Archive for the ‘software’ Category

it about how you use the (web 2.0) tool, not the tool itself

Friday, July 30th, 2010

This week I was fortunate to be able to attend a seminar presentation by Associate Professor Matthew Allen, called “Using Web 2.0 in Your Teaching”. Matthew is a Teaching Fellow of the Australian Learning and Teaching Council and is the leader of the ‘Learning in Networks of Knowledge‘ (LINK) project.

Matthew emphasised that Web 2.0 is about connection and stressed that when thinking about Web 2.0 we need to take into consideration the 4Cs.

    • Components: what feeds into the knowledge work system
    • Cognition and Collaboration: thinking and working together forms the processing system
    • Communication: the results of processing become public and the basis of audience reception and conversation

      Matthew presented us with his top 10 Web 2.0 tools and gave us some great ways to use them for learning & teaching. It was useful to be reminded that it’s not about the tool, it’s about what you can do with the tool. Here’s his list – I was surprised that I was only familiar with only two of them. They may not all be mainstream, but they could add value to the learning activities/ experiences you develop.

      1. xtimeline – xtimeline enables users to create timelines of events, in a constrained but flexible format, with collaboration features, and public communication options
      2. listphile – “a powerful tool for organizing and collaborating around structured information. Call it a database tool, if you will (but please don’t scare anyone away)” [**I couldn’t access this link today, but will check again later]
      3. slinkset – slinkset creates social news sites, private, shared or public like digg, with extensive yet simple to use design features
      4. posterous – posterous is a powerful yet simple blogging engine with a particular emphasis on ease of posting: do it by email
      5. mind42 – Mind mapping is … about entering ideas, arranging them … and refining and deepening ideas with colors, links and other attributes”
      6. quizlet – quizlet is a flashcard production and use system, with inbuilt group and collaboration features and innovative ways of testing knowledge
      7. reviewbasics – reviewbasics is a web-based service allowing users to work together to review documents, websites images with an emphasis on annotation
      8. springnote – “wiki, word processing, and file organization [and] … sharing, having collaborators… to organize all the information you need at your fingertips”
      9. knol.google – knol is Google’s answer to Wikipedia: editable, classified user-generated content based on the idea of a ‘knol’ (a unit of knowledge)
      10. wiggio – comprehensive group collaboration tool: calendars, to do, sharing, online meeting and polling … people work as teams, not a group of individuals

      You can also access the presentations on each of the tools on Slideshare, and a video recording of Matthew’s presentation capturing his discussion on each of the tools. You can follow Matthew on Twitter and read more of his work on his website (look for ‘writing’ tab).

      automated captioning for Google Video & YouTube – great for accessibility

      Friday, November 27th, 2009

      Google Video and YouTube have recently announced new features that support automated captioning and automated timing for video that will help hearing impaired people.

      This can only be a good thing, and indicates just how far new technologies have come to enable advanced speech recognition (ASR) to automatically generate captions for uploaded video. Well done! This is all still being rolled out to support languages other then English, but it’s only a matter of time for wider adoption of this development to support issues of accessibility for video content.

      You can read more about this on the Google Blog post: Automatic captions in YouTube.

      ‘hosted conversations’, brought to you courtesy of Google Wave

      Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

      ’It’s in the news today, oh boy’, (to borrow a line) and I thought I’d collect some of the ‘noise’ and provide it here for anyone interested. Google Wave has been announced to developers and coders to drum up some application, plugin, widget, & extension development before it gets released to the world.

      If you’ve got the time and bandwidth check out the developer preview at Google I/O (181MB & 80mins) “Google Wave is a new tool for communication and collaboration on the web, coming later this year.”

      Commentators have been busy writing about the implications of this service/application for the use of the web, in education, and business. I’ve collected a few links and apologise for not annotating them…

      The Top 6 Game-Changing Features of Google Wave

      Google Wave – the beggining of the end for VLEs?

