Terence Armentano - eResume & ePortfolio

Experienced e-Learning Specialist, Entrepreneur, Futurist
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Bowling Green State University goes Web 2.0

Terence Armentano | March 26, 2008 | 9:33 am

As any reader of my blog knows, I have written about the important role I believe web 2.0 will play in academia. (See Web 2.0 and Higher Ed, Blogging in academia, Blogging Academia, and the Stanford Blog Directory,and University 2.0)

Not being one to just sit idly by and talk about the important role web 2.0 will play in academia, I decided to put words into actions and design a weblog and podcast system for Bowling Green State University. I built the system on the technological framework of WordressMU with many personal customizations. The system is in perpetual Beta so we can test new features, collect feedback, and continue to refine it. There are so many creative ways to use this system (See our About page for some examples). Below are several real life examples of ways the BGSU community is already stretching the creative boundaries of the system:

One English instructor at BGSU, Amanda McGuire Rzicznek, is using the system to podcast her lectures and blog her writing tips, news, and announcements (see her English 111 blog & English 112 blog). She is also having each of her students create their own weblogs on the system, which they use for reflective writing, collaboration, and feedback (see one of her students blogs here).

My office, IDEAL, is using our IDEAL @BGSU weblog as a web 2.0 portal to communicate our services to the university and to display our distance learning Resources, Announcements, Newsletters, Podcast, and Photo Gallery. The nice thing about our weblog page is that it is very dynamic and enables email subscription, RSS feeds, Podcast Feeds, and lots of other things the tech junkies of the world love). Plus anyone with admin rights can update the site without having to know any HTML. One of our instructional designers, Michael Kudela, is a huge flickr fan so we can even manage our photo gallery from his personal Flickr account. Now that is cool!

Did I mention that I built this system using all open source tools? Yeah. That’s pretty cool too.

Sports and Recreation is a huge part of the BGSU culture. If you ever go to an intramural flag football game at BGSU, you would think you were at the superbowl. Well, the sports and rec people at the university saw the potential of a community blog for their users and contacted me to help them get it set up. It required a little more programming and customizing, but in the end they will have a community of sports rec bloggers. I can see the bragging rights go up even more with this outlet. Their community weblog will be launching soon so I look forward to seeing how that community uses the web 2.0 environment. Check out the Rec Sports Wire to see what they are doing.

The MBA department is using their weblog to give current students the opportunity to share the ins and outs of their daily life so if you’ve ever wanted to know what’s it like to be a graduate student, you’ll want to check it out at - BGSU MBA

The benefits of blogs and podcasts are far reaching and are transforming the way people interact and learn from each other. BGSU faculty, staff, and students can all reap benefits from blogging and podcasting.

Thanks to Connie Molnar and Dr. Bruce Edwards, my bosses at IDEAL, for allowing me to dream, innovate, and design this system for BGSU. They are both great leaders and visionaries at BGSU.

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emerging technology, university 2.0, higher education, web 2.0, blog, educational technology
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PB Wiki steps up their game. Will Google Sites respond?

Terence Armentano | March 14, 2008 | 7:23 am

It appears that PB Wiki is fiercely competing with the Goliath that is Google and their new product, Google Sites. I really enjoy both products and have implemented them both in different ways at BGSU. We have been using the PB Wiki in our training programs and Google Sites for our own project management organization. I think wiki’s are awesome collaboration tools. I wrote a post a few days ago about ways I thought Google Sites could improve their system and it appears that PB Wiki already has pretty much all of the feature I said should be integrated into Google Sites, so I hope the competition drives excellence for both companies. Sometimes I wonder if Google is wishing they would have bought PB Wiki instead of JotSpot, but I guess they still could if they wanted to. I mean it is Google! The reason I like what Google Sites is doing is because it has the the patented ease of use guarantee and it integrates well with other Google apps we use. I am typically a fan of their web apps and they usually integrate search technology like no one else. However, PB Wiki is looking a bit more sophisticated at this point and I hope the Google Sites development team is working hard to match their features very soon. For example, the new PB Wiki provides page level access, page folders and folder access controls, as well as a new sleek interface. Check out this video of the new PB Wiki 2.0 and let us know what you think.

