SITE08 Keynote YouTubed!
| Posted on: March 10th, 2009 | Categories: Art, Blogging, Conference, Creativity, Design, Learning, Personal, Representation, Research, TPACK, Teaching, Technology, Video, Worth Reading |
2 Comments »
Other related posts and pages: |SITE 2008: A postview | SITE 2008 Keynote | Is a lecture just a lecture? | SITE 2008: A preview | Leigh Wolf @IgniteLansing |

Other related posts and pages: |SITE 2008: A postview | SITE 2008 Keynote | Is a lecture just a lecture? | SITE 2008: A preview | Leigh Wolf @IgniteLansing |







March 21st, 2009 at 10:57 pm
I LOVE that your keynote was utubed! Super lecture – well done. I actually made my family watch it! I have two kids in college. I a doc. student under Dr. Theresa Foulger at ASU and she sent me your way.
I want to quote some items from the lecture, but don’t know how to cite this in APA. Sorry such a boring question.
Another question – have you found a system that measures any part of TPACK for effective learning from students point of view? or school administrators? I am very curious here….
Thank you!
March 21st, 2009 at 11:11 pm
Michele, the fact that you made your family watch the video is actually the greatest compliment I have received so far! Thanks
As to how to quote from the lecture… I really don’t know. I am terrible at APA anyway. Matt Koehler (my partner in crime) often thinks that I make up my own version of APA that he has to then deal with. I think that you can just quote it and cite my website, not the youtube version but rather this link (which has the entire version in quicktime format). That may take a little longer to load but is somewhat immune to the vagaries of Youtube.
http://punya.educ.msu.edu/2008/03/18/site-2008-keynote/
TPACK is a framework for teacher knowledge and our focus has been on measuring that aspect. The next (and necessary) step towards student learning is not one that *we* have taken so far. I know there has been a great deal of interest in TPACK by school instructors (and I am involved in outreach in this area) but I am not sure there is any specific research devoted to that.
Clearly both of these are prime areas for future research – so let me know if you want to talk sometime about this. Thanks again.