Education is a journey - and with technology it's a journey that constantly weaves and turns ... hence anything I say is true at the time I say it.
Friday, December 18, 2009
Chartle - Great online charts
Here is an example of the type of chart that Hans Rosling has made famous in his analysis of UN data on his awesome gapminder web site. This simple data set looks at 4 sets of English and Maths scores over 4 years for 3students. The dynamic way the data points move make this type of visualisation quite useful.
I'm thinking of using this to do my annual analysis of achievement data for students over time - so hope that I can find an easy Excel import option. Looks to be a useful tool.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
K-12 Online Conference 2009 Keynote
Firstly, she makes the now well made connect that many of us (western teachers) live and breathe what we know. Our view of the world is heavily influenced by what I refer to as our own KER (knowledge, expertise and reputation). She points out that her eyes have been widened to the richness in other cultures only through the contact that her travels have permitted. (So I can see the connection coming that I'm sure she will make between the power of technology to connect students globally and the growing desire to make these connections by both students an teachers.)
Once Kim gets past the introduction she hits on a number of the issues - those of mobility, customisation, 24/7 always on, tradition and new co-existing, just in time delivery, flexibility, collaboration, adaptability. She uses the backdrop of everyday life in Asia to good effect to make her points. The metaphor of everyday life and how education should be part of this and not stand apart from it.
At one stage she alludes to iTuneU and other online course availability to allow students (and teachers) to develop personal learning networks. I've often referred over recent years to the "long tail" economics approach to K12 education - I firmly believe that Chris Anderson's concepts of long tail economics can and will apply to K12 education - and quite likely in the realm of private education first. (Memo to self - finish listening to Chris's book "Free" - there is a powerful message for education in the first message that Chris delivers about the Monty Python experience of "free" with their Youtube channel!)
OK - lots more to pick up I suspect in the rest of Kim's presentation. But for now - off to class!
Friday, November 27, 2009
Sir Ken Robinson extravaganza
1. Trailer for Lord Putnam's new film
2. Speech to Hammer Museum at UCLA about his book "The Element" in Jan 2009 (1 hr 20 mins)
3. Q TV Interview about The Element (17 mins)
4. 6 minutes of student interview at the London International Music Show 2008.
(If you last to the end, the girls have their own reflections on what SKR had to say, and about their "education" and music. [There are no wrong ways ...]
Thanks for sharing your ideas, Sir Ken.
New Streaming Video for Schools
This site looks to deliver what I have been looking for for a long time - an organised way of getting access to some of the rich content on the likes of Youtube and Google Video without all the junk. I'll quote from the press release in the ISTE email ...
WIKIPEDIA CO-FOUNDER DESIGNS WIKI-STYLE DIRECTORY OF EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS FOR CHILDREN
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (Nov. 12, 2009) - Dr. Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia, has launched a new website designed to gather and organize educational videos for students ages 3 to 18.
The site, www.watchknow.org
"Think of it as YouTube meets Wikipedia, filtering out everything but quality educational videos," says Dr. Sanger. "WatchKnow.org links together content from traditional sites, and also allows users of the site to improve the organization of the video categories, which makes finding the video you need much easier."
The site, which features videos from National Geographic, YouTube and Google Videos among others, took more than 18 months to develop and has been endorsed by educators from schools including Harvard, Stanford, Brigham Young and more. WatchKnow.org is designed to complement and enhance the traditional learning experience for students as they study concepts that are traditionally hard to learn."
So, I've created my account (free of course) and I look forward to both helping students and teachers explore it in the new year, and contributing to the community as well. WatchKnow.org is funded by the Community Foundation of Northwest Mississippi (CFNM), which has set the goal of offering more than 50,000 videos on the site by the end of 2010. The site offers tips for video searching, separate pages for students, parents and teachers, and a guide for contributors.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
What are your best applications for use with students?
Edmodo - terrific tool for managing a class in a "school sponsored bebo" (as one of my students called it) format. Nice functionality for handling assignments, polls etc. Students love it.
Voicethread - terrific tool for sharing all kinds of data from video to still images, with comments via a wide range of options.
Wikispaces - very easy way to get a web site up and running -the free ones for educators are a real bonus.
Google Apps - while very bandwidth hungry these tools offer great flexibility for collaboration and communication. Google Sites is the best aspect of this suite in my view.
