E-learning Toolkit Activity: Accessibility

E- learning Toolkit – Accessibility

Instructions:

Take a look at your LMS (Vista or Moodle) site, including images, multimedia, links, tables and frame. Check the “Quick Tips” on WAI and check your work at Markup Validation Service.  See updated Web Accessibility Quick Tips based on WCAG 2 at a glance. What did you find? How accessible is your site? What sorts of things might you need to do to ensure it is accessible to all of your students?

Reflection:

This toolkit activity has been very eye opening.  I took a look at my moodle site and used the Web Accessibility Quick Tips to reflect on the overall accessibility of my site.

Here is a summary of the points that I took into consideration:

1.    Images & animations:

I used the alt attribute to describe the function of each visual.

2.    Multimedia:

This is an area where I could improve.  The checklist recommends providing captioning and transcripts of audio, and descriptions of video.  The next time I embed a video, I would also include a written text of the audio and a short description of the video.  That being said, I was able to include audio files using Audacity to support students with the reading components of the course.  For more information about multimedia used in my course site, please visit my Multimedia Inventory.

3.    Hypertext links:

Throughout my course, I endeavored to use text that makes sense when read out of context.  I avoided “click here” and generally used text that described the activity.  For example, on my splash page, instead of saying “astronaut”, I say “Start Here”.

4.    Page organization:

I have used headings, lists, and consistent structure.  My course is organized around three (3) modules, A, B and C.

5.    Check your work:

I validated my site at the Markup Validation Service and it found 4 errors.  All 4 of them were a XML Parsing Error where I had an opening and ending tag mismatch.  The report tells you where the error has occurred; however, I am not sure how to find the specific lines and columns.  More learning is required in this area!

Overall, because my site is to be used with teacher support and the SMART Board, I believe that my site is accessible.  At my school, we are very focused on Universal Design for Learning; therefore accessibility and differentiation are forefront in my mind when planning lessons to meet learning outcomes.

Social Software

Social Software

E-learning Toolkit Reflection

For this E-learning Toolkit Activity, I have decided to focus on four Social Software sites that I use personally.  The main sites that I use most frequently are Delicious and Twitter, and I have explored Digg and Flickr.

1.  Who “owns” materials posted by members?

Delicious

By posting content, you are granting permission to Delicious and others to access and use it in connection with Delicious and otherwise in connections with its affiliates’ businesses.

Digg

By creating and posting Content to Digg, you warrant that you own all rights to the Content, agree that the Content will be dedicated to the public domain under the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication, available at http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ and that you will not object to the use of the Content by Digg in any context.

Twitter

Twitter claims no intellectual property rights over the material you provide to the Twitter service.  Your profile and materials uploaded remain yours.  You can remove your profile at any time by deleting your account.  This will also remove any text and images you have stored in the system.

Flickr

You understand that all materials, including without limitation, information, data, text, software, music, sound, photographs, graphics, video, and email messages or other kinds of messages (“Content“), whether publicly posted or privately transmitted, are the sole responsibility of the person from which such Content originated. This means that you, and not Yahoo!, are entirely responsible for all Content that you upload, post, email, transmit, or otherwise make available via the Service. Yahoo! does not control the Content posted via the Service and, as such, does not guarantee the accuracy, integrity or quality of such Content. You understand that by using the Service, you may be exposed to Content that is offensive, indecent or objectionable. Under no circumstances will Yahoo! be liable in any way for any Content, including, but not limited to, for any

errors or omissions in any Content, or for any loss or damage of any kind incurred as a result of the use of or reliance upon any Content posted, emailed, transmitted, or otherwise made available via the Service.

2.  For what purposes can these materials be used?

Delicious

Delicious is explicitly not responsible for the manner or circumstances by which third parties access or use public content and is under no obligation to disable or otherwise restrict this access. Delicious provides you with the ability to retrieve and remove your posted content and your personal information from Delicious. This ability does not extend to copies that others may have made or to copies that Delicious may have made for backup purposes.

Digg

Social sharing of data: Digg allows other users to browse stories that you have Dugg, submitted or commented on. This information is made available publicly via your User Profile, on Digg Labs (labs.digg.com), via the public API (services.digg.com), or within the permalink URL of the story on which you performed the action. Digg may choose to post this data on other site features.

