Saturday, January 2, 2010

Digital Life or Citizenship .... Do you have yours organized?

Christmas break is a wonderful and needed rest for educators everywhere. It always helps me clear my mind and be able to focus again on the daily challenges in the classroom.

This break I found myself pondering the question of a digital life. OK, that's not quite the concept, but it will have to do. I am wondering about just how much ownership, awareness, and organization students and teachers give their online life. Sure they understand and manage their Facebook identities, but what about all of their work and leisure online?

I would like to help teachers and students learn to manage or balance their digital needs easily. What are those needs. Here is my list of essential digital needs;
  • File Storage - a place to keep everything
    • photos - flikr or picasa, or ?
    • video - youtube.com
    • documents - dropbox.com or box.net or MS Skydrive or Google docs or ?
    • Sharepoint
    • Moodle ePortfolio
  • Authoring Applications
    • Google Docs
    • Zoho.com
    • Sharepoint
  • Communication
    • Gmail
    • Windows live
    • Zoho.com
    • Moodle
    • Sharepoint
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
  • Organize
    • Google calander
    • Windows Live
    • Zoho.com
    • Sharepoint
    • toodledo
Each of these needs must be met regardless of hardware or software currently in use. They can have a robust offline component, but they MUST have online access across a variety of devices from phones to ipods to the PC. Ideally they should be personally owned and managed, this questions Moodle and Sharepoint for most of the work. No doubt these services will be accessed for specific course work, but the point is how are students and teachers managing all of their digital life and taking ownership.

The last piece to the puzzle is how are the students and teachers creating a PLN. For students this is most likely to be on Facebook, but teachers should consider using that for personal interaction and using something like Twitter for professional chatter.

This is a large topic and deserves much more than this short introduction. However, I am tired of students and teachers blaming others for why they are not using the digital tools we now have. They should not be able to blame the school for poor file access or organization or communication. They are expected to bring paper, pencils, binders, calculators, and such to class and to have these at home. Why not digital tools?