Friday, December 12, 2008

Isabella Soprano College

the zoo as a metaphor ...

As digital technologies are close to the needs of students, is more common to use terms from the web usability also in educational settings. A powerful tool that is often overlooked is the metaphor, often used in the design of computer interfaces. The Windows desktop is a classic example, and is also common to find metaphors in some conceptualizations of the universe 2.0 and FLOSS , like the bazzar and cathedral. But, undoubtedly, are the growing number of worlds educational virtual responsible for the increased use of metaphors in the design of virtual learning environments.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Maybelline Mineral Foundation Swatches

mobile immersive learning ...

[Courtesy: http://educasecondlife.blogspot.com/ ]

... which is not very well is where does the label of "learning" :-)

Friday, October 24, 2008

Woke Up With Severely Swollen Lymph Node

instructional design 'online'-open ...

Coincidentally two articles have appeared convergent themes that shed light on a central section and -learning 2.0, such as instructional design. On the one hand, Graham Atwell wonders if instructional design is dead as we know it. Apparently, his view depends on the conceptualization that is made of "instructional design"
"Is instructional design dead? It depends, I suppose, what is meant by instructional design. Yes, if the focus revolves around the sequencing of learning objects and the figure of the master controller applications. But it is not if we talk about the development of materials to help people learn. "
and adds a final comment just as important:
"The global learning environment is not only the site (approach that goes beyond e-portfolios , the PLEs and VLE), the latest learning environment is the world around us, which of course includes the web. But it also includes people, books and our environment (physical). A major challenge for the future is how to ensure that the environment is rich in learning opportunities. "
The other comment on this point comes from Niall Sclater , which provides a continuum between open source and open content Finally, the design of open courses. His vision is far more pragmatic than that of Graham (Niall Graham is a technician and a sociologist), and their questions focused on the operational side:
"The opening of the course design process generates a series of questions: Do I feel comfortable if people can see the first versions of my work, which may be far from perfect? \u200b\u200bCompetitors will steal our ideas to be first in commercialization? (...) What happens if an open show my ignorance about some content of the course I'm doing? ".
Somehow, I have always understood everything related to SocialLearn and the movement of open educational resources as a cultural phenomenon-conceptual rather than technological or operational. It seems clear that these are issues that have no easy fit in conventional educational structures and whose implementation requires doses of voluntary leaving aside the cost-benefit analysis.
emmm ... also seems clear that movement is still under construction ...

Monday, September 29, 2008

Buying Ice Skates Northampton

process design user-centered learning ...

One aspect that is often overlooked in the design of learning processes with digital technologies is the target: who is leading the process. This is a structural problem that becomes even more explicit in the field of academia. For example, when universities teach future educators to develop teaching sequences with digital technologies will be aimed at wider audiences, as in the fields curriculum design, organizational innovation, social intervention programs, and so on. Typically in these cases is to focus on a group stereotype ("young", "adult", "society", etc.), whose definition does not take into account the psychosocial changes associated with the use of technology. In the time to internalize the academy change, the evolution of the social scene has reached a level where it makes explicit the break between the theoretical model and the real situation. This gives rise to problems of fit (or disengage, as you look) like this: Where would fit the profile within the academic orthodoxy?, What type of conventional teaching resources (methodological and instrumental) are most likely in accordance with their characteristics, and do what those resources would be facilitators (rms) of their learning?

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

How Old Do You Have To Be To Work In Autozone

what's next ...

21 ideas for 21st century education?



+

Friday, July 25, 2008

Does Wireless Internet Cause Cancer

edupunk (iii) ...

I'm working on a project that links the concept of fashion, edupunk , with three movements in the same tune: Open Educational Resources (open educational resources), social learning (social learn) and personal learning environments (Personal Learning Environments).
the meantime, I stumbled on this video is priceless. The most interesting is the dialogue of the texts and the message of the song . Although it seems inappropriate to mix and edupunk Oasis, the end result is brilliant.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

★ Ugg Moccasins

3D learning ... Science

The virtual reality prominently among myths of ICT for education . For years immersive 3D environments and metaverses are a common ground in the discourse of new technologically mediated educational practices. And, in view of some items, it seems that the serious press not escape this hyperbolic line.
What makes it different from virtual reality, driving fantasies about him, is that there is little empirical evidence substantiating the most exaggerated claims. There are very few serious studies on the social uses of Secondlife and even less about what happens in other scenarios immersive uncommercial. The available research comes from consulting with interests in the sector, which makes them unreliable. For its part, the view from the education field is that the pseudo-scientific discourses have not been validated, most of them come from sociology and almost none has derived interesting for teaching.
long ago teachers in schools and corporations engage in virtual environments by relying on some kind of 3D immersive technology. Most of these practices is to replicate real situations led to the virtual, taking advantage of synchronous communication channels such as chat or video conference to facilitate interaction among agents. These experiences give rise to two types of methods, simulations and virtual labs. The former are translations of real situations fictionalized in order to place the participant in contexts that require decision making and lead to cognitive dissonance . Along with overcoming the dissonance, the back scaffolding (see theories of Vygotsky and Bruner ), which is facilitated by social interaction - supposedly more powerful in a setting that simulates reality and where the co-presence figures prominently - encourages the learning of participants. The second group practices consist of simulations carried out in controlled settings, such as remote virtual laboratories. Conceptually derived from remote desktop, remote laboratories are places where teacher and learner do practices using a common graphical interface and joint access to applications that develop learning processes. The potential of this tool has been questioned several times by the more orthodox education. And this about the unclear distinction between training and education that accompanies such exercises in controlled environments. Overcoming
current intensity depends on the appropriation of 3D technologies in formal educational settings. That is, the guide uses the developments and the speeches begin to settle alrederor increasingly validated practices in real situations, responding to needs real place in conventional learning contexts.
Meanwhile, Lively is Google's latest initiative , which lately seems interested in virtual reality. How powerful your metaverse concept is simplicity, the house brand. In Lively simply rooms where people chat. This is the room of the UNED :

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Disposable Shower Matt

2.0 ...

The issue seems to have gained interest from Science 2.0 Article of Ben Shneiderman, a professor of computer science at the University of Maryland , published in the journal Science .

musicians of the time, pushing the music of ordinary people. Punk emerged as a mockery to the rigidity of the conventions that concealed forms of social and cultural oppression. "
If we change the words" rock "by " training " and" musicians "by mainstream academic" , we have a rough idea of \u200b\u200b "edupunk"
. The term / movement is very interesting several reasons: covering the concerns of a number of teachers who seek continuous improvement in their practices 'online' and lack of responses in the technologies available in their institutions, can justify (in the epistemological level) the current e-learning 2.0
and, above all, gather around a concept (brand) a number of concerns present in the movement for open educational resources . source The critical point is the monitoring and evaluation. It is teaching something that has been with anarchist theory and the 'de-schooling' authors such as Illich , Reimer, Goodman or
Holt. In the alternative to formal schooling, Illich even suggests the possibility of building the conditions for using technology in the service of society, culture unschooling (Illich, I, The conviviality, Barcelona, \u200b\u200bBarral Editores, 1974 .) The progress of social software seems to go in the direction desired by Illich, but the discussion of quality in education and the need for control over