Twitter

The Twitter service makes it possible to post images and text hosted on Twitter to outside websites. This use is accepted (and even encouraged!). However, pages on other websites which display data hosted on Twitter.com must provide a link back to Twitter.

Flickr

Yahoo! does not claim ownership of Content you submit or make available for inclusion on the Service. However, with respect to Content you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Service, you grant Yahoo! the following worldwide, royalty free and non-exclusive license(s), as applicable:

  • With respect to Content you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of Yahoo! Groups, the license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform, and publicly display such Content on the Service solely for the purposes of providing and promoting the specific Yahoo! Group to which such Content was submitted or made available. This licence exists only for as long as you elect to continue to include such Content on the Service and will terminate at the time you remove or Yahoo! removes such Content from the Service.
  • With respect to photos, graphics, audio, or video you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Service other than Yahoo! Groups, the license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform and publicly display such Content on the Service solely for the purpose for which such Content was submitted or made available. This licence exists only for as long as you elect to continue to include such Content on the Service and will terminate at the time you remove or Yahoo! removes such Content from the Service.
  • With respect to Content other than photos, graphics, audio or video you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Service other than Yahoo! Groups, the perpetual, irrevocable and fully sublicensable license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, publicly perform and publicly display such Content (in whole or in part) and to incorporate such Content into other works in any format or medium now known or later developed.

3.  Would using each site be appropriate with your students?

My students are grade one students, and therefore, many social software sites are not accessible to them because of their age.  Digg and Twitter require that users are at least 13 years of age.  Reading through the respective Terms of Service of each site, I could not locate age requirements for Delicious or Flickr.  That being said, I would not have students sign up themselves.  I would create classroom accounts on both services.  I would not have students bookmark sites to Delicious, rather I would direct them to the site to visit sites that I would like them to visit.  A Flickr account could be created to house photo collections of classroom projects.  I would not post photos of students on Flickr, unless I had parental permission.

4.  In your opinion, how well are the privacy interests of members represented?

Locating the Terms of Service for each site was very accessible.  That being said, some are easier and more straightforward to read and find the necessary information.  It is up to users to inform themselves before signing up to a service as Social Software sites are very clear with their expectations.   I would argue that if you are going to use a Social Software site, you are basically giving up your right to privacy.

References:

Delicious.  Terms of Service.  Accessed on-line July 18, 2009 from: http://delicious.com/help/terms

Digg.  Terms of Service.  Accessed on-line July 18, 2009 from: http://digg.com/tou

Flickr.  Terms of Service.  Accessed on-line July 18, 2009 from:  http://digg.com/tou

Twitter.  Terms of Service.  Accessed on-line July 18, 2009 from:  http://twitter.com/tos

Audacity

E-learning Toolkit:  Audio

For this E-learning toolkit activity, I used Audacity to record 10 .mp3 files that I have uploaded to my moodle course.  The purpose of these voice recordings is to have audio support for the reading component of the course; the descriptions of the Milky Way, the Sun and the planets.  In each module, there is a resource titled “Centres de littéracie / Literacy Centers”.  When you click on the name of each planet, you will notice an image of an ear holding a megaphone with the words “Cliquez sur l’oreille!” in red beside the image.  Looks like this:

Clip Art Graphic of a Human Ear Cartoon Character

Cliquez sur l’oreille!

When the student clicks on the ear, a new window opens up and they will hear my voice recording reading out the text.  After the recording has been listened to, the students must close the window to return to the course.  From there, they can click on the word “Description” to see the text that was just read out for that topic.

I have used Audacity before in ETEC 510 for my Group Design Project.  My group created a technology enhanced language project designed to assist educators in enhancing the Spanish oral proficiency skills of their students. Students used Audacity to record conversations in Spanish which were then posted to their oral portfolio.

When I first started using Audacity, I remember struggling and struggling with exporting to an .mp3 file.  Once I realized that I had to download the LAME plug-in for my operating system, I really had the ball rolling!  This was the biggest challenge in using Audacity.  For the toolkit activity, I followed the instructions and made my recordings without any difficulty.  From there, I uploaded the files to the appropriate folder in moodle and was easily able to link the files to the “ear” image.  Once I had my system in place, it was just a matter of clicking here and there!