Google Sketchup - what a fantastic 3D visualiser this is. A real favourite.
Delicious and Diigo - great tools - work well together.
iTunes - the best way of organising audio and video
Youtube - there is so much quality and education specific stuff that it is worth putting up all the rest of the rubbish that people want to share.
TED - you can always find really cool stuff here for use with students and staff.
Jing - screencasts and captures
Prezi - very cool presentation tool - makes an audience stay awake!
Aviary - awesome suite of online editing tools - students love Phoenix (photo editing) and Myna (Sony Acid lookalike) most.
Livebrush - very cool graphics program.
Google Earth - you can do so much with this great tool - always a favourite.
Pulse Smartpen from Livescribe - not a software tool per se, but a combo of a pen, microphone, camera and software. If only it had OCR ...
Friday, November 20, 2009
K12 Online Conference - not long now!
The rough schedule for what is on and which weeks is here http://k12onlineconference.org/?p=389 and you can watch the stuff either on the site here http://k12onlineconference.org/ or on the ning site here http://k12online.ning.com// [If you are not a ning member, sign up. This social networking tool is used by vast numbers of educators and students world wide – it is like facebook or bebo, only seems to have found a niche with educators].
If you want, you can gain a teaser of previous years k12 conferences – another power of the web is that the 2006, 2007 and 2008 conferences are still available here http://k12onlineconference.org// - just use the navigation on the rhs
Note that many/most of these presentations are available as a download – I generally download the iPod version and watch them on either my Ipod or iTunes on my laptop.
You gotta love the web – so many options...
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Awesome 3D Visualisation Tools
You can "pull apart" the model and look at how it was assembled in the first place.
DeepView is certainly a fantastic bit of code, very easy to use and affords some very cool functionality for students and teachers - in fact anyone wanting to visualise in 3D.
Seriously cool. Try it. Soon.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Why Social Networks Are Important
A colleague asked me recently for a reason she should sign up for a social networking site. The best response I could mutter was something along the lines "Well, this is why I use ...." and proceed to try and show how I find some social networks better (for me) than others.
Now, I've always liked the CommonCraft videos - they do a great job of explaining web related issues, and thanks to following CommonCraft on Twitter, I found this today - a great explanation of just why I find value in social networks. Wish I'd seen it before I tried to stumble over my explanation!
So, thanks Sacha!
TED India Live - See Hans Rosling and Pranav Mistry live!!!
Dear TEDsters -
We're thrilled to announce that Day 1 of TEDIndia and the closing session on Day 3 will be webcast live, to the world, for free. The webcast is hosted by the Times of India, TEDIndia's online media partner.
On Thursday, the first day of the webcast, you can watch at ted.indiatimes.com (note that this page is not yet live).
Read more about the TEDIndia speaker program.
Webcast schedule (all times are India Standard Time , GMT+5:30):
Thursday, November 5
Session 1: Fast Forward -- 11am-12:45pm
Session 2: Not Business as Usual -- 2:15pm-4pm
Session 3: Wonder. Wonders. -- 4:45pm-6:30pm
Saturday, November 7
Session 9: Within You, Without You -- 11am-12:45pm
Want to watch the stream on your television screen? Download instructions for connecting your television to a Mac or a PC.
So, why am I excited about this? Two immediate reasons -the first is:
Hans Rosling is presenting in the first session. I have mentioned his awesome GapMinder web site and talks before. The opportunity to see him present his latest live just seems like any mathematicians or social scientists dream come true. His session is set to go at 11am Thursday 5th in Mysore India - so by my calculation this is 6.30pm Thursday evening NZ time.
The second is Pranav Mistry - Pranav is a student at MIT and is the brains behind a project that goes under the name Sixth Sense. If you haven't seen Pattie Mae's TED presentation earlier in the year then make sure you have a look at the video below - it'll give you an insight into the work.
Pranav's session is due for kick off around 12.15am Friday morning - so might be a bit of an ask - but if you're a night owl ...
And there are a host of other peple delivering inspirational talks too - you never know - you just might find something useful.
You can watch these at this site http://ted.indiatimes.com/ - it is not live yet.
Enjoy!