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pb wiki, emerging technology, web 2.0, google, educational technology
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I made the Alltop list for Education sites on the Internet

Terence Armentano | March 12, 2008 | 12:38 pm

It appears Guy Kawasakai left me a comment letting me know that I made the Alltop list for Education sites on the Internet! Yes! Click the image above to see a screen capture of my location on Alltop. You will notice the US News Education site right above me and the BBC Education news site a few rows over. If this were a digital magazine stand, I would be right there with the big boys. Yet another reason to digg Alltop. Check me out here http://education.alltop.com/

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university 2.0, emerging technology, web 2.0, educational technology
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Alltop - A table of contents for the Internet

Terence Armentano | | 10:11 am

Alltop is a very simple and cool site that can help people find what is currently popular, by topic, on the Internet. Their slogan is “we’ve got all the top stories covered all the time.” The page updates every 10 minutes as well. This is a good site for people that won’t build their own custom homepage on Netvibes, MyYahoo, or iGoogle and those that do have custom homepages may find some good new sites to add to their homepage. I personally think it is neat to see what all of the top global news articles are. Gone are the days of having to just rely on 1 newspaper or newsprogram to stay informed. This opens the doors up to deeper acountability in reporting the news. For example, one could quickly compare Al Jazeera Headlines to CNN Headlines side by side and see how each venue spins various stories. This would be a great way for students to hone their critical thinking skills by comparing and contrasting the various outlets of information. What makes one source more credible than the other? Plus, it would be cool to see TerenceOnline added to their topic page on Education. I would like to see Alltop add a search engine to their site. Categories + Search Engine = More access to information.

Here is what the site says about itself:

“We help you explore your passions by collecting stories from “all the top” sites on the web. We’ve grouped these collections — ”aggregations” — into individual Alltop sites based on topics such as environment, photography, science, celebrity gossip, fashion, gaming, sports, politics, automobiles, and Macintosh. At each Alltop site, we display the latest five stories from thirty or more sites on a single page — we call this “single-page aggregation.”

You can think of an Alltop site as a “dashboard,” “table of contents,” or even a “digital magazine rack” of the Internet. To be clear, Alltop sites are starting points — they are not destinations per se. The bottom line is that we are trying to enhance your online reading by both displaying stories from the sites that you’re already visiting and helping you discover sites that you didn’t know existed. In this way, our goal is the “cessation of Internet stagnation.”

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learning resources, university 2.0, rss, emerging technology, research, web 2.0
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Google Sites - Some quick thoughts to improve the system

Terence Armentano | March 11, 2008 | 3:47 pm

I am liking Google Sites as a team intranet wiki collaboration tool. However, there are a couple of things that need improvement and I’m hoping people from google read this.

  1. First and most importantly, they need to make the page management system better!
    • For example, they need to allow people to create folders to organize the pages we create, instead of just a huge list of created pages. I know google is anti creating folders and I am fine with that since I too prefer the search engine for organizing and retrieving, but they need to provide a search engine to find the page I am looking for to link to.
  2. They need to enable each user the ability to add a list widget to a page so that people can add co-workers’ lists to their page and have an updated list of everyone’s projects on their page. In addition, it would be nice to have the ability for individual lists to export their lists to 1 Master Team list. Therefore, everyone could keep their individual project lists on their pages and it exports to a team list. It would also be neat if it could take list information and generate a graphical diagram.
  3. The Google Sites Start Page is pretty weak. It would be cool to have all of my RSS Feeds there and i’d like to be able to upload them in one fell swoop with an OPML file. It should be something more like Netvibes or at least iGoogle.
  4. Why not incorporate email with Google Sites?
  5. More page privacy options.

