ZDNet Education

Christopher Dawson

The folks who brought you Mathematica do it again

By | July 27, 2010, 3:05am PDT

Summary: Wolfram Alpha was a powerful educational tool as a search engine. Now as it adds Widgets to its bag of tricks, students and teachers can tap its power in new ways.

When Wolfram Alpha first introduced its search tool, pundits spent a couple weeks calling it a potential Google killer. Even I called it a Wikipedia killer. While it has quite clearly done neither, it has, like the other products created by Wolfram Research, proved to be an incredibly valuable tool for education. These are the people who brought us Mathematica, after all.

Now, as I reported over on Between the Lines, Wolfram Alpha has introduced a new tool that should make Alpha easier and more accessible for students and teachers alike. Wolfram has tossed in a bit of programming and some social web applications for good measure in its new widget builder. This is both a classroom and a homework tool just waiting for the right teacher to take it and run with it.

I won’t belabor the inner workings. The Wolfram Alpha site does a fine job explaining how it works:

[A widget is] A free, personalized mini-app that leverages the depth and breadth of
the Wolfram|Alpha computational knowledge engine.

Widgets can do almost anything, from calculating the calories in a recipe to solving complex problems.

If Wolfram|Alpha can answer your query, you can use it to create a widget — to share in Facebook,
Twitter, email, or anywhere else.

Users can find a tutorial here and can either modify existing widgets or create new widgets from scratch. Either way, the process is simple. What gets me excited, though, are the possibilities in the classroom.

Since Wolfram Alpha does such a nice job of plotting mathematical expressions, for example, widgets can generate plots based on user input. Students can then easily see the effect of modifying whatever portion(s) of the expression that a teacher specifies as a “variable” in the widget. Obviously there is plenty of software that can make this happen as well, but a web application with which students can not only interact but can also create or modify is compelling.

Although Wolfram’s original claim to fame was Mathematica, Wolfram Alpha is hardly applicable only in a math classroom. Widgets already exist in the gallery for a variety of social science, health, and cultural categories. This collection will only grow as more users contribute their own widgets.

In their simplest form in the classroom, Wolfram Alpha widgets could be guides to avoid imprecise or useless querying. Alpha can take a bit if trial and error to formulate a query that provides precisely the factual data for which a user might be looking. Widgets can have the query set up before class, allowing students to focus on the data or get at more sophisticated queries than they might otherwise explore.

Users must create a Wolfram Alpha account to build widgets. However, the account is free, the tool is easy, and your imagination is the limit in terms of what can be modeled or queried for or by your students.

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Topics

Chris Dawson is a freelance writer and consultant with years of experience in educational technology and web-based systems. In 2011, he became the Vice President of Marketing for WizIQ, Inc., a virtual classroom and learning network SaaS provider.

