Archive for May, 2010

Building on eXtension

One of the goals for the eXtension Engineering Team is to make as much of our data and information programmatically available to our peers as we can.

We’ve just begun doing that this year, and our colleagues are already taking advantage of it – and we wanted to highlight their efforts.

Ray Kimsey, at North Carolina State University, as part of the CYFERnet project, is pulling data from the CYFAR community within eXtension.org for the CYFERnet Professionals’ Directory.

Visitors to CYFERnet can browse the public profile information for Extension Professionals, including their activities and interests and social network connections – sourced from their profile information that they have chosen to share publicly.

Brian Webster and Ying Zhou at Iowa State University have built on this public profile data as well, building a widget that you can use at your own sites to list your own social networks (see it in action on Brian’s staff page at Iowa State)

Both teams are using our “publicprofile” data api – which pulls a JSON output for a person’s public profile information. You can see the JSON output for my public profile at http://www.extension.org/api/data/publicprofile?person=jayoung (or person=jason.young@extension.org – we’ll find it by either eXtensionID or registered email address).

You can get all the public profiles for any community by using the “communitymembers” data api e.g. http://www.extension.org/api/data/communitymembers?community=engineering or http://www.extension.org/api/data/communitymembers?community=extension%20staff (community can be the name or ID of any of the 182 communities at people.extension.org )

We’ll be documenting the parameters and the API’s available from extension.org over the next several weeks and months (and we’re presenting at NETC 2010!)

We are looking forward to making more and more data available this year, and building a foundation that more folks like Ray, Brian, and Ying can build upon!

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Early Registration Deadline May 20th for National CoP Workshop

Early registration for the National CoP Workshop ends May 20th. So, make sure that you are registered.

Also check out the interviews with our keynote speakers for the CoP Workshop. David Warlick talks about teaching and technology in an interview with eXtension. Melissa Rach’s shares her thoughts on content audits and how she got started in this area with eXtension.

The schedule is available on the National CoP Workshop site.

eXtension looks forward to seeing you at the Workshop in June.

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eXtension Welcomes David Warlick as a Keynote Speaker at the 2010 CoP Workshop

We are pleased to introduce you to David Warlick, one of the keynote speakers at eXtension’s 2010 Communities of Practice Workshop, held June 6-8. If you have not signed up to attend, you can do so now here.

Since 1995, Mr. Warlick has been the owner and principal consultant of The Landmark Project, a professional development and innovations firm in Raleigh North Carolina. During this time David has spoken at conferences and delivered workshops for educators throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, The Middle East, and South America. He has been an innovator and leader in the field of educational technology and a prolific programmer. His Citation Machine, receives more than a half-million page views a day.

We asked David a few questions about his experience as an educator and the role that technology plays. You can see the interview below:

Can you tell us about your background in education?
I graduated from Western Carolina University and started teaching in 1976, before there were desktop computers.  I taught math, science, and social studies, but mostly social studies to 7th and 8th graders in a rural school in South Carolina.  I witnessed my first desktop computer, a Radio Shack Model I, in 1981, and my school received 11 Radio Shake Model III computers later that year.  With no software included in the deal, I started teaching myself how to program so that my students would be able to learn on with the machines.  They included a game called Stock Baron, designed to help students infer meaning from historic events, and Trucker Geography, designed to help them learn the relative locations, economic importance, and how to spell the states of the United States.

In 1983, I became a computer resource teacher and then director of instructional technology for a rural school district in in North Carolina, and then moved to Raleigh, to work for the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction in 1990, assisting in the proliferation and integration of the information and communication technologies (ICT) throughout the state.

Leaving NCDPI in 1995, I have since worked as an independent consultant providing training, public speaking, and software development services.  I’ve been published in numerous education-related journals, and have written three books on educational technology and contemporary literacy.  My forth book should become available very soon, A Gardener’s Approach to Learning, about cultivating personal learning networks.

How is technology changing the way we learn?
I’m not sure that I can say that technology has changed the way that we learn.  However, it has changed the environment of learning or the experiences and contexts of learning.  I grew up in a small town, with limited access to content and ideas, yet a rich array of physical manipulatives (scrap lumber, boxes of junk, used nails, bolts, screws, etc.).  Today, children are learning within a networked, digital, and info-abundant learning environment and an astounding array of virtual manipulatives that can often be created on-the-fly.

Because of these shifts in the information environment and the rapidly changing circumstances of our play, work, and learning, it has become necessary not only to redefine or expand what it means to be literate, but also to change its context.  As the 3Rs expand, I think that it has become important that we treat literacy not only as the skill to read, but the skills involved in learning — that we might start talking about “learning literacy” rather than just “literacy.”

I’ll add one more thing about learning today, and that information and learning are at the heart of our children’s native experiences.  Information and learning are their culture.  One of our challenges today is to crack the code of that experience, to be able to describe and apply not their out-side-the-classroom information experiences, but the qualities of those experiences.