Though I have these requests, it is a very cool product and I look forward to see how they improve it over time. More thoughts coming soon as I discover more about the inner workings of the system…

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google sites, wiki, web 2.0, google
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Google Sites - Putting it to the test

Terence Armentano | March 10, 2008 | 3:17 pm

I was eagerly awaiting to see what Google would do with the wiki software company, Jot Spot, that they acquired quite some time ago. From the acquisition, Google has created Google sites, which is this hybrid wiki/project management application that is really quite interesting and easy to use. I must admit that I am a huge fan of using technology effectively to make things better. However, the only way to truly know it’s deep value is to put it to the test in a real life team and project management situation. So lets do it. I just designed and am now beginning to implement a google site for my team to use. My logic in developing my team’s Google site was to give each team member their own wiki page to help them manage their own projects, invite collaboration, and track their own status, while simultaneously sharing with the group what they are doing. In addition, everyone has a file upload page, which is linked to their wiki page. I’ve also created a dashboard (this is a custom template provided by Google sites), an ongoing projects page (custom template to easily add and track projects), an Announcements page to communicate with the team (also a custom template), and a Team Wiki page. The beauty of the system is that it is incredibly easy to use and enables the team to be productive on their projects while giving managers a snapshot of our workloads. Most project management software systems are clunky and not this easy to use, so I give it props for ease of use. The question is how effective this method will be for team collaboration and project management. It seems that it is off to a good start, and I’ll report back in about a month on my thoughts of the system.

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wiki, web 2.0, google
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The World Wide Telescope and Google Sky - innovative technology for the innovative teacher

Terence Armentano | March 3, 2008 | 10:00 am


Yes, images in a textbook of the beautiful heavens are a nice way to teach about our universe, but give me a comprehensive view of the universe with real satellite images any day. Science teachers of the world; you gotta see Microsoft’s new WorldWide Telescope - a technology that combines feeds from satellites and telescopes all over the world and the heavens, and weaves them together holistically to build a comprehensive view of our universe. The TED video treats the WorldWide Telescope like something completely new, however, it appears to be very similar to the already available Google Sky, which enables you to view images of distant galaxies and nebulae from the Hubble Space Telescope, learn about the movement of the planets and the lifecycle of the stars. The advantage of Google Sky is that it works on any operating system whereas I am not sure that will be the case with Microsoft’s WorldWide Telescope. Either way, I look forward to finding out which one I like better and teachers around the world should do the same.

These innovative technologies will really give students a unique, never before seen perspective, which may inspire some excited discussion in the classroom and even ignite some new motivation in students to look at studying science and technology. Again, we see the online world continue to contribute innovation to education. Just another aspect of University 2.0.

The World Wide Telescope Video

Google Sky Video

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YouTube, university 2.0, harvard, emerging technology, teaching tool, web 2.0, educational technology
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About Me


Terence Armentano is the Assistant Director of Online Education at Bowling Green State University (BGSU). Terence has substantial experience in instructional design, web design, and multimedia development. Directly responsible for the design and development of BGSU’s 3 week Online Faculty Training Program, eLearning Newsletter, Weblog and Podcast System, and the Non-Credit Online Training Course Learning Management System. Follow Terence’s passions and interests for education at his internationally read weblog (http://terenceonline.blogspot.com), which is dedicated to the exploration, application, and sharing of information about education, emerging technology, and web 2.0. Terence is also the owner of Discoverly, Ltd, an elearning consulting and design company.

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Quote

“Terence is a wonderful multi-tasker, problem-solver and collaborator. I’ve asked him to assist me on many projects and even if he’s busy, he makes time for me and not only gets it done quickly, but exceeds my expectations as well. I always look forward to working with Terence and highly reccomend his services to anyone.” March 6, 2008

Tom Siebenaler, Assistant Director, COT Co-op, Bowling Green State University worked with Terence at Bowling Green State University
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