      Look out Outlook, Google’s Wave is coming

      I’ve Seen the Future and the Future is Us (Using Google)

      What Intrigues Me About Google Wave

      Does Google Wave Mean the End of the LMS?

      A Google Wave to the LMS Haters

      Google Wave: What Might Email Look Like If It Were Invented Today?

      Google Wave Drips With Ambition-A New Communication Platform For A New Web

      Google Wave: A Complete Guide

      Whatever the ‘wave’ ends up being capable of, it does point the way towards being more collaborative while using an integrated interface in the web browser, and I reckon that’s cool.

      last week’s Apple Mobile Learning seminar (higher education)

      Sunday, May 31st, 2009

      I was able to attended the Apple Mobile Learning seminar (for higher education but off course any educators were welcome) at the VCA last week. Quite a few colleagues were there and it was also fun to bump into some twitter friends while enjoying something to eat and drink afterwards. Everyone who attended was provided with an iPod Touch (you could use your own iPhone of ‘Touch’ if you wanted) on the way in and we were asked to use them to provide feedback during the presentation. It was a neat demonstration of the (free) ‘Mobile Academic Platform’ (MobileAP) a web-based platform for creating interactive conference and classroom experiences. It contains features like question/response, discussion, link sharing and scheduling. It was great to be able to be part of he demo and to see how it worked from a user perspective.

      The presentation focused on mobile applications and we were given time to check out the apps that were on the ‘Touches’. Some of them were; iHomework, Acid Plus, Medical Calc, Papers, Anatomy, OsiriX, Hubble, iStanford, Tally Counter, Free Piano, NYTimes, WSJ, Notecards lite, Critter Crunch lite (game), Blackboard, Art, Free wifi and AudioBoo (audioboo.fm) which all means I need to find a free afternoon to follow them up.

      The focus on higher education meant that iTunesU was highlighted, and it’s good to see just what some unis are doing. Hopefully we’ll have our own channel delivering some worthy material soon enough. Overall a worthwhile event which gave us an insight into some of the developments in e-learning and application development for mobile devices as well as how mobile devices can provide engagement for students (as well as staff). Oh, and I didn’t win the iPod Touch 🙁

      there’s more than one way to deliver a podcast

      Sunday, August 24th, 2008

      I recently attended an Apple Roadshow that was focussed on the introduction of iTunes U in Australia. I was interested in what they’d tell us about the ‘program’ and also to see what they could provide as support for ‘workflow’ (getting podcasts uploaded).

      While a little cynical about our institution having to be locked to delivering podcasts through iTunes, I was pleasantly surprised to note that this wasn’t necessarily the case. We could link to a podcast (kept in iTunes U) directly from a unit section in our LMS. So, each object has the ability to be accessed via an individual url rather then through the iTunes feed.

      The other thing they told us about was the ability of iTunes U to provide access to both public and private podcasts. This means that we would be able to tag some of our material as public and freely available (say more for marketing and communication purposes), while other material could be tagged as private and only available for registered or authenticated users.

      They also have a nice feature in the iTunes U server software/application called Podcast Producer that tops and tails, and watermarks each podcast to provide a uni/faculty ‘livery’ to each object. This would save a lot of time in getting podcasts delivered to production, and at least give some consistent ‘look’ to what was made available.

      I suppsoe iTunes U is a lot like Lectopia (the system we currently use to record lectures live) in regard to processing the recordings, but it doesn’t do the actual lecture theatre recordings – it’s more suited for individual desktop work. I did come away with a different view on what Apple were providing and can see there could be benefits for those involved in the program.

