TJ Kopcha’s Weblog

Rain on my Interactive Fiction parade

January 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Ok, so I’ve been hitting the interactive fiction sites pretty hard over the last few days. I still love them — turns out, though, there are some glaring errors that tend to make the sites — well — challenging to use. Especially in educational settings. Here are the main issues…

  • Some of the Scott Adams Adventures just don’t work. I verified this by checking a walkthrough — the program just didn’t let me go where I needed to go. Very odd.
  • None of the save options worked.
  • From what I’ve found, the downloadable versions of Zork I, II, and III only work on the Mac Classic OS.
  • Language barriers. The older games are too word-specific. I said “Dig”. It said “How?”. I said “With Hands”. It said “Can’t”. Turns out “Use Hands” was the proper command. Needed a walk through to find that out.
  • The text disappears on some computers when you scroll the main window

However, I have not lost my fervor for using these in the classroom. Especially when they are so much darn fun! I’ll post more about that later…

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , , , ,

29 reasons to fear Chuck Norris

January 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This is a very amusing take on good ol’ Chuck.

29 Reasons to Fear Chuck Norris

Enjoy!

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , ,

Interactive fiction and learning (or I’m a Zork dork)

January 15, 2008 · 1 Comment

zork.jpgOk, I admit it. I’m a dork — in the kindest sense of the word. I love interactive fiction. Back in the day, I used to call them text adventures, but it appears that they have since upgraded their status. I can still remember the first time I played once of these games. I had a TI-99 4A computer (this was my second computer…my first was a Timex Sinclair 2068 – I did not remember the number until I looked up the image) and I had this game by Scott Adams called “Savage Island”. I had to load the game from a cassette recorder to the computer’s RAM to play it. Man, that game frustrated the heck out of me. I don’t think I ever made it very far in the game, but I loved playing it.

Interactive fiction is a game that contains no graphics, just text. For example, in “Savage Island” you are stranded on this island with little idea of what to do or how to do it. The game uses simple commands like ‘go volcano’ or ‘climb tree’ to interact with the world. Fun to explore and interact with. Eventually my TI-99 soon gave way to a Commodore 64, and I left “Savage Island” behind for the greener pastures of Zork, Trinity, and Leather Goddesses of Phobos. These are more complex text adventures with a form of interplay that was a bit smoother than the earlier adventures and with a bit of humor thrown in for the mix — these were made by Infocom.

Now that I’m all grown up (sortof…), I see tremendous potential for these games in education.

What I love most about these adventures is that they are similar to reading a book, but one you interact with. It is intrinsically satisfying when you figure out how to combine items to solve a problem, and when you discover new and unknown areas of the game. I think these would make a great practice, reward, or enrichment for students in middle or high school. They are free, available online, and combine reading, writing, and problem solving skills. What more could you ask for?

Below are two links for these games. There are loads of games at these sites, and they should get you and your students started. (Note that, like all online content, it is always good to play the games a little before allowing students to view them. Leather Goddesses of Phobos contains content of a sexual nature, so be forewarned on that one. The others are likely to be more innocent.)

There’s plenty here to keep a Zork dork like me happy for a long time. I’m disappointed, though, that I cannot find a game called ‘Trinity’ online yet. This one was fantastic. I’ll keep looking for it — hmm, all this hunting for an old game is like a…it’s like a real-life text adventure!

→ 1 CommentCategories: educational technology
Tagged: , , , ,

Digital Immigrants, Digital Natives – A new Marxist society?

January 8, 2008 · 1 Comment

I’ve been thinking more on this idea of digital natives — those lucky youngsters who get to think and act differently simply because they were born into the royalty of this technologically-driven society (you can find more on Marc Prensky’s site about them).Chipset

 

At first blush, the idea seems somewhat reasonable. Born in the 21st century, you rock on that iPod / Facebook / 3-D gaming world. You get to think differently, little dude, because all that technology mumbo-jumbo forces you to think like no one’s business — faster, quicker, more efficient. Born before 2002, though, born without a clue. (NOTE: I selected 2002 because it rhymed with clue, not because it is some special date worthy of note. Except for the release of Star Wars: Episode 2, which wasn’t really that worthy of note, except maybe for the fight scene with Yoda, but I digress.)

