Celebrate Learning! Spring 2014 (Vol 5, Issue 2) | Page 16

What Do Today’s Students futures we cannot even imagine at the moment. Tools for gathering information include Instagrok, www.instagrok.com; Jogtheweb, www.jogtheweb.com; and Scoop.it, www.scoop.it. Instagrok bills itself as a “new Dorothy Minor way to learn.” It is a search engine with several special feaAssociate Professor tures. When users type in a subject, Instagrok returns an Communications Services interactive map complete with appropriate Web sites, videos, images, glossary, key facts, and quizzes on the subject. Northeast Campus By creating a free account, users can also keep a journal of CELT Coordinator their searches, their own notes as they research, and Web On September 19, 2013, Eric Patnoudes posted on sites, images, and videos for future reference. All of these Edudemic “The 4 Things Modern Students Must Underfeatures are free; Instagrok does have a classroom plan stand.” Patnoudes is a “passionately curious connected which does cost money, but purchasing the classroom site educator, instructional technologist, Microsoft Innovative is not necessary. Jogtheweb is another site where users Educator Trainer, and advocate for innovation creativity can collect Web sites, comment on the sites, and add their and imagination in education.” His article reminds educa- own questions, ideas, and commentary. For anyone worktors that we should follow John Dewey’s admonition: “If ing on a research project, storing sites in Jogtheweb makes we teach today as we taught yesterday, we rob our sense in that the sites are accessible from one location and [students] of tomorrow.” He continues by also referencing easily edited. Scoop.it is similar to Jogtheweb in that users Sugata Mitra, Professor of Educational Technology at the create a free account and then collect Web sites on the School of Education, Communication and Language Scienc- topic of the user’s interest. A user may have up to five free es, Newcastle, England and visiting professor at MIT. Pro- Scoop.it topics; after that, the user must pay for additional fessor Mitra names the four things modern students must sites, but five can be plenty. Scoop.it allows users to write understand “to become contributing members of a global their own insight about the pages collected in a particular society.” According to Professor Mitra: scoop or topic. Others can see the scoops and comment on them or rescoop the sites into their own topics. All three of “First, they should be adept at finding information these tools are readily shared through links, Facebook, quickly and easily on the internet. Twitter, Google+, and other social media. Next, he says they have to comprehend what they are Using the tools listed above, students have begun reading. the process of gathering information. They also need to Third, students will have to organize the information understand what they have found. Tools which are helpful they have discovered in a manner that makes in that regard include Padlet, www.padlet; Linoit, sense. en.linoit.com; and Mightybell, www.mightybell.com. At Finally, decide which information they will use to Padlet, students have a wall on which they can easily post make a decision, solve a problem, or accomplish a questions, comments, videos, documents, and Web sites. task.” Professors can set up specific boards and invite students by email, thus keeping the site private and open only to If we learn to use the Web tools effectively, we can those invited to use the wall. Students can create their teach our students how to use them, but we can also learn own free Padlet sites as a way to keep track of materials in from those same students new ways to use the technology. a research project, sources they wish to remember for latBy encouraging students to find, understand, organize, and (Continued on page 17) use the information, we are equipping them for jobs and Need to Know? 16