John Travers's blog
Google Sites: a wiki with good sibling relations
I have been presenting a group of workshops recently
showcasing a number of Web 2.0 applications and have used Google
Sites as the starting point. From the speed with which teachers were
able to set up a site and make it look presentable and funcitonal it
is like most wikis, very easy to use. As I explored Sites more I
found that it has some very useful features. One is that once you
have a Google account - using any email as your identity, you can
creat as many sites as you like. Different sites can have different
acces right for a class of student to view, or edit, or open to the
world. These can all be linked to a home site, so on the menu to the
right, I was the sole editor of most of the pages listed, but Open
Access is actually another site that could be edited by the workshop
participants.
Another feature is a result of having some powerful siblings in the Google family, most of which integrate with Sites very well. You can view Calendars, Picasa Web Album slide shows, Google docs, and in the case of Forms, complete a suvey.
Many of the teachers immediately began setting up one or more sites
for class use.
The immediacy of wikis is very appealing to teachers,
and the Forms from Google docs is an added bonus. This feature make
creating a form, or survey a 15 minute task if you know what you want
to ask and the resulting survey can be viewed in Sites, or
emailed to the participants. The image of a survey to the
right is how the survey appears when inserted into a Sites page.
A nice little feature is that when you go to the Insert menu in Sites and select a document to insert, you are taken to the list of files from you Google docs home page: Mr Google having taken the liberty of opening up the sibling site in the family. A single login to a Google account makes all of this very accessible and easy to use.
But really, most of these or similar features can be found in WetPaint or WikiSpaces and other wikis. The big news is that web publishing for students and teachers is available right now. What teachers really like and deserve is control of these applications. Teaching is an individual and often spontaneous art and teachers should not have to go through a middle-person to access these powerful learning tools.
If you would like to browse a site you can do so HERE.
Tags:
google
wiki
cloud computing
web2.0
Posted at 06:29PM Sep 26, 2009 by John Travers |
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John Travers
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- Adelaide, SA, Australia
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