Tuesday, January 6, 2009

New Years Resolutions

I'm normally one of those people who avoids New Years Reservations like the plague. But I'm going to try something new this year.

I'm always trying to find that ultimate successful long-term strategy to help me keep learning new ideas. I figured if the list of things to do was so short and so sweet so as to not be intimidating, I just might have a chance at actually being successful at it. For the past 6 months, I've experimented with a little post-it note on my desk. I called it my "to do" list.

My goal was to watch something new for 10 minutes, read something new for 10 minutes, do something new for 10 minutes, and write something new for 10 minutes, each work day. I must confess, this simple little post-it note inspired me to start drinking my morning coffee in front of my computer while I attempted to become human. After all, I'm not fit to interact with humans until I've had at least 2 cups of coffee in me anyways. That gives me plenty of time to work at this list. The strategy actually worked for me—early morning hours are when I am freshest. Of course, I couldn't boast a faithful 5 days a week—I considered myself lucky if I accomplished these once a week.

So this year, I'm going to change my criteria just a little:

My modified goal will be to watch something new for 15 minutes, read something new for 15 minutes, do something new for 15 minutes, and write something new for 15 minutes, each week.
If I do each of these once a week, say for 40 weeks this year, that gives me a full 40 hours of voluntary learning time. (It also leaves me plenty of time off for holidays, vacations, conferences, etc. without feeling guilty.) Right now that seems pretty doable! Of course, it is only the first week of January...


Thursday, August 14, 2008

Community Clips

I just found the coolest free feature from Microsoft Office Labs. It's called Community Clips, and it allows you to download a free video recorder for Microsoft products.

Community Clips

This sure comes in handy for people like me. I downloaded and installed it in less than 2 minutes. Then I loaded up Excel and recorded my first session. The audio is not all that good, but I didn't even have my mike connected!

Here's my first try, no training, no prep, no nothing! The file format is .wmv. This was a whopping 3 mb file.


Here is my second try--this time you can view the video larger at the host site:

Working with the Access Navigation Bar

When the window opens, just click Switch to Full Screen at the top of the video!

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Starting a Conversation

This week the SCC faculty and staff community will begin having a real conversation about the potential of blogs and wikis as aids in our classrooms. I'm hoping each and every person who attends the initial sessions will come and visit and share their perceptions. While not all of us can or even need to incorporate these technologies in our classes, we at least need to be better aware of them.

In the initial workshop in August, several handouts were made available. These are now listed here:

7 things you should know about wikis

7 things you should know about blogs

7 things you should know about facebook

They all come from the Educause Learning Initiative website, which is a great web resource for those of us who are always trying to play "catch up" with technology.

I look forward to comments!

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Publishing from Word 2007

It seems Word 2007 has a menu command specifically to help publish blog entries.

  1. In Word, go to the Microsoft Office Button and choose New.
  2. Under the Installed Templates category, choose New Blog Post.
  3. You will be prompted to register, and it's as simple as that!

Found a great online site this week for teaching resources again: it's the Faculty Innovation Center from the University of Texas at Austin. Great stuff! You can click the image below to see the topics more clearly!

Friday, August 10, 2007

del.icio.us.ly Devouring Excel 2007

It’s only been three weeks since classes have ended, and already I find myself overwhelmed with commitments. For over a year I have been telling everyone I would get to them “come August”, and here it is—August. I’m feeling a little blindsided!

My two projects for this week were

1. del.icio.us
2. Excel 2007

del.icio.us How on earth did I ever exist without this site? The website is a free social book marking web service for storing and sharing bookmarks. Sign up is quick and easy, in just a few steps my 200+ Favorites were imported, and two new toolbars in my browser now allow me to add new sites quickly and painlessly. Considering I can work out of up to 5 sites in a day, being able to have access to my Favorites from anywhere with an Internet connection is incredibly useful!

If you need to consolidate all your Favorite sites so you can access them from anywhere, my advice is--don’t wait any longer!







Project number 2 was to get up to snuff on Excel 2007. Screamed through an 800 page reference book, streamlined a training manual and got files ready to go for this month’s faculty and staff training sessions. There’s some pretty nice additions to this new version. I found out I missed Excel’s intersection formula somewhere along the line in the last few versions. Excel’s infamous INDEX and MATCH function has always made the bravest of students groan, but it can easily be replaced with an Intersection formula.

Go figure!!