Saturday, October 31, 2009
The Power of Self Directed Learning - a Passion for Writing by Young Authors
"I have written a book and Georgie is starting one (Sian is our helpful editor) so we all came up with an idea to make a website about writing and reading since we realised that not many people have set up sites where young writers can join and read other peoples work and put up their own. We added a Review page because we want people to be inspired by famous authors. We want everyone to be inspired by the heap of work people have put up. Hence the name Exploded..
The website was created out of pure self interest. We also want students to gain knowledge about writing paragraphs correctly, hence the reason we will be adding a Paragraphs page where people can see how to write a paragraph using the structure TEE."
(The emphasis is mine)
Every so often you get to see something that makes this teaching lark just all the more worthwhile. These instances are always student centred. This is the story of one of those.
I received an email from a Year 9 student, sent during her Art class. It read
"Hello,
Mrs xxxx saw our website that we put together and wanted you to have a look at it.
The site is targeted at young writers and readers and it includes forums on different topics to do with books and movies, tips for young writers and ways to gather ideas. It also has a book of the day page, reviews and advice from famous authors. And lots more!
Its up and running, with 34 members on last count. Many of them are Dio girls, but there are 3 from Sydney and many others from around Auckland.
Here is the link: www.explodedbookshelf.webs.com
We created our site using Webs.com- which was quite simple and easy to use- though perhaps limited in options for the site.
We hope you enjoy browsing."
So - I went and had a look - WOW! I continue to be blown away with what students can do!!!
And immediately I had a number of questions: So I emailed back the student with a few questions - have a read and enjoy the students' responses!
1. Why did you create the site in the first place? Was it part of an English project? Or an ICT project?
"Thank you for emailing us back! We have discussed and read your questions and have some answers!
1. I have written a book and Georgie is starting one (Sian is our helpful editor) so we all came up with an idea to make a website about writing and reading since we realised that not many people have set up sites where young writers can join and read other peoples work and put up their own. We added a Review page because we want people to be inspired by famous authors. We want everyone to be inspired by the heap of work people have put up. Hence the name Exploded..
The website was created out of pure self interest. We also want students to gain knowledge about writing paragraphs correctly, hence the reason we will be adding a Paragraphs page where people can see how to write a paragraph using the structure TEE.
2. How long did it take you to do it?
Georgie and I came up with the idea during art whilst talking about our novels. Sian agreed and gave us some tips. It was just an idea until that night I figured might as well give it a go. I found Webs.com over the internet and then created the website in less than 90 minutes. But considering I made a couple of mistakes and had to restart probably about 2 hours. However ExplodedBookshelf.com is continuously growing.
3. Why did you choose webs.com as your hosting site? What other ones are you aware of?
I am not sure of many hosting sites but I did search up ‘make a website’ over Google and Web’s looked like the best one. From the easiness to the creativeness. I thought it would help us make something amazing.
4. Did you enjoy it?
Yes! ExplodedBookshelf has become one of our biggest hobbies, you could call it an obsession! It’s lots of fun and we get the opportunity to meet other young writers. Sian is our editor and her job apart from the site is to help go over Georgie and my writing to spot mistakes that we have missed
5. What are your plans for ongoing development of the site?
We check it every-day! Updates and new discussions get submitted at least once a day and we plan to keep developing it in the future – to take it from a amateur website to a full-thrown international site!
Thank you so much! This is extremely appreciated by us all.
If only they knew how much it is me that appreciates what they have done.
Now - there are some key points this little episode has highlighted - wonder if you picked them up?
1. most of the discussion around this little venture happened in art class. Not english, not ICT. Art. Highlights yet again to me the folly of a secondary timetable - you simply can't dictate what people will think by ringing the period bell.
2. Created out of pure self interest. So, not a teacher in sight? How much powerful learning has been going on during this little exercise? Plenty.
3. One of their biggest hobbies. An obsession! I wonder how many students say their regular learning is an obsession! They yearn to see the site used and built on.
4. No experience building web sites of any kind before. Shows how great some of the free tools are these days.
5. If the web wasn't around - just where would these girls go to try and realise their passion?
I suspect that if they persist, they may find some issues around managing their site, moderating comments and dealing with unwanted members - but I hope they get some traction on what they are aiming for.
The joy of writing. By young people who have a passion, and want to share it. Visit their site and give them some encouragement. They deserve it.
http://www.explodedbookshelf.webs.com/
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Yet another cool tool - Livebrush
Now, I'm no graphics person, at least from a design perspective, but what captured my attention from the Livebrush site was a couple of their sample files. I know I've always wanted to have an idea of how to so some of this stuff - just lack the motivation to actually do it! Once I showed them to the students, well, in less than 30 minutes there were plenty of "ooohs" and "aaahhhs".
