About: I'm an instructional designer at the Hunter College Campus School. I support the effective use of technology in schools and classrooms.

I am also keen on the role of games in education. Please find below an ever-changing picture of me. You know, just in case you were curious.

yoda

loans that work

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

Categories


All the categories

Search:

Podcast feed

Blog feed

my blacklist

Please log in or register to sign up for our mailing list!

Valid XHTML 1.1
Valid CSS
Valid ATOM feed
Valid section 508

Monthly Archives



All the archives

Blogroll

Kasia's Blog
igforum
Raj Boora
Jamie Tubbs
David McDivitt
John Kirriemuir
Mark Wagner
Mr. Ball
Tony Forster

Bill MacKenty

Technology strengthens, deepens, and broadens our learning...

Home | Games in Education | Conference Notes | Ed Tech | Gallery | Contact me | Text-based games | My more personal site
How to keep track of good websites?
Monday, March 31, 2008

I got this question from a new instructional technology specialist - I think it’s a great question, and I wanted to share it with my readers!

Some teachers have asked me about bookmarking some websites that the children are using for research here in the lab. I have two questions:
1. Do you have a policy about bookmarking in your lab? It seems to me that over time there would be a ridiculous maze of websites favorited on each machine? Any suggestions or policies for me?

yup. we don’t allow it at all in the high school. In fact, we have software installed on our lab computers that, literally, re-formats the computers every evening and restores the computer to a nice clean pristine state. Please see my answer to #2 for an idea.

2. If I do place bookmarks on all the machines in the lab, is there an easy way to update all of them at once or do I have to place the bookmarks in each browser manually?

I would stay away from bookmarking websites on the kids browsers. instead, I would put only one bookmark, something to a shared bookmarking tool, like del.icio.us. This way, you can quickly update the links only once, and all the kids see the updated link. If I am not mistaken, I think this is how our math teacher manages his links - he has his own website, and the kids are sent to the website, where they can see the links.  The nice thing about del.ico.us is you can share the links and sites can have multiple tags - so a site for math could have “math”, “4th grade”, “shapes”, and maybe “geometry”. Our librarian in the High School, uses a blog, where he updates with an assignment or some links - so all the kids need to do is go on his site.

You could also start a blog, or make a google pages site, but I think something like del.icio.us would be a good place start. The other reason I like del.icio.us is because if something horrible happens to our computers, we are not in trouble, and the kids can access the sites from home grin Hope this helps.

Warmly,

Bill



Posted by Bill on 03/31 at 04:00 PM in Educational TechDesign
Permalink
Page 1 of 1 pages
© 2003-2008 Bill MacKenty, M.Ed. | XYZZY | 421990