Mar
20

Attending MACUL from Afar

Filed Under (macul09) by Pam Shoemaker on 20-03-2009 and tagged , , , , ,

I was very disappointed when I learned earlier this week that I have pneumonia.  I was bummed because I feel bad, but even more bummed because my physician told me I could not attend the MACUL Conference!  I look forward to the conference every year.  This year, I had more responsibilites than ever before… facilitating sessions, writing/posting to the MACUL blog, helping run the SIG-EE annual meeting, manning the MACUL booth, and supporting all the presenters from my district.

So I decided to do what I can virtually. I started with Twitter.  The conference has Twitter buzzing for sure!  I started following everyone who was following MACUL.  People at the conference share tips, links, and ideas.  As people share links, I tag them in my delicious account as macul09.  If you would like to see all the links I tagged, you can see them here.

I attended Thursday’s Alan November keynote through the eyes of Ben Rimes and Kevin Clark as they used Cover it Live.  It was almost as if I was there.  When they wrote about students being creators of content, with Audacity being one of the tools mentioned, I shared some Audacity video tutorials.  Shortly afterwords, I received a nice note by email from Kent Manning, a technology coordinator from Belleville, Ontatio, Canada.  He also was not able to be at the conference and was “attending” the keynote virtually.  We have similar jobs.  He wondered if my tutorials were on iTunes (they weren’t) and told me an easy way to get them there.  We are now Twitter friends and I’ve invited him to try out Plurk.  Plurk is a Twitter-like network that allows more conversations.  Try it out if you have not yet. Steve Dembo likes it; if Steve likes it, you probably will, too.  Anyhow, this is an example of how a PLN can help you learn and grow professionally.

Later, a friend (Krista Hanna), saw that I was online and had Skype open.  She called me and I was able to listen in on two of the sessions she attended.  Awesome.  Krista and I were to co-present this morning.  Since Skype worked so well, we planned that if I was feeling up to it, that she would Skype me in for the presentation.  I don’t look too great, so I did not turn on my webcam; I didn’t want to horrify the participants and have them run out of the room!  However, I was able to pipe in with comments during the presentation. VERY COOL.

I’m also taking the opportunity to reflect on the conference, something that is difficult to do when you are rushing from place to place and networking with others.  I have some ideas for the conference planners on ways to make MACUL 2010 even better!

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4 Responses to “Attending MACUL from Afar”

  1.   Krista Hanna Says:

    Pam, the people who attended this morning also thought is was terrific that we were actually USING some of the technology we were sharing with them in the presentation. As much as I was bummed that you weren’t here and “live” in-person, the techno aspect of what we were able to accomplish was AMAZING!

  2.   Annelise Says:

    You are certainly right about being able to take the time to reflect on the conference from afar. While at the conference, or any conference, you are so busy running from one session to another and networking with others. I was really bummed this morning when I woke up early and knew I was too sick to be making day two of the conference. I got several hours more of much needed sleep and am now trying to catch up on the conference through twitter and blogs. I’m sure getting some reflection time sitting here from home. I know that I’m still missing out but I also know that so much is coming at you during the conference that most people (myself included) don’t set aside the time for reflection. I’m going to chalk today up to being just that. A day to reflect and recover.

  3.   Kent Manning Says:

    Hello Pam and all from Small Town Ontario..

    #macul yes!

    Thank you for your thoughts about attending from Afar. I’d not be “vitually attending” if it wasn’t for friend and fellow Ed-Tech guy @dougpete who attended f2f yesterday and alerted his twitter followers that he was in Alan November’s session.

    It is an amazing world when current social networking tools can allow us to not only visit from afar but add to the discussion.

    I look forward to the continued conversation.

    Thank you.

    @kentmanning

  4.   Kevin Clark Says:

    Missed seeing you, Pam. Thanks for hanging out in Twitter and the live blogs. From where I was sitting, I wouldn’t have know if you were “here” or not.

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