But there were also the "how do I do this?", "Where are the colours?" and the usual response from me "no idea" (which is true), "but you find out and create a short Jing cast to let others know." Within minutes huge learning of several new tools (Jing is still new to this class, as is the notion of an e-portfolio which they are creating using Google Sites).
The power of digital technologies to ignite learning experiences with students, and the occasional old teacher too!, never ceases to amaze me. We are so lucky to live and work in education in these times - we owe it to students to keep pushing the boundaries.
So thanks, Livebrush. Keep up the great work.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Golf, Sunshine and no kids!
Check out my Flickr set for Natadola.
Prezi version of 2009 Horizon Report
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Data Visualisation, Authentic Learning, and Why the Web is so Cool.
Hans' first TED talk was inspiring - as is his second.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Interactive Whiteboard Conference Day 2
Chris Betcher has been one of the stars of this conference. Every show has its star presenters, but this one has had one. I've seen four of his sessions - all delivered with enthusiams and clear passion for what he does. His session today looking at putting the interactive into the IWB has reinforced my view that in the hands of a good teacher, these boards are a "table stake" for the classroom. The interactivity doesn't really come from the board, it comes from what the board lets you do in the class. So, my task now is to re-energise our push with these technologies and light those fires again!
It's been a few years since I played with Turning Points v-pad software for student polling in Powerpoint, so I was pleased to catchup with KeePad out of Oz and look at how this has developed. Still expensive for what it is, so I think I'll head to the likes of PollAnywhere to get a look at how this might deliver some formative data. It did however give me the chance to have a play with the eBeam system - one of those devices claiming to give IWB functionality on a standard whiteboard. After having a play, I think that if you are strapped for cash, then maybe these are an option - but my preference is definitely for a "board". And while on this - I remain quite impressed with the Promethean ActivBoard. Kind of think that maybe they are just a little better than SmartBoards?? Just.
Having had my main reason for attending the conference satisfied, I spent the rest of the day in sessions looking at software options to make classroom life that much more fun. That's always a great part of these types of conferences - you always find some new stuff. There are a few that I thought looked just fantastic - I'll save them for another blog or two.
Now - how to bring some of this conference, plus a whole lot of other stuff I've accumulated over recent months, to our staff? I'm looking forward to it!!
Friday, September 25, 2009
Interactive Whiteboard Conference Day 1
But - to the conference - opened by Steven Jury, a senior executive (OK the vice chairman) of Promethean. His presentation was generic and didn't say much that was new - did quote some research from Robert Marzano and published on the BECTA site that shows some significant gains in student learning with IWB use. You can check out the research here on the Whiteboard Blog.
What else did I get from the keynote? One thing was that my Pulse SmartPen caught the entire presentation perfectly in the school hall - without using the special headphones. That pen is just awesome! So, not only do I have the notes I took, but the whole audio to review. What I need now is the promised version of the Pulse software that will convert my scribble to text - that will be a challenge for the OCR/AI software they need to decipher my scawl!!
Chris Betcher (from PLC in Sydney) gave a useful session on possible futures. Nothing to do with whiteboards per se, but everything to do with just how fast stuff develops. Cool 3D book stuff and augmented reality - must check out the site he used.
Robyn Garden from the Invercargill area (where the local trust put IWBs in every class in every school) gave a very practical session which, to be brutally honest, restored my faith in this type of technology. Thanks Robyn for the great reminder that you can provide ICT skills and IWB skills to teachers that don't have them - but to give great teaching skills to someone who doesn't have them is much harder.
There was much more to take in - not all was great, but much was good. Of course you meet new people and old friends too.
But I went along to this conference with a big question. Are these IWBs little more than an excuse to leave the teacher in control of the classroom? I came away from the keynote and the session with Robyn with the belief restored that in reality, a large interactive touch board of some type is the way of the future. So yes, can't wait for tomorrow and more learning.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Aviary - my find of the year?
...and this is the one that caught my eye from their new audio tool, Myna
I'll be using these tools with my Year 8 Digital Technologies class in Term 4 - that'll give me an idea of how they perform over a wireless network and how 12 and 13 year olds respond to this software.
