Wednesday, 30 April 2008

Future of the internet?

The BBC's website has some short comments from web gurus as to what the future might hold for the internet and the web. Contributors include Tim Berners-Lee

Thursday, 24 April 2008

YouTube for media studies teaching

Alexandra Juhasz, a Professor of Media Studies in theUS, has just taught a complete course through the medium of YouTube and blogged on the experience (how cringingly hip is that?). To quote from this and a related article in the Chronicle, she said that the features of the site broke down the power relations of the academic classroom, and as a result, "the nature of teaching and learning shifts (I’d say for the worse)."


Tuesday, 22 April 2008

Could your students go tech-free for a week?

Students at the University of Central Florida were challenged, as an assignment, to go tech-free for five days. The rules:

No cell phones, iPods, portable CD players, text messaging, e-mail, computers, TVs, DVDs, video games.

Their lecturer, Mary Ann Murdoch, who teaches English Composition, wanted them to consider "Are they really in charge of these devices, or are all these devices in charge of them?"

Out of 26 students, just 2 survived the challenge, with many giving into temptation after just one day. At least one student didn't even bother to try. Most of the students reported excruciating boredom and had to resort to sleeping, cleaning or doing homework!

Monday, 21 April 2008

Conference - June 5/6 2008

As Spring has sprung, time now to think of those gloriously sunny days in early June when each year CELT/NUIG hosts its annual conference. Last year's event of course was the impetus for this very blog, but this year's theme is a little different in that we move away from specifics to more profound general questions on the nature and future of universities! With an excellent panel of speakers and workshop facilitators we really expect to host a fascinating debate and unleash some creative and challenging ideas as Universities make the transition into this new era, carving space in the cultural, political and economic landscape and recapturing (or losing) their transformative potential in the lives of students and citizens. To book your place (and do it quick to take advantage of the discount rate) head over to http://www.conference.ie and to join in the pre-conference discussion visit our sister (gender?) blog at http://ollscoil.blogspot.com.

Irish Blackboard/WebCT Users' Group Meeting

It was great to attend the Blackboard/WebCT Irish Users Group meeting on Thursday last at TCD. The WebCT side of this group has been active for some time, but Ken Lacey (DIT) and others have identified the need/opportunity for greater communication and sharing between both platforms, particularly in light of the recent BB/WebCT 'merger'.

Vinny Wade (TCD) welcomed participants and Ken Lacey chaired the activities for the day. Barry McIntyre's (IADT) presentation on WebCT CE 6 provided an insight into how he is utilising WebCT in marketing courses, while Paul Gormley (NUIG) demonstrated the NUIG Blackboard Learning System (Academic Suite) and described the NUIG implementation of the VLE platform.

The open forum with Richard Borrows (Blackboard) proved very useful. Ken finished the day with a demo of SafeAssign.

Officers appointed to the Blackboard/WebCT Irish User's Group were: Ken Lacey, Muiris O'Grady, Theresa Logan-Phelan, Paul Gormley and Grace O'Leary.

If you wish to obtain more notes on any of the above, please contact Theresa Logan-Phelan at tlgnphln@tcd.ie.

Colleagues interested in signing up to the HEAnet Blackboard/WebCT Irish Users' Group list serve can email "BLACKBOARD-USERGROUP@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE" with the text “subscribe Blackboard‐Usergroup” in the body of the email. No subject description is required. For more detailed instructions on how to subscribe click here

Friday, 18 April 2008

IT in the Humanities 5th Annual Conference

Next Monday (21st April) the final year undergraduate BA students who take IT as one of their subjects at NUI Galway are having their “conference”.

To explain … one of their modules concerns Information Technology in the Humanities. Each student self-selects a topic that they are interested in, and spends the year doing some research in the area. They produce a conference paper (in a specific format, with strict referencing enforced) which goes into a conference proceedings. They also have to give a 10 minute conference presentation on their topic.

I would certainly encourage, if you are available on Monday at all, to pop along to a session that interests you. Pat Byrne, who runs the module, would be delighted to have a wider audience, and it gives the students a huge boost to present in front of a wider group.

The schedule kicks off at 9.15am in IT125 and continues, with breaks for coffee and lunch, until 3.15pm. Topics include (5 plucked from a list of 25):

  • The application of Information Technologies to Sports Parachuting (Skydiving)
  • Are Video Games Art?
  • E-Learning: A Focus on Interactivity and the challenge of overcoming the lack of human interaction
  • Social Networking and its Effects
  • The Open Source Movement: Components of a Revolution

Blog IT

Jane Hart's E-learning Pick of the Day yesterday was Blog IT, a Facebook application that allows you to post to your blog from within Facebook. So, I thought I'd give it a go and it seems to work. This is coming from my Facebook space!

I'm not sure quite how it's going to be useful!

Friday, 11 April 2008

Digital whiteboards, three-D graphics and more for $40

From TED: Johnny Lee demos his amazing Wii Remote hacks, which transform the $40 game piece into a digital whiteboard, a touchscreen and a head-mounted 3-D viewer.

Tuesday, 8 April 2008

Blogged to death???

From the Guardian today:
...in March, Russell Shaw, a technology contributor to Zdnet and the Huffington Post, died from a heart attack a few months after Marc Orchant, another US tech blogger, died following a massive coronary. Meanwhile, the New York Times is reporting stress, sleep disturbance and exhaustion among members of the blogging community, and there is a question being bandied around: did blogging kill these people?


Read on....

Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Pangea Day - World Wide Film & video Event


Pangea Day - the first global event to link film, video and images across the world will take place on May 10th. To find out more about this exciting project visit the Pangea Day website and view the trailer below.