Disclosure

Christopher Dawson

Christopher Dawson is the Vice President of Marketing for WizIQ, Inc., by day and a freelance writer and educational technology consultant by night. Well, most of his colleagues at WizIQ are based in India, so really he's working with them whenever he can stay awake. He has worked for his local school district as a teacher and technology director, for the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health, and for Biogen, Inc. (now Biogen-IDEC, Inc.). He has also consulted with STATNet and Cytyc Corporation and retains close ties with X2 Development Corporation (now owned by Follett Software, the supplier of the student information system he administered for several years). Follett is paying him a monthly honorarium to act as a presenter for their "SIS Voices for Student Achievement" community (he produces occasional blog posts and hosts a monthly webinar on the use of student information systems to inform data-driven instruction and school-wide change. He regularly purchases and/or recommends Dell hardware. This is because Dell makes good hardware and has truly committed itself to education in innovative ways, particularly with their "Connected Classroom" initiative. It isn't because he has dealings with the company through his role at WizIQ (which he does) or because they have provided him with long-term loans of a variety of equipment for in-depth testing (which they have). Intel (reference designer for the Classmate PCs he has implemented in his local schools) has provided him with long-term loans of Classmate PCs for testing, as have Dell and Lenovo with their educational offerings. He may report on any of these companies as his experiences with them have direct bearing on educational technology; positive reports are not necessarily an endorsement and he receives no direct financial compensation from these companies or any others. Intel paid all expenses for his attendance at the 2009 Intel Classmate PC Ecosystem Summit which he attended as the sole representative of the technology press. He was invited to attend in 2010 but his wife would have killed him if he spent 3 days in Vegas geeking out and left her home alone with a new baby. Acer provided him with a 50% discount on an Aspire One netbook in early 2009 after he tested it for 30 days through their educational seed program. He liked the netbook at the time but it has since broken and sits unused in his office. Canonical sent him Ubuntu lanyards, t-shirts, and mousepads for his kids. He stole one of the lanyards and proudly hangs his keys from it and occasionally features his 8-year old wearing an oversized Ubuntu t-shirt on his Facebook profile. Gunnar Optiks sent him a pair of computer glasses to evaluate for a holiday gift guide. He is wearing them now as he types this because they never asked for them back and they rock out loud. Seriously - they work brilliantly and make it much easier to spend 20 hours a day staring at an LCD. If they ever asked for them back, he would fork over the $99 and buy a pair. Microsoft gave him 2 free copies of Office 2010 professional, a desktop clock, and a useless book on Office 2010 when he attended the launch of Office/Sharepoint 2010. He occasionally uses the SharePoint lanyard they gave him instead of the Ubuntu lanyard for his keys, but feels dirty afterwards. Adobe provided him with a pre-release version of the CS5 Master Collection for evaluation and ultimately provided a full, licensed copy for ongoing testing of educational applications of this admittedly expensive software. Like the Gunnars, if the license expires or they come out with CS6, he'd actually go out and buy it himself. Which is saying something, because he's actually pretty cheap. Any other companies wishing to send him cool things to evaluate, wear, or otherwise adorn his kids are more than welcome to; he promises to disclose it here if he keeps any of the stuff. Finally, because WizIQ is a virtual classroom and learning network provider, Chris, as VP of Marketing, frequently interacts with, seeks out deals with, and directly or indirectly competes with a whole lot of LMS, SIS, and other Education 2.0 companies. In general, he'll limit his reporting about these companies to news that does not impact his relationship with them or with WizIQ. If he reports on them, it's because what they are doing is newsworthy or worth the attention of his readers and not because he's trying to broker some deal, damage competition, or otherwise advance his position in his day job. LMS and SIS companies, along with other online learning communities, are a pretty important part of Ed Tech. If he stops reporting on them completely, there won't be a whole lot left. He'll be sure to call out any overt conflicts of interest if they are unavoidable. Finally, Follett Software Company pays him a little tiny honorarium every month to present on their SIS Voices webinars and to write the occasional blog or discussion thread for them. Since Follett recently bought X2 (maker of an awesome web-based SIS that Chris just happened to have used, served in advisory groups for, and frequently reported on), this is probably also worth disclosing.

Biography

Christopher Dawson

Christopher Dawson grew up in Seattle, back in the days of pre-antitrust Microsoft, coffeeshops owned by something other than Starbucks, and really loud, inarticulate music. He escaped to the right coast in the early 90's and received a degree in Information Systems from Johns Hopkins University. While there, he began a career in health and educational information systems, with a focus on clinical trials and related statistical programming and database modeling. This focus led him to several positions at Johns Hopkins, a couple-year stint in private industry, teaching high school math and technology, and 2 years as the technology director for his local school district. Most recently, he started his own consulting business and is now the Vice President of Marketing for WizIQ, Inc., a virtual classroom and learning network provider. He lives with his wife, five kids (yes, 5), 2 dogs, and a hateful cat in a small town in north-central Massachusetts. Although he is no longer teaching, his roles with WizIQ and ZDNet allow him to continue helping students and teachers add value to education with technology rather than merely adding to the bottom line.

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