Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Juggling Tutorials

OK...I know that juggling is a little out of place on this blog. Unless you stretch a little bit and think of it from a learning standpoint... and I've always wanted to learn to be a juggler.

Just Your Average Joggler had a post about a series of juggling tutorials from a contest sponsered by the International Jugglers Association.  Lots of fun stuff here.

I've watched several now and am working on the Three Ball Mills Mess by Tony Steinbach.  (embeded below)



[Image: Captured from the video]

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Fireworks Tutorials






I've decided to use Adobe Fireworks as the graphics editor of choice in my classes. I've always been a fan of Photoshop and have used it for years. This semester I am teaching in a lab that doesn't have Photoshop installed. The cost of outfitting the machines with a program that will only be used this one semester is prohibitive. We do have Fireworks in the lab. In fact, we have a site license for the entire school. I was going to just use Fireworks in my one class and Photoshop in my others when I decided to go all out and teach it in all my web classes because:
  • It is available on every computer
  • It edits both vector and raster graphics
  • Doing certain tasks are easier in Fireworks than Photoshop (less steep of a learning curve).
  • If kids are into the graphics they can always move on to explore Photoshop or Illustrator.
The problem. I am not as adept at using Fireworks. So, what's a geek like me to do? I immediately started looking for tutorials online. I've found some good ones and I plan on sharing some of the better sites I find here. The first being a site put up by Joyce Evans who has written several how-to-books on Fireworks and Dreamweaver. She offers up a lot of video tutorials which are simple to follow and descriptions of books and DVDs you can purchase.

I've found the online video tutorials to be simple and easy to follow. I've gotten several lesson ideas already. Someday, I'd like to have a series of videos similar to this available for my students who miss a class or just don't get it the first time. Until then, I may point them to these easy to use clips. (Have to check to see if it's blocked by my district first.)

[Image captured from Adobe web site]