But if it works half as well as the demo's suggest - we'll have a ball. It looks a cool tool.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Resizing a Jing cast to fit your blog
Monday, August 24, 2009
Sir Ken Robinson Interview on TED
But what I found today was that Sir Ken, again via the TED website, has answered a number of questions about his talk and these questions and his answers are posted on the TED site here.
So, if you are not a Ken Robinson fan, or have never heard of him, and you are a teacher - then after watching his talk and reading the interview, I would be surprised if you weren't motivated to change. And soon!
Thursday, August 20, 2009
So, what is fundamental?
People laughed at Seymour Papert in the sixties when he talked about children using computers as instruments for learning and for enhancing creativity. The idea of an inexpensive personal computer was then science fiction. But Papert was conducting serious research in his capacity as a professor at MIT. This research led to many firsts. It was in his laboratory that children first had the chance to use the computer to write and to make graphics. Today Papert is considered the world's foremost expert on how technology can provide new ways to learn. He has carried out educational projects on every continent, some of them in remote villages in developing countries. He is a participant in developing the most influential cutting-edge opportunities for children to participate in the digital world.
In 2004, Papert addressed a conference in Sydney where he made the observation that too little time was spent in schools discussing “what constitutes fundamental?” By this he meant what is important to include in the learning opportunities that students are exposed to. He made reference to a key point – most of what is included in current curricula is the result of what can be written down in books. How relevant is this as we move at exponential pace into a world where writing on paper is not the main means of communication? Blogs, wikis, podcasts, email, social networking websites, instant messenger are all new modes of communication that no one had heard of a few years ago, let alone used. Today, sites like MySpace claim to be signing up 250,000 new users every day, and have over 200 million registered users. In addition to this, they claim that the average time spent by a user once logged in is around two hours.
A leading group of computer research scientists met in Washington, USA, in October 2006, to share their views on where they saw developments in technology moving over the coming years. In a summary of their meeting published in the New York Times and titled “Computing 2016: What Won’t be Possible”, the scientists shared their common view that the changes to science, the economy and to society that have occurred over recent years are minor compared to what will happen in the ten years ahead. Developments will impact on all areas in a far wider and deeper way than they have, and there will be significant social policy that needs to be addressed as a result of this.
This month (November), 250 delegates from 48 countries met at a conference held at Philadelphia's School of the Future, where all students have laptops, there are few books or pens, and teaching is done in multidisciplinary projects in which academic skills develop through work on real-world problems. "Education for most people doesn't promote creativity," said Sir Ken Robinson, a British educational consultant. "It actually stifles it." He cited research showing that 98% of children as young as 3 – 5 years showed divergent thinking, and that this dropped to only 10% of 15 year olds and 2% of 25 year olds.
There is a constant theme in each of these stories. Technology, in particular the personal computer, has brought unprecedented power to the user. Information is no longer the domain of books. The power of the press is no longer with the press. For the first time in history the access to information, and the ability to create and publish information, is with the individual.
We are at one of those points in history where fundamental change is taking place. Not just incremental change, but fundamental change.
Research from the USA (PEW Internet Group, 2005) is starting to show the preference for 8 – 18 year olds to get the information they want from an online source rather than in the traditional classroom or from their parents. They get information in a manner and a time frame that suits them. One reason for this is that irrespective of whether the learning style is visual, auditory or kinaesthetic, the individual can find something on the web to suit them. Technology is unique in this way – targeted carefully, it can reach any learner.
The implications and challenges to education are vast. None more so than at the “high stakes” testing we still engage in at the senior end of the school. We continue to assess knowledge in an unnatural time frame using anachronistic tools. The International Baccalaureate (IB) is currently trialing electronic assessment, and this is at least a step in the right direction. Internal (moderated) assessment is another step in the right direction, and both NCEA and IB have significant components of this. [ASIDE: it is not uncommon to hear questions regarding the use of technology in learning when assessment of learning is still carried out with pen and paper. There is no research that supports the premise that student achievement is diminished as the result of significant use of technology in the learning process. There is a growing body of research that supports the use of technology as an element in the improvement of student achievement in standardised testing. The UK is well ahead of New Zealand in the deployment of technology in state schools, and over recent years they have experienced significant increases in student achievement in all subject areas at GCSE and A level, despite their examination processes being even more formal than NZ.]