So as the idea of digital immigrants marinated in the juices of my neurons and dendrites, the metaphor began to crumble. Take, for example, many of the English-speaking natives in our classrooms. Native, yes. Do they speak fluently — for the most part, yes. But get down to brass tacks and they’ve got a long way to go before they master grammar, punctuation, spelling, and all the other nuts n’ bolts that a native speaker doth make. In fact, many never do, and subsequently massacre the language to which they are native to, both in the spoken and written language. Just look at all that IM lingo.

At the opposite end of the spectrum lies the immigrant who comes from another country. Do they think differently simply because the country they come from is not the same as the ones they live in now? I don’t know, maybe they do. They know two languages which, of course, changes the physical makeup and workings of the brain and gives a serious advantage when speaking in those countries. But I’m not sure that translates into making them better problems solvers or multi-taskers per se. People have different skills, both learned and innate, and how they use them largely determines their success in the world.

The bottom line is that it just plain ol’ doesn’t make sense to pit immigrants of any sort against their native counterparts. It’s hogwash, plain and simple. Immigrants can and do learn to function in a world that is not native to them, and natives often fail to be successful in the world they are native to. It is not a matter of where (or in the case of digital natives, when) you are born but what you do with the skills you have.

If educational technologist hope to make strides and a lasting impact in schools and in learning, I doubt creating a ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’ scenario is the way to success. It’s nice for bolstering egos and smugly patting us technology lovers on the back for being so darn savvy and so downright awesome for the Internet power we wield. But it seems that such a dichotomy would simply push teachers and administrators to do the one thing that keeps much of our educational system focused on the past (to borrow more of Prensky’s words).

When push comes to shove, educators tend to shun what they don’t know or understand. Wikipedia is being banned in schools. So are wikis, google docs, and many other collaboration tools. People fear them because they don’t know enough about them. In the long run, I doubt that pointing out the fact that they are immigrants in a strange world where technology ‘explodes exponentially’ with no hope of understandin’ the new-fangled, high-falutin’ digital world like these young whipper-snappers does won’t really end up helping anyone, least of all the students.

→ 1 CommentCategories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , ,

Digital Natives – What’s all the fuss anyways?

December 30, 2007 · 1 Comment

This year has been an exciting one for me in regards to the Internet tools that I’ve found and started using on a regular basis. Twitter, WordPress, Facebook…I’ve got them all bookmarked in a special place for easy access whenever I’m online. I’m here to admit it — I’m hooked. They all played a role in opening my eyes to new and wonderful technologies that help people teach, interact, and live.

As the new year approaches, I wonder what impact these tools will have on how people think and behave. I read a lot about digital natives how different their thinking will be in general because of their exposure to these tools at such a young age. I have well respected colleagues who agree with this, and other who disagree. Myself? I cannot predict the outcome one way or the other. I can see both sides…

Side 1: There are always some students who just plain ol’ ‘get it’. They think differently and see the world differently and will always do so, regardless of the tools that they use to learn. These are the students that embrace learning for learning’s sake and put their disbelief aside for a moment when the teacher asks them to bear with a new lesson that experiments with fancy technology. These students are generally the minority and often get overlooked in the classroom — and blogs, wikis, and other web 2.0 tools are just the thing to fill in the gaps and let them (and their learning) go hog-wild. In summary, the learner, not the tool, seem to be the focus.

Side 2: These tools revolutionize the way information is thought about and shared. Instead of seeking out information, tools like Twitter, blogs, and wikis provide the user with constant streams of incoming information. Students go from ‘go-getters’ of information to sorters of facts, opinions, and text. Any student exposed to the skills needed to find, sort, analyze, and organize (I sound so Bloom’s Taxonomy right now!) will walk away from their public schooling with a good deal more of those skills than I did 15 years ago. For the first time, the tool may introduce or perhaps force students to deal with information in a way that no generation prior to ours has, and to a greater ability range than ever before. This will profoundly impact the type of thinker that emerges from our schools. In this case the tool, and its connection to information, are the focus.