As educators, what are some things we need to think about to optimally reach our audience?
Four things come to mind.  First, we need to understand and to become fluent in today’s prevailing information landscape, which is networked, digital, abundant, and remarkably participatory.  This does not mean that we should be 100% expert or even 50%.  It means that we are learning literate within a contemporary information environment.

Second, I think that we need to be engaged in our students’ conversations.  There is much in their ‘native’ information experience that is compelling and will almost certainly be a part of their future.  We need to be able to reflect on those experiences, and to integrate them into the conversations of formal learning.

For number three, I believe that we need to understand the qualities of our students outside-the-classroom experiences.  As we try to make formal learning more relevant to our students, we need to start not with video games or social networks as a whole, but to deconstruct those experiences into smaller qualities, that are at the core of the experience.

Finally, I think that it is critical that educators start to include, as an absolutely essential and explicit part of the job, the practice of learning, that we should start to refer to ourselves as expert or master learners.

You talk about a new generation with ‘native’ information experience. What exactly does that mean? What does this mean for educators?
I’m not a neurologist, so I can’t speak to how their brains are wired, and I’m not an anthropologist, so I can’t map out the regions of their culture.  However, I am almost sixty years old with 34 years in education, and I know that the world that our students interact in and with has changed, and that the information landscape that they call home, has undergone dramatic shifts — magical transformations.

As a result, the experiences that define them, individually and as groups, are dramatically different from the experiences that prepared me for my future.  It’s the qualities of those experiences that I think can help us to craft learning experiences more relevant to their world and self views and also to their future.

What challenges do you see for “non-digital natives” who are trying to serve audiences in todays learning environments? What are the most common pitfalls that will create barriers to their success?
Marc Prensky’s 2001 article, Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, served to help us understand that there are distinct differences between our students and the students that we were.  However, like many analogies that become part of the vocabulary of our professional conversations, there are many fallacies.  For instance, the land that our students call home is not a destination.  It is a constant journey.  My son started out banging on the keyboard of an Apple IIe computer.  Now he make videos with a computer that slides into his book case and with a camera he can carry in his shirt pocket.  They have seen and adapted to amazing change, and our challenge is their challenge.  We’re all living in times of rapid change, which is why I think that it has become so important that teachers become “master learners” rather than merely  ”learned masters.”

On a more practical note, there are challenges to our everyday endeavors to teach today’s students, within a new information environment, for an unpredictable future.  We often lack the technology.  We lack the time to study and reflect on the implications and practice.  We are hampered by inflexible and sometimes less than relevant curricula.  These are big problems that need some outside-the-box solutions.

Can you tell us more about the Landmark Project?
Just before I left the NC State Department of Public Instruction, I had built their web site, the first state department of education web site in the nation.  In a time when the Internet was a wilderness to most educators, I saw it as a set of landmarks that would help them navigate this wilderness.  This idea carried through and continues to be my goal, to help educators learn to navigate no only the Internet, but what has become a rapidly changing landscape of our work, learning, and play.

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New Widget for Sharing eXtension Content

Last week we released a new content widget which allows anyone to display a customized list of eXtension content on their own webpage. You can choose what content to display by selecting from any combination of content tags, choose what type of content (Articles, FAQs, Events, or a combination of Articles and FAQs) and how many items you want to display. These new content widgets join our Ask an Expert widget and both are now available from a new Widgets landing page: http://www.extension.org/widgets

We hope you enjoy this new feature.

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Six Free Public Webinars on Tap for May

Each month experts from land-grant universities and industry use webinars to provide information on seasonal topics and current research. Click on the link provided for details on each event.

May 4Increasing Plant and Soil Biodiversity on Organic Farmscapes, (https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/989072424)

May 11Field Evaluations of Commercial Humic Products: Current Knowledge and Future Needs (http://www.extension.org/article/27475)

May 13Getting Your Community Ready for Entrepreneurship Development (http://www.extension.org/events/1585)

May 14 Livestock and Poultry Mortality Composting- A Natural Rendering Process, (http://www.extension.org/pages/Live_Webcast_Information)

May 18 Parenting Tips at the Horse Show, (http://www.myhorseuniversity.com/resources/webcasts/parenting_tips_may_10)

May 28 Cellulosic Biofuel Logistics, (http://www.extension.org/events/1680)

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Extension Master Gardeners Launch Blog

Extension Master Gardener volunteers have a new communication tool to encourage interaction and sharing at the national, state and local level. Cooperative Extension Master Gardener (EMG) program coordinators are gearing up to launch the first national blog for EMG volunteers on Monday, May 3, 2010.

Blog posts can be found directly at http://blogs.extension.org/mastergardener or through the new national Extension Master Gardener website at http://extension.org/mastergardener. With over 94,000 volunteers contributing more than $100 million in service nationwide, the EMG program is hoping to take its volunteer program to a new level by increasing the social interaction of its participants.

Beginning Monday, May 3, EMG coordinators and guest contributors from various states will take turns sharing a weekly blog post on a topic geared toward the national EMG community. Master Gardeners will be encouraged to discuss items appearing in blog posts by submitting comments using the blog’s commenting features.

