Saturday, June 20, 2009

Getting Ready for The Translator

Greetings,

Many of us are getting ready to use The Translator and there are a plethora of tools available to us. I've been playing with a few that will hopefully add some interactivity to my lessons.

Zoho Creator offers the ability to create input forms and pull the information out in a variety of ways: spreadsheet, summary, calendar, rss feed, .pdf, and HTML. In their Free Account version, they allow you to create five (5) applications; however, within those, you can have as many forms as you like.

For this project, I've chosen to embed using the summary layout. Here, I can filter by book section or see all the comments at once. The data has been set to sort by "time added" in a descending order so that we can see the latest entries on top.
To give an idea of how this works, I've entered comments in the following sections: Introduction, Chapter 4, Chapter 7, Chapter 26, and General Comments. I've written "Nothing yet" in all other sections just to make sure I pulled data correctly.

Instructions


Add an Entry: There is a small "Add" link direclty below the word "Translator". When you click this link, a small entry form will open. Use the pull-down menu to select a section of the book about which you will write. The tag for "General Comments" is at the bottom of the menu.

View Entries: Use the Filter pull-down menu to view the comments for the section in which you are interested.

Let me know if you think these instructions require clarification.


NOTES:

  • Twitter might be a good choice, but it limits the user to 140 characters and I haven't learned to set it up for filters correctly.
  • In using Pageflakes to transfer widgets to this blog, I discovered Pagecasts which allow you to pull together information from given sources for your topic. Here is an example. This might allow us to pool our resources campus-wide or college-wide. Heather Sullivan, on EdTechTopia explains how to set up a class. Read her article, "Pageflakes for Education"
  • One university seems to have chosen Pageflakes over Blackboard. Hmmmm. Click here to see an HTML version of their PowerPoint presentation.
Here is my attempt at a Pagecast for The Translator.

If you have time, please enter some thoughts about the book into the widgets--think of yourselves as Beta testers--and let me know what you think. Questions, comments, and critiques are always appreciated.



Aggie

1 comment:

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