In the past I have also used GarageBand with iTunes to create .mp3 audio files.  However, these programs are specific to Mac computers and Audacity is open source and cross-platform making it possibly more accessible to more users.  When deciding on a process for students to follow in our ETEC 510 group project, we chose to design it around the use of Audacity for this reason.

Using Audacity has made my course more accessible to my students.  In Grade One, students range from emergent readers to students who are already decoding words and reading them with comprehension.  By adding in an audio file, students who are emerging as readers have the opportunity to listen to the text instead of struggling through it.  Furthermore, students who are already reading can listen to the audio and can practice reading with fluency.  This is very important, especially when learning a second language.

By adding audio files to a course, the principles of Universal Design for Learning are considered.  The paradigm of UDL, which was first developed by the Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST), is a means of respecting a variety of diverse individual learning styles without requiring adaptation. This theoretical framework promotes the success for all learners by inherently having the flexibility to support each individual’s needs. UDL applies to all learners, not exclusively to individuals with disabilities, but aims to provide everyone with equal access to learning.

Audacity is a very powerful tool that I will be using to enhance my teaching.

Still Images

E-learning Toolkit: Using Picasa

For this E-learning toolkit activity, I chose a photo of a lily that I took at Grotto Canyon, close to Canmore, Alberta.  I followed the instructions in the activity pretty much step-by-step and as such, found the usability of Picasa to be intuitive.  On the left is my original photo, in the middle is the cropped photo, and on the right is the re-sized image (500 pixels wide).  Click on each image to view it separately.

The image above (left side) is a photo that I took of graffiti at the Hastings Skateboard Park in Vancouver while visiting my brother a few years ago.  At the time, I used Picasa and the “saturation” effect to enhance this photo.  I was so pleased with the final product that I have enlarged it and framed it.  I have also printed 4 x 6 prints of this photo and have created greeting cards with it.   The photo in the center is a photo that I cropped using Picasa a few years ago, and the last photo, of the Totem, is a photo I took in Seattle that I am just really proud of!  In fact, I have used all of the images above among others in my digital story and in the creation of greeting cards.

For amateur photographers such as myself, Picasa is a great tool to dabble in the editing of photos.  For the most part, I use iPhoto and have found it to be very intuitive and user friendly.  I am more keen to use iPhoto, as my school uses Mac computers, however, since Picasa is open source and cross-platform, I would recommend it to schools that utilize different platforms.  Furthermore, I noticed that you can upload directly to Blogger from Picasa, which would be very handy for teachers and/or students using Blogger as their blogging platform.  Whether people use Picasa, or iPhoto, or any other digital image software suite, it is important to spend the time to “play around” and figure out what the software has to offer.  I find that learning by doing usually produces fantastic results!

Web + log = Weblog

E-learing toolkit:  Weblogs

We have been discussing Weblogs in much detail over the past week or so in ETEC 565, which has led me to this toolkit activity.  I’ve spent the greater part of this afternoon browsing through some educational blogs which has been interesting and has led me to discover many articles, video clips, views and opinions of educators worldwide.  Sampling through the different weblogs, I came to the realization that every blog starts small; they all seem to be at a different point in terms of their content, number of comments, pages, etc…  The Weblogs that are more developed are truly a work of art in a sense, rich with information, well thought out and clearly visited on a daily (hourly?) basis!

In the New Year, I thought it would be a good idea to start a blog chronicling my journey through the MET program.  I created this blog using WordPress, which turned out to be very easy and quick.  However, I did struggle with understanding the difference between categories and pages, and this confusion remained with me, until I started ETEC 565 and created my reflective weblog for the course.  Through the creation of the pages that we were asked to create, I finally understood how a WordPress blog is organized!