I’ve laid out two sides of this story as I see them. My point is simply this — never before have I had so much access to such high quality information about what I do and how I spend my time. I’ve got access to blogs about surfing, educational technology tweets, technology wikis, blogs about making videos, videos themselves, and countless other topics. I’m amazed by it all, and here is why…

The way I use my time in a given day is changing, and will continue to change the more I use these tools.

I thought I was a good multitasker before this year – I was kidding myself. I have a long way to go if I want to take advantage of the information that is out there without fruitlessly burning through the hours of the day. I have made some improvements…I no longer focus on how and where to get information from – it just comes to me with RSS feeds and such. Instead, I think about how to manage my time so that I get the maximum use from these tools. I use them to enhance my performance at my job, share stories and updates with my family, communicate with my home when I am away, and a handful of other benefits.

The bottom line is that I do more in less time than I did a year ago, and I can’t imagine what I’ll be doing a year from now or how I’ll be getting it done. I know it will be different than this year, and probably better. Our kids, our students, our next generation of citizens — the ones we guide and influence as we teach and work with teachers — will have this experience and access to technology from a very early age. What will it mean to them?

What does it mean to you?

→ 1 CommentCategories: educational technology
Tagged: , , , ,

Wildfires and Wild Thoughts

December 20, 2007 · Leave a Comment

When the wildfires struck San Diego this past fall, I was forced to evacuate. I literally had 50 minutes to pack my kid, my cat, and clothes before we were told to evacuate. I’d never before been evacuated from my home, and found that this task was not an easy one. Adding to my difficulty was the view from my bedroom window — thick black smoke hid the early morning sun. Ash drifted like a light coating of snow on the ground. Wind buffeted my home and drove the smell of smoke deep into the house. Our eyes burned, our throats itched, and we were all scared.

Several months have passed and I find that my physical experience — cleaning house and leaving it behind, taking only what was most important — has prompted a more spiritual house cleaning. I am driven like never before to inspect the small details of my life and determine which of those are working and which are not. It seems the paring down of my existence to the bare essentials during the wildfires has likewise led me to do the same in my own being.

The hitch? Change is not an overnight sensation. It is slow and arduous and I have yet to make the changes I desire. Mind you, I am reminded daily of what is wrong and unneeded in my life. But making the change, that is another story. Seeing is easy. Doing is the challenge. This conflict is quite uncomfortable.

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , ,

Not to surf. Apparently…

December 6, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Not to surf. Apparently this is not my week to surf. Not only do I have a lot of things to do at work but the surf is so incredibly high that there were reports of someone dying yesterday trying to battle the surf. The waves are anywhere from 8 to 16 feet from what I’m hearing. That could be exaggerated but when it gets to be that big and the waves get to be that large adventure gets … listenpicture-3.png

(Two days later) Well, the reports of someone dying may be a bit overdone. I’ve not heard any confirmation about this.

But the waves were incredible and pretty far out of my league. Have a look at some of the footage shot earlier this week. It speaks for itself…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gCetPs6Kzg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9BgijrC1PY

Surf’s up through Sunday. Perhaps there is still time…

Powered by Jott

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized

This Jott message will…

December 4, 2007 · Leave a Comment

This Jott message will appear in my blog in about 10 minutes. listen

Powered by Jott

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized

Is it the arrow or the archer?

December 4, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Is it the arrow or the archer? I am asking myself this as I teach people to use technology, to teach with technology. I guess it’s a little of both if I had to give an answer. Certainly, the tool (the arrow) makes the difference. The piece of technology you use has an impact on how it gets used, but really there is an art to using it, too.  And that comes from the archer. That takes time, creativity and imagination to cultivate. listen

Powered by Jott

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized

To surf or not to surf…

December 4, 2007 · Leave a Comment

To surf or not to surf? There is a high surf advisory for So. Cal. for today and probably in for tomorrow. I haven’t checked the surf reports but I’m guessing that this is the time to get out there and enjoy the waves. So that’s the question — to surf or not to surf? The water temp is about 60 degrees and I know how cold that is going to feel. Cold.

But so worth it.

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Uncategorized