giovedì 2 dicembre 2010
What is Web 2.0?
Web 2.0 changed the average internet surfer from passive consumer to active participant. The level of participating can vary from simple rating or voting through blogs and galleries to creative learning communities.
Web 2.0 is about sharing your ideas and opinios. It's about open source applications and free tools for everybody. It's about giving and getting.
Web 2.0 supports the idea of an active and creative learner. As tools for collaboration make the learning process visible, the focus changes from the product to the process. And thus, the teacher's role changes from a distributor of knowledge to a guide on the path of learning and understanding.
Web 2.0 is about sharing your ideas and opinios. It's about open source applications and free tools for everybody. It's about giving and getting.
Web 2.0 supports the idea of an active and creative learner. As tools for collaboration make the learning process visible, the focus changes from the product to the process. And thus, the teacher's role changes from a distributor of knowledge to a guide on the path of learning and understanding.
Web 1.0 is one-way | Web 2.0 is two-way |
Web 1.0 is authoritarian | Web 2.0 is democratic |
Web 1.0 is passive | Web 2.0 is active |
Web 1.0 is hierarchical | Web 2.0 is network |
Web 1.0 is static | Web 2.0 is dynamic |
Web 1.0 is read-only content | Web 2.0 is user-generated content |
Web 1.0 is about companies | Web 2.0 is about communities |
Web 1.0 is about client-server | Web 2.0 is about peer-to-peer |
Web 1.0 is about lectures | Web 2.0 is about conversation |
Web 1.0 is closed | Web 2.0 is collaborative |
Using a blog in a project
On one hand, pupils' collaboration: forums, chats and wikis must take place in a secure protected environment. On the other hand, it's important to share the process and its outputs with the whole school, parents and the surrounding community.
Blogs are excellent for being used as project diaries. You can write there weekly what's happening in the project, publish pictures, make links to photo galleries and embed video clips, podcasts and presentations. You may also allow commenting, but blogs aren't good tools for discussions.
Remember to link your blog on the school homepage, so that it can be found easily.
Tools for planning a project
It's really important to share some information and discuss and decide a few basic things before you start an eTwinning project. Together with your partner(s) you should agree on
Very good tools for this is Google Docs. Google Docs offers you a space where you can share and edit a Word-document together with your project partners. You can also publish it in the net, when you've completed it. It's quite easy (and free) to use.
Google Docs is a great collaborative tool also for learning.
- project goals
- pedagogical contents
- the tools you'll use
- the timetable
Very good tools for this is Google Docs. Google Docs offers you a space where you can share and edit a Word-document together with your project partners. You can also publish it in the net, when you've completed it. It's quite easy (and free) to use.
Google Docs is a great collaborative tool also for learning.

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