So far, I have enjoyed the blogging experience in ETEC 565, not only posting assignments, but also being able to choose a theme and customize the header of my blog.  There are limitations to how unique your blog looks, but I think that I’ve made a tweak or two to help it stand out.  🙂

Throughout our discussions concerning Weblogs, I picked up a great book by Will Richardson (2009) titled “Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Web Tools for Classrooms” through the Professional Learning Centre of the Calgary Board of Education.  I’ve been thinking about how teachers could use blogging with students and I would like to share Richardson’s following ideas:  (p.39)

You can have your students create their own Weblogs to…

  • learn how to blog.
  • complete class writing assignments.
  • create and ongoing portfolio of samples of their writing.
  • express their opinions on topics you are studying in class.
  • write comments, opinions, or questions on daily news items or issues of interest.
  • discuss activities they did in class and tell what they think about them. (You, the teacher, can learn a lot this way!)
  • write about class topics, using newly learned vocabulary words and idioms.
  • showcase their best writing pieces.

Richardson also provides ideas for teachers wanting to create a reflective, journal-type blog and/or a class blog.  Blog safety is an important consideration when blogging with students and it is important to be aware of the policies of your school district.  There are many good arguments concerning private vs. public blogging with students and it is very important that the teacher and students understand the consequences of both types of blogging before embarking on a blog project.

I look forward to blogging in more detail and reading other Weblogs as I journey through the MET program and my teaching career.

Reference:

Richardson, W. (2009).  Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms.  2nd Ed.  Corwin Press.

Categories
Module 3

Exploring Communication Tools; Synchronous & Asynchronous

The following post is also posted on the Communication Tools page.

Activity: Exploring Communication Tools in Moodle

My LMS, in Moodle, is designed for grade one French Immersion students who will be using the LMS to support their classroom learning.  It should be noted that I intend to use my LMS with the SMART Board in my classroom.  Students also have access to one classroom computer which they use on a rotational basis during literacy centers.  I have chosen two main communication tools for my LMS, one synchronous and one asynchronous.

Activity #1:  Wiki (asynchronous)

Description and Rationale

This activity would be completed towards the latter part of the school year.  Generally, as grade one culminates, the students are starting to consolidate their thinking around story writing.  My instructional goal is for students to have a sense of story, specifically the parts of a story; beginning, middle, end.  The purpose of the wiki would be to write a collaborative story.

I see myself and my students using the wiki together and individually.  We would start the project together, using the SMART Board to instruct the students on how to edit the wiki.  We would write the first couple of sentences together.  At this point, I foresee my students adding to the story as part of one of my literacy centers, which is using the classroom computer.  This will allow students time to reflect on their contribution to the collective story.  The expectation would be that they add one sentence to the story and that the story would unfold in order (beginning, middle, end).  Prior to starting the actual story writing, we would have, as a class, developed a story map using Kidspiration.  An image of our map would be posted on the wiki so that the students would be able to refer to it.  The final story product will remain as an enduring record of a project completed by my grade one class which will develop reciprocity and cooperation among students.  According to Chickering and Gamson (1987), “Learning is enhanced when it is more like a team effort that a solo race.  Good learning, like good work, is collaborative and social, not competitive and isolated.  Working with others often increases involvement in learning.  Sharing one’s own ideas and responding to others’ reactions sharpens thinking and deepens understanding.”

A limitation of asynchronous communication tools is that students may not feel as connected to a community of learners, particularly if efforts are not taken to keep people interacting with one another. I do not foresee this to be a problem, because as stated above, students will be expected to contribute to the wiki during literacy centers and are accountable for their work during this time.

I have tested the wiki, and it works!  I am confident that after being showed how to use the wiki, my students would be able to edit it at the classroom computer independently.

Activity #2:  Wimba Live Classroom (synchronous)

Description and Rationale

Chickering and Gamson’s (1987) third principle is “Good Practice Uses Active Learning Techniques”.  Many technologies available today encourage active learning.  Real-time conversation is one such technology.  Real-time conversation has the ability to create a sense of real-time connection and a sense of community.

The second communication tool that I have chosen for my LMS is the WIMBA Live Classroom.  My instructional goal with using this technology would be to improve the oral fluency in French of my students.  At first, I thought that this tool would be far too complicated for grade one students and  that it would be difficult to support with a class of 17-20 students.  This bothered me for a while as I saw this problem as a major limitation.  However, I believe that I have come up with a solution.  My idea would be to use WIMBA as a whole class to connect with another grade one French Immersion classroom in Calgary.  Often students do not understand why they are learning French because it is very disconnected from daily life in Calgary.  By connecting with another peer group living the same academic path, students may start to connect their language learning with life outside of school.

