appear on a projector screen before them. As far as qualitative research, or qualitative researchers, are concerned, I could see some potential for interesting conference presentations or data collection in a classroom or a small group interview, but as I know qualitative researchers are endlessly creative, I am sure they will be able to think of other uses for this tool.

One caveat is that the tool is only free for 30 users, and you must pay for anything beyond that.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Web 2.0 for scholars

Recently, I was reading the May 2009 edition of Educational Researcher and I came across a mention of citeulike. This is an online community where researchers can post article references that they like, rank them, and tag them, so that others can search by tag and rating and find some good articles. It's not too populated at the moment, or at least as populated as I thought it would be, but I like the idea. Especially since I'm pretty new at this and I like to know that an article is valued by the community before I spend a lot of time trying to understand and incorporate it into my work.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Prezi

I came across an alternative to PowerPoint that I wanted to share here. It's called prezi and it has an interesting non-linear format so that you may create presentations that begin with a large idea and move through components of that idea in various ways. I've tried it out just a bit, but I really like it. Click on this link to see tutorials on how to use prezi and some examples (at the bottom) of what the presentations look like.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Blogs for teaching and learning

I have the quarter off from teaching this course, so things have been a little slow. However, I am in a class right now (EPL 823) on issues in technology and education. This week, we are to present a Web 2.0 technology and discuss it's issues to teaching and learning. I chose blogging, in particular blogger, since that's what I'm using for this blog. And I chose to post it here because I think it has some relevance to this course.

1) First, a definition: Blog is short for weblog and is essentially an online journal. There are many free, formulaic blog applications (blogger, wordpress, livejournal, etc.) that make blogging today simple for anyone who wants to put content on the web in this form (no HTML experience needed). The tools are simple... sign up, fill in your profile information, click "new post" and start entering text, links, photos, videos, etc. If you want to get fancy, all of the blog applications have various widgets that can be added to your site (like a blogroll, tag cloud, news feed, etc.).

2) Issues related to using blogs in teaching and learning?
Good "issues"-
For the most part, blogs can allow students to display work for a large interactive audience. Blogs can have multiple authors, so it could be used as a collaborative space among students on a project or to discuss their understanding of some concept over time. The public nature drives motivation because the content is no longer limited to a teacher and because they also have the opportunity to get feedback from others interested in their content. Blogging also has the potential to allow students and teachers to reflect on learning, identity, society, etc. and participate in a community of practice. This could lend itself to transferring formal learning to more authentic informal learning or vice versa (if a student had a blog at home to begin with). Teachers could also use blogs as a class website, pointing students to resources, summarizing lectures, sending out timely reminders about homework, creating dialogue with students about the content or the management of the class, etc.
Bad issues-
The main negative within teaching and learning for blogs is the very issue that is a positive, the public nature. Blogs can elicit feedback, but it can also elicit unwanted contact or attention. For young students this is dangerous (though I am skeptical about the odds of this happening) and for teachers it could be career damaging depending on how reflective/honest a teacher is about their practice or feedback to other students. This moves "teacher talk" from the lounge and private comments written in red ink on paper to a persistent, searchable and copyable (to use danah boyd's terms) world. The same could be said for students, who are still forming their identity, and may regret their words years later.

3) As it relates to qualitative research-
Since this blog is on a qualitative research, a method where much learning takes place, I thing blogs are also a useful tool in this arena. A blog could be a space to document field notes, maintain a reflective journal, or dialogue with participants about issues related to research. Depending on the nature of the project, a blog could be kept private or it could be used as a means of member checking or as a way to have others in your field offer up opinions as the work occurs. Since blogs are intended to be used regularly, this could be a motivation to stay on top of data analysis and reflection as it happens rather than putting it off only to try weeks or months later to recall what exactly your thoughts were that day.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Another Word Cloud Creator

I found another tag/word cloud creator. This one is called wordle.net and I like it because each time the cloud has a different look. Here are two that I got after hitting "randomize" (using the same interview).

Plus a benefit of this one is that you can just copy and paste text, so you don't need to save your word doc as .txt.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Another Tag Cloud

I wanted to try another tag cloud with my own real data to see what happened, so here it is. Very interesting indeed.



created at TagCrowd.com