Nov 07 2008

The best layed plans….

Published by JoAnn under Educause 2008, General

I had great plans to post summaries of all of the sessions that I attended at the EDUCAUSE conference. Unfortunately, reality set in when I got back to campus…. for the next two months I will need to dedicate all of my time to developing training materials for a new version of our course management system.

If all works according to plan I will post some of the information nuggets in my conference notes and the the next learning series mid January…. until then this blog may be pretty quite.

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Nov 01 2008

Mashups, Remixes, and Video Culture: Engaging the YouTube Generation in the Classroom

Published by JoAnn under Educause 2008

 

Presenters:

Peter Decherney, Assistant Professor, English and Cinema Studies, University of Pennsylvania; Renee Hobbs, Founder, Media Education Lab, Temple University; Susan Simon, Senior Learning Technologist, Dartmouth College; Anu Vedantham, Director, Weigle Information Commons, University of Pennsylvania

 

 

My Summary

A mashup is a web application that combines data from more than one source into a single integrated tool. Content used in mashups is typically obtained from a third party source via a public interface or API (web services). Other methods of obtaining content for mashups include Web feeds (e.g. RSS or Atom), videos, audio files, and screen scraping. (Wikipedia)

Mash-up videos are being used in education to comment on popular culture, products, and current events. Mash-up video mixes original images or sounds with music, quick-witted narrations or creative transitions. The result is a video dialog of sorts that makes a statement that addresses the central question presented in an assignment.

Fueled by digital cameras and recorders, and easy to use film and image editing software, it is easy for students to create what are in effect multimedia compositions. The idea that mashups are dialogs with source materials or events suggests to me a kind of active reading. In reading a print text, a book say, we encourage students to respond, and we teach them to underline, take margin notes, draw connections to other things they’ve read. Mashups require the same kind of engagement we try to get in reading print in our classrooms — making connections, interjecting ideas. However, they process of shifting from a private dialogue to a publicly shared one via a mash-up causes some key shifts. First, the reading is a performance. Second, the technology makes it possible to engage write/edit images, words, sound and video directly into the primary text, pulling it apart and mixing it up in ways that just don’t correspond at all to writing notes in a book’s margin. The following links will take you to sample mashup assignments, assessment strategies, student products, and copyright discussions.

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Oct 31 2008

Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge

Published by JoAnn under Educause 2008

Presenters: Christine L. Borgman

My Review: During this session Dr. Borgman provided a vision developed by the NSF Task Force on Cyberlearning for how educational institutions should prepare  learners to be successful in the environments in which they live and work. The vision notes that the ideal learning environment will assist students develop a  life-long learning portfolio created through:

  • Virtual learning simulations,
  • Exposure to customized interactions developed with a diverse set of materials
  • Mobile technologies that provide  access to school materials assignments and supplemental content,
  • Demonstrations of virtual interactions with classmates,
  • Ability to retrieve real-time data from remote sensors
  • Interactions among communities of learners across space and time

She went on to suggest that Institutions build a vibrant cyberlearning field that promotes cross disciplinary communities of researchers and practitioners that develop shared, interoperable designs of hardware, software, and services. Making the many of the resources available on the web with permission for unrestricted reuse and recombination.

The full presentation can be viewed online at http://connect.educause.edu/Library/Abstract/FosteringLearningintheNet/47560, and the National Science Foundation Task Force on Cyberlearning report can be accessed at  http://connect.educause.edu/Library/Abstract/FosteringLearningintheNet/47165

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Oct 29 2008

Teaching Nurse Anesthesia in a Second Life Operating Room Simulation

Published by JoAnn under Educause 2008

Presenters: David M. Antonacci, Director of Teaching & Learning Technologies, The University of Kansas MedicalCenter;Stephanie Gerald, Educational Technologist, The University of Kansas Medical Center

My Comments

Based on the abstract for this session I thought the presenters would be providing a set of tools that could be shared with the nursing program at my university. Unfortunately, the session concentrated on a very specific learning assessment simulation and the navigation of the KUMC island in Second Life.

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Oct 29 2008

Blogging the 2008 Educause Conference

Published by JoAnn under Educause 2008

I am attending the EDUCAUSE conference again this year and will be dedicating the next several postings to reviews of sessions attended and vendors spoken to at the conference. The postings will concentrate on presentations and vendors that address web 2.0 tools and their ability to enhance teaching and learning. Hope that you find some of the information useful.

Please review the 6 part “Modifying Bloom’s Taxonomy to Meet 21st Century Pedagogies” postings on this blog if you are looking for specific open source or low cost multimedia tools that can assist with enhancing student learning and preparing students for the digital world.

My plan is to post summaries over the next week to 10 days. Once all of the session summaries have been posted I will start posting a 4 part series dedicated to the use of digital storytelling in higher education.

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