Research on second language acquisition supports the student-centered, task-based learning nature of real-time conversation.  The use of WIMBA supports second language acquisition by providing a relevant, meaningful context, learning tasks appropriate to students’ age level, and learner-centered instruction, which Curtain and Dalhberg recommend as crucial for language learning (2002).  Hadley (2001) reiterates this notion by stating, “opportunities must be provided for active communicative interaction among students” (p. 95).  Furthermore, Hadley recommends “students should be encouraged to express their own meaning as early as possible after productive skills have been introduced in the course of instruction” (2001, p. 95).  Real-time conversation provides opportunities for authentic “communicative interaction among students” by allowing students to communicate with other peers their own age.

The constructivist model of education further supports the use of real-time conversation  in the classroom.  According to Jonassen (1999), knowledge is “individually constructed and socially constructed by learners based on their interpretations of experiences in the world” (p. 217).  Feedback provided by the teacher encourages the learners to “reflect on what they have done” and the “strategies they used” (Jonassen 1998) to communicate in a second language.

Hatch (1978) argues that “[…] language grows out of experience, and it is out of participating in conversations that one learns how to interact verbally; out of this interaction, syntactic forms develop” (as cited in Ramírez, 241).  Therefore, the use of WIMBA will facilitate interactional competence and will provide a medium where students can interact in the second language and conduct a conversation without the worries of grammar mistakes.  Ramírez (1995) writes, “Students need to be made aware that it is not necessary to converse perfectly in the [second language] in order to communicate and that conversational strategies can be used to overcome communication difficulties in the real world” (Ramírez, 253).

I see my students using WIMBA to share projects they have been working on with the partner class.  My students could, for example, share the collaborative story that they wrote with the other grade one classroom.  Their presentation could also be archived allowing for parents or other members of the classroom community the opportunity to watch the students present.

I intend to try to connect with another grade one classroom next school year.  Although we do not have access to WIMBA within the Calgary Board of Education, we do have access to Elluminate which could be used for this purpose as well.  Last week, I was able to test Elluminate with my Assistant Principal and four other teachers.  It was very successful and after having participated with the WIMBA demonstration in ETEC 565, I am confident that real-time conversation will be an asset to my LMS and my instructional goals.

Assessment of students

Because my LMS will be used in the classroom, I will be able to monitor my students very closely.  I will be able to know who has contributed to the wiki (collaborative story) as the students are on a rotating schedule to use the computer during literacy centers.  Furthermore, Moodle itself keeps track of who has edited what.  In terms of using WIMBA, the interaction would be facilitated by myself and another teacher in another school.  Besides formally evaluating the work the students will present, I will be able to make observations of their conversations in French and the improvement of their oral fluency.

References:

Anderson, T. (2008). Teaching in an Online Learning Context.  I In: T. Anderson & F. Elloumi (Eds.), Theory and Practice of Online Learning. Edmonton AB:     Athabasca University. Accessed online 21 June 2009
http://www.aupress.ca/books/120146/ebook/14_Anderson_2008_Anderson-DeliveryQualitySupport.pdf

Chickering, A.W. & Gamson, Z.F. (1987). Seven Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate Education. American Association for Higher Education Bulletin, 39 (7), 3-7. Accessed online 21 June 2009 http://www.aahea.org/bulletins/articles/sevenprinciples1987.htm

Chickering, A.W. & Ehrmann, S.C. (1996). Implementing the Seven Principles: Technology as Lever. American Association for Higher Education Bulletin, 49(2), 3-6. Accessed online 21 June 2009
 http://www.aahea.org/bulletins/articles/sevenprinciples.htm

Curtain, H. & Dahlberg, C. (2004). Languages and children, making the match: New languages for young learners, grades K-8 (3rd ed.). Boston: Pearson

Hadley, A. O.  (2001). Teaching language in context (3rd ed.). Boston, MA: Heinle & Heinle.

