"Web 2.0" is a term used to describe an apparent second generation of the World Wide Web that emphasizes collaboration and sharing of knowledge and content among users. With the growing popularity of Web 2.0, there has been a burgeoning interest in education. Tools such as blogs, wikis, RSS, social networking sites, tag-based folksonomies, and peer-to-peer (P2P) media sharing applications have gained a prominence in teaching and learning. With Wired for Learning: An Educators Guide to Web 2.0 there is tremendous potential for addressing the needs student, teachers, researchers, and practitioners to enhance the teaching and learning experiences through customization, personalization, and rich opportunities for networking and collaboration.
The purpose of this text is to clarify and present applications and practices of Web 2.0 for teaching and learning to meet the educational challenges of students in diverse learning setting. This text will bring teachers and university education into a bold new reality and cause them to move to think differently about technology’s potential for strengthening students' critical thinking, writing, reflection, and interactive learning.
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements.
Preface.
Part I. Introducing Web 2.0: Trends, Signs, and User Design.
Chapter 1. The Trend of Web 1.0, Web 2.0, Web 3.0, and Beyond; Te-Ping Kang, Jengchung V. Chen, and Terry T. Kidd.
Chapter 2. Web 2.0: How Signs, Symbols, and Podcasts Affect Elearning; Ruth Gannon Cook.
Chapter 3. User Generated Design: Teaching and Learning with Web 2.0; Jeremy I. Tutty and Florence Martin.
Part II. Social Learning, Networking, And The Web 2.0: Designing Collaborative Communities Of Inquiry Through The Application Of Web 2.0 Tools.
Chapter 4. Instructional Design and Pedagogical Issues with Web 2.0 Tools; Amelia W. Cheney, Robert L. Sanders, Nita J. Matzen, and John H. Tashner.
Chapter 5. Incorporating Web 2.0 Into Education: Instructional Design and Pedagogical Issues; Elena Qureshi and Phillip Olla.
Chapter 6. Web 2.0 in Academia: Blogs and Wikis as Instruments for Learning and Teaching; Stefanie Panke.
Part III. Web 2.0 Environment And User Center Design.
Chapter 7. Wiki Environments for Learning; Johann Ari Larusson and Richard Alterman.
Chapter 8. Reflective Learning for the Net Generation; John Sandars, Christopher Murray, and Maggie McPherson.
Chapter 9. SimSpaces: Collaboratively Designed Virtual Learning Environments; Brendan Calandra and Stephen W. Harmon.
Chapter 10. Course Co-Creation vs. Course Management: Wikis as a Potential Alternative to Traditional Learning Management Systems; Michael L. W. Jones and David Gelb.
Part IV. Learning Management With Web 2.0: Meaningful Learning With Wikis: Making A Connection.
Chapter 12. You've Got to See This: Looking Back On/Forward from On-Line Hypermediated Art Criticism and Collaborative Digital Technology; B. Stephen Carpenter, II and Pamela G. Taylor.
Chapter 13. Web 2.0 Affordances for Literacies: Using Technology as Pedagogically Strong Scaffolds for Learning; Julie McLeod and Sheri Vasinda.
Chapter 14. Semester Without End: Keeping the Class Connection Open via RSS; Ray Schroeder.
Part V. Web 2.0: Case Studies And Ideas For Educators.
Chapter 15. Planning for 21st Century Technologies; Jeff Utecht.
Chapter 16. Is There a Place in Second Life® for K–12 Education? Amanda Jost and Irene Chen.
Chapter 17. Uses for Web 2.0 Tools in Instructional Settings; Dominique Turnbow and Andrea Lynch.
Chapter 18. Designing Professional Development to Support Teachers' TPACK and Integration of Web 2.0 Technologies; Drew Polly.
Chapter 19. Technically Speaking: Supporting 1.0 Teachers in a 2.0 World; Jeanne C. Samuel, Jarrod L. Sanson, and Janice M. Hinson.
Chapter 20. Accessibility Issues for Web 2.0; Becky Sue Parton and Robert Hancock.
Chapter 21. Web 2.0 in Teacher Education: Characteristics, Implications, and Limitations; Michael M. Grant and Clif Mims.
Chapter 22. Glossary of Terms; About the Editors.