      As our institution hasn’t yet signed up for this service, it would be useful for us to at least encourage our leadership to enagage in talks and examine the usefulness of such a service for our university, both for teaching and learning, and for marketing.

      a month is a long time between posts

      Saturday, August 9th, 2008

      I’ve convinced myself that I need to write a blog post today, or I’ll feel bad for the rest of the year. My last post was a month ago, which to me seems far too long! I’ve jotted down a few ideas for posts over that time and I’ll get to them soon – but for now it’s just a matter of getting some words and thoughts down so I can sleep tonight. In between weekend chores, watching the Olympics, and catching up with what’s happening to my friends via Twitter, I haven’t spent any time preparing or thinking about this post so, here we go (might have to rely of some ‘stream of consciousness’?, or how’s this for an idea? As this blog is about my observations and reflections, I think I might write about some of the more significant aspects of my work that I’ve experienced over the last month. Hope you find it interesting and maybe even useful…

      I attended a workshop on e-Assessment by Geoffrey Crisp who presented as a part of his ALTC fellowship project. We were given a good overview of assessment and how you might create new possibilities for immersion and activity using e-assessment as well as enhancing social interaction (through using a wiki) and even adding value to learning by doing something other assessment can’t do. You can visit his website, register as a user, and check out the resources available.

      The university where I work has three campuses and I regularly travel between the one I’m based on (Geelong @ Waurn Ponds) to our main campus in Melbourne. This is usually a 75 to 90 minute commute and I try to hitch a ride with someone who’s driving a university vehicle (to keep one extra car off the road and for the opportunity to talk on the way). Because there’s quite a few people traveling on a daily basis, the university has undertaken a trial for three months of running a bus (12 seater) between the two campuses. I’ve used it a couple of times since inception, and I think that it might catch on. There’s always the opportunity to meet and chat with people from other areas of the university, but the IT people have installed a mobile wireless internet connection on board (this is the cool part). There’s a wireless router (connected to 7.2 NextG card) so everyone with a wireless laptop connection can connect into the uni network while zipping up the highway. There were four of us checking email (me also keeping an eye on my Twitter friends) earlier this week, and after a day of meetings it’s nice to get some of that correspondence out of the way before getting home. There are plans to also provide a couple of laptops on the bus for those who don’t have them, and they are also going to provide a couple of IP telephone handsets so we can call the office over the network instead of using mobile phones. Apparently the cost of maintaining this mobile wireless connection annually (excluding the card and router) would only be around $600 as part of our telco contract. Cheap! All we need now is an AC power supply to plug in the laptops in case batteries run out – and maybe even an espresso machine. 😉

      I also managed (with a couple of colleagues) to get a paper written and submitted (by the end of July) for peer review for the ASCILITE Conference at the end of the year. Don’t understand why there’s such a long lead time but I understand that there will probably be well over 200 papers submitted.

      I partcipated in the The Knowledge Bank online conference 2008 which was focused on Web 2.0 in education: what it is, how it’s being used today and its potential to radically change education. The event was facilitated through Elluminate (sessions were recorded and available from the website), featured live blogging and is supported by a wiki. It was a great (learning) experience to be part of a group of nearly 200 people from all over the world listening to a range of speakers/presenters. The event was well managed and with a few moderators and presenters (with their slides) went more smoothly than I thought it might. It was fun to hear school bells ringing in the background as teachers participated live (and included their students!). Nice to experience what’s possible.

      I’m also on a group providing feedback and support to the implementation project for a learning repository for the university. We’ve been discussing project scope and milestones, metadata, workflow, digital objects, permissions, and training etc. Will be nice to have this available by the end of the year.

      I also attended a training session/workshop on using our new powerlink for Blackboard/Vista that enables us to create a Drupal/SMF and/or a Mediawiki installation in our units/courses that integrates within the system. This will be a good enhancement to the LMS ad provide opportunities for some authentic collaboration between students, particularly those studying off-campus/remotely.

      I also attended a couple (brown bag) lunch time seminars; ‘multiple choice questions – cultural, linguistic and item writing factors’, and ‘designing, facilitating and assessing group assignments’.

      Well, that’s most of the exciting stuff (I’ve probably missed a few things) and looking back reasonably interesting. As second semester settles down I’ll be writing more reflectively on these experiences.