Jonassen, D. (1998). Designing constructivist learning environments. In C. Reigeleth (Ed.), Instructional Design Theories and Models: Volume II. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Ramírez, A. G. (1995). Creating Contexts for Second Language Acquisition: Theory and Methods.  Baton Rouge: Longman Publishers USA.

wiki wiki wiki

The following reflection is in relation to the Wikis E-learning Toolkit Activity.

In December 2008, I introduced the concept of a wiki (using pbworks) to the parent community of my grade one classroom.  The wiki is called “Oasis of Learning“.  The main purpose of the wiki is to communicate with a very active volunteer base.  Parent volunteers sign up on the wiki when volunteer opportunities are available.  I have also posted our weekly spelling lists on the wiki, which are sent home in paper format, however, many parents have been pleased that they are able to access the information on-line as well.  The wiki is a private wiki in order to protect the privacy of classroom activities, students and their families.

In ETEC 510, we were responsible for editing a page and authoring a page on the ETEC 510 Design Wiki.  I authored the page on Universal Design for Learning.  This Wiki was much different than using pbworks.  It utilized MediaWiki.  What I found interesting with this project was that I was introduced to and learned some html.  Although this was frustrating at times, I loved seeing how the code changed the overall look of the page and piqued my interest in html in general.  Furthermore, I realized that Wikipedia is edited in this way and that got me thinking about the different types of Wikis and their ease of use.  Pbworks uses a WYSIWYG editor which requires no knowledge of html code, where as Wikipedia and the ETEC 510 Design Wiki require basic knowledge of html code.  I am assuming that Wikipedia uses this format to deter people from making easy,  unfounded edits.  That being said, comparing the two (Wikipedia and pbworks); they are used for very different purposes.

Also in ETEC 510, I completed a collaborative group assignment using pbworks.  The goal of this project was to identify the relevance of a particular set of ideas – e.g., about how objects are designed, how people learn, what kinds of learning spaces support meaningful engagements in knowledge-building, the affordances of social networking and collaborative learning – and to engage in a time-limited design practice that is informed by scholarship.  Our group decided to design a learning space that would contribute to the overall improvement of oral fluency in second language learners by utilizing the Wiki technology and Skype.  Visit http://etec510-65a-designproject.pbworks.com/ to view the final wiki project.  I enjoyed working on this project and setting up the wiki.  As a second language teacher, I believe that I will utilize this project with my students.

Overall, I must say that Wikis are a technology that I am very fond of.  The affordances of this technology are numerous and relate to the field of education in so many useful ways!

Categories
Module 2

Moodle Beginnings

This is fun!  Using Moodle, that is.  I just completed my first activity in the ETEC 565A E-Learning Toolkit.  Here is the link to the Moodle page of the Toolkit.  As you know, I teach Grade One French Immersion.  I have decided to design my course around literacy, learning how to read and write using the theme of Outer Space.  I have taught this theme face-to-face in the past and I am very excited about how my course will look in Moodle format.

Reflection

How labour intensive was the process?

I didn’t find the process of setting up my Welcome page and Discussion Forum to be difficult.  In fact, it was rather intuitive for me.  The instructions in the E-learning Toolkit were very helpful and I appreciated them to launch me into my discovery.  As I become more familiar with Web 2.0 applications, my comfort level increases.  This is my 3rd MET course and I must say that if this was one of my first assignments in my first course, it would have been much more intimidating and difficult.  Over the past 2 courses I have learned to give challenges a shot, and that has paid off.

What worked well? What was challenging? What surprised you?

I started editing my course and my Welcome! page with Safari, Version 4 Public Beta.  As I started working in the full text box, to enter in my welcome message, I decided I would like to insert an image.  At first I thought that I needed to enter in some html code, but then I realized that this version of Safari does not support a WYSIWUG editor.  I logged out of the MET Moodle site and then logged back in using the Flock browser, which worked like a charm and presented the WYSIWYG editor.  Thank goodness, because my html coding skills are novice!

Overall, this initial introduction to Moodle worked well and has allowed me to familiarize myself with some of the tools and functions available.  I am looking forward to the finished product, but if the “Benoît scenario” has taught me anything, I’ve got a lot of work ahead of me!  Just keep swimming, just keep swimming… 😉

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