Monica David, Illinois EMG coordinator and Consumer Horticulture National Committee chair, said, “ I hope the EMG Blog will be a place where Master Gardeners are encouraged to ‘talk shop.’” David also noted that the blog can be a place for EMGs to interact around blog post topics that may highlight many Master Gardener activities including:

• Project ideas, successes, and learning points
• Educational opportunities and curricula
• Contributions to the public good (value and benefit)
• National updates and events

In addition, David noted that collaboration via the EMG blog could lead to more cross-state and regional cooperation on projects and provide expanded learning opportunities for Master Gardeners. “Hopefully they will share and discuss researched-based knowledge from different land grant universities related to their project and volunteer opportunities. Another equally important component of utilizing the EMG blog is to reach audiences who primarily use blogs and the Internet for communicating or getting information,” she said.

“While we don’t all grow the same plants or have all the same exact program needs, there is much to learn from each state,” said Rick Durham, Kentucky EMG Coordinator and current leader of the eXtension Consumer Horticulture Community of Practice. “Maybe the EMG blog will help provide a more freely flowing river of ideas within and between states,” he said.

Please help spread the word that on May 3, EMGs will be blogging live via http://blogs.extension.org/mastergardener

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National Community of Practice Workshop June 6 – 8, 2010

We are finalizing the agenda and presentations to be delivered during the National CoP Workshop, June 6-8, 2010 in Austin, TX. Watch the conference web site (http://about.extension.org/the-2010national-cop-workshop/) for an updated program. Make sure you have registered and have your room reserved for the meeting. Come and learn from experts in content development and online engagement and from colleagues who are innovative in their approach to content delivery through a “hands-on” workshop format.

Melissa Rach has been named as one of the keynote speakers for the workshop. Melissa is director of content strategy at Brain Traffic, an agency focused on helping clients tackle messy content problems. Melissa worked on her first online project in 1993. Since then, she has become a respected authority on how organizations incorporate interactive content into their overall communications strategies. Her methodologies have been taught at universities nationwide and recognized in books for nearly a decade, from Webmastering for Dummies (2000) to Content Strategy for the Web (2009). For more on Melissa click here.

We look forward to seeing you at the National CoP Workshop! For more information or details contact Craig Wood, craig.wood@extension.org.

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eXtension Calls for New Communities of Practice

eXtension is releasing a call for the formation of new Communities of Practice. Specific details can be found at http://about.extension.org/wiki/2010_Call_for_CoPs. eXtension will provide start-up funds of up to $60,000 per Community of Practice. Funds are available to establish four new Communities in 2010.

The subject areas identified in which CoPs can emerge are listed below. The list is not all-inclusive. So, if you have an idea for a CoP and have the team in place to build the community, eXtension would encourage you to submit an application.

• Forage and Livestock Systems
• Carbon Science
• Rural and Community Development
• Alternative Crops
• Air Quality
• Ecosystems
• Global Climate Change
• Food Security
• Soils
• Wildlife and Fish
• Family and Small Farms
• Youth Citizenship
• Youth Healthy Living
• Community Capacity Building
• Farm Financial Management
• Farm Safety
• Turf Management
• Community Leadership and Policy
• Urban Programming

• International
• Nutrient management
• Sustainable Agriculture Practices
• Water Quality
• Markets
• Trade and Policy
• Almost any subject area within the International Arena

Letters of Intent are due July 1, 2010.

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eXtension Supports CoPs Developing AFRI Proposals

The eXtension Governing Committee is interested in supporting the development of integrated Agricultural and Food Research Initiative (AFRI) proposals by Communities of Practice. Any CoP planning to take a lead in the development of a proposal may apply for financial assistance to help support organizational and proposal development activities. Those interested should submit a one-page letter of intent identifying:

* the name of the Community of Practice with contact information
* the program area to which the proposal will be submitted
* description of the proposed project, and
* how the development funds will be used to support the development of the AFRI proposal,

For information on how to include eXtension in a grant proposal, please visit:
http://about.extension.org/wiki/NIFA_RFA_Information

Please send funding applications to Craig Wood at craig.wood@extension.org or Dan Cotton at dan.cotton@extension.org.

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eXtension Identifies Funds to Support Exisiting CoPs

Enhancement funds have been identified to help Communities of Practice that did not receive startup funds and are struggling in various ways to develop their community, get content created, and engage with their users. CoPs must meet the eligibility requirements and submit the appropriate materials to qualify for review.

Eligibility Requirements:
*The CoP cannot have received any startup funds or leadership funds from eXtension in the past to be eligible for the motivational funds.
*A CoP that is having significant issues in devoting leadership time to the CoP and in engaging CoP members to create content.

Criteria:
*Submit justification for why the funds are needed and how the funds will be used. (2 pages)
*Submit scope of work with budget and budget narrative

Review Process:
eXtension will establish a special review panel to evaluate requests for funds. Potential make up of review panel would include selected members of the Director’s Council, Governing Committee, and eXtension staff.

Deadline for submitting material for Enhancement funds is July 1, 2010. For more information contact Craig Wood at craig.wood@extension.org.

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