You would think that providing timely information would be just the thing to get you applauded. However, as the song from Porgy and Bess tells us, it ain’t necessarily so. It really all depends on what the information is, and to whom you’re making it available.
Is this the newspaper I’ve been looking for?
A short while ago I expressed the view that paper.li, the Twitter-based newspaper, was no longer for me. I don’t like the lack of control over what is published, and it started to look a lot like spam. I experimented with a couple of other similar services, and they did nothing much for me.
But Microsoft's Montage looks promising. Although you still don’t have control over what appears in particular streams, you do have a say in what types of stream are featured, and (to an extent), the layout.
The sledgehammer as a tool for innovation?
25 ways to make yourself unpopular: #1 Don’t do as you’re told
Search engines with a difference: Collecta
Digital storytelling resources
Digital Storytelling
Walls
Here’s a nice idea for students to use as a basis for writing a blog post, making a video or other form of presentation, or a series of digital photos.
Is it rude to comment?
ICT and the Built Environment
Please! No More Mantras!
Creating a game – a positive impact on learning?
Games-based learning: a personal view
by Amanda Wilson

Six months ago, writes Amanda Wilson, I would have said that games in the class were not a way for children to learn mainly because I never thought of them as educational tools. I never really connected education with entertainment.
Update on The Amazing Web 2.0 Projects Book
In case you haven’t heard of it, or just to remind you if you have, The Amazing Web 2.0 Projects Book contains:
Personal Learning Networks
What a wonderful connected world we live in! Thus it was that a group of us were able to listen to, and chat with, Chris Smith about, appropriately enough, learning networks.
It’s Not About The Game!
Getting Teachers Engaged With Technology
Spreadsheets Across the Curriculum
<Yawn> <Groan><zzz><Snort><Grunt> If that’s the sort of thing that greets you when you tell a class that “we’re going to be looking at spreadsheets”, then maybe – just maybe – you ain’t doing it right. I mean, I think spreadsheets can be exciting, a window into some really lively discussion. OK, I admit it: I don’t get out nearly as much as I should, but even so….
Finnish School of the Future
Here’s an interesting-looking project, with a video about it. I don’t think the video does the project justice, and I think that it’s unfortunate that when we see three youngsters leaping into the air with joy at the end of the film, it’s when they’re leaving the school building at the end of the day!