The New Zealand Digital Strategy states that “New Zealand will be a world leader in using information and technology to realise its economic, social, environmental and cultural goals, to the benefit of all its people.” (Ministry of Economic Development, 2005)
If we are to deliver on this objective at a macro (or micro) level, we have no choice but to deploy tools that will enable the student to successfully participate.
Creativity is a highly valued characteristic that employers seek in future employees according to a 2003 Victoria University study. Searches of the research literature into the use of technology in education frequently highlight creativity, problem solving and collaboration as key outcomes from successful use.
If Sir Ken Robinson is correct, if Seymour Papert is correct, and if the collective intellect of the top IT research scientists is correct then we have a duty to be pushing the boundaries of the “education system”.
We are at a place in time where change is occurring in an exponential manner. Change, by its very nature, threatens the status quo.
We must continue to ask ourselves “just what does constitute fundamental?”
It is a question that we will ask a lot more over the coming years. We are at the most exciting time in history.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
A weekend away with 12 year olds - a learning experience
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Great Resources for Educators II
Saturday, August 1, 2009
DimDim for Videoconferencing
At first glance, DimDim looks just what I am looking for. It's free for up to 20 users, and has plenty of low cost alternatives if you need to go further than that. It is entirely web-based, so no downloads and the like. Last night I shared a 12 page PDF file with my test buddy, and even without using a headset and microphone, communication was OK - though I'll use them next time.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Next Horizon Project starts tomorrow
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Google Apps, Video, Sites, Reader and Gears
One of our motivations for setting up our own Google Apps domain rather than allow individual students to set up their own Google Docs account was to make life easier for students and teachers in collaboration and communicating. From this basis, Google Apps is quite good. It allows simple collaboration and sharing of documents well. The ability to upload Office documents is good. Unfortunately it doesn't allow sharing of Acrobat documents in an easy way, but this too can be done if you are prepared to spend the time typing individual email addresses. To date, haven't found a solution to publishing in foreign languages - haven't looked that hard, but if anyone reads this and has a solution, then please let me know!
Perhaps two of the unheralded features of Google Apps are Google Sites and Google Video. Google Sites gives you an excellent tool for building web sites, similar in some ways to the likes of Wikispaces. It integrates well with YouTube (as you'd expect) and it is pretty simple for students to build a nice looking site without much help. Google Video as part of the Apps suite allows you to upload video of any length (up to 1 GB), and this gets over YouTube's 10 minute limit and Fliggo's 25 minute limit. We video our outside experts so that students and staff can look back at the presentations for information they may have missed - and several of the presentations are 45 minutes in length, so not having to break them up into 2 sections is a real bonus.
But using Google Apps has not been without difficulty. We have a pretty strong bandwidth available (supposedly), but at times with as few as 30 students connecting simultaneously to our Google Apps site, the response has been not much short of atrocious. As anyone teaching will know, letting kids loose on laptops when they have to wait minutes for relatively short documents to load is asking for trouble. Further investigation has involved our ISP and at present we still await the results of a number of trials which from where I sit seem to indicate that our bandwidth within NZ and across to Australia is OK, but we are missing out badly with traffic from the USA and Europe. We will certainly need to get more response to the desktop than that we have had till now if we are to seriously consider Google's cloud offering.
As an RSS aggregator or subscription reader, Google Reader is my tool of preference for a couple of reasons. Firstly it has a gadget for iGoogle making it easy to see what is new, and secondly, the ability to take it offline via Google Gears makes it easy to catch up on reading when away from a network - like we were last week when away on holiday in the motorhome. In the middle of nowhere (well, Waingaro Springs to be exact) there is no cell coverage and no wireless, but I was able to deal to 50 or so blogs that I was behind in once the kids were asleep.
Google Gears also makes it easy to read documents from some of the applications in Google Apps - most notably word processor docs. So, if you have student work shared in this manner you can read and comment back offline, and once reconnected, can synchronise back to the cloud and everything is as it should be. But Gears needs to offer more functionality in relation to creating new documents and editing existing ones, plus it would be good to have Blogger compatibility built in.
So, at this stage in our trials, its a big thumbs up for Google Sites and Reader, limited thumbs up for Google Docs and Gears. If we can resolve our bandwidth issues and Gears allows a little more interaction, then Docs will be useful contender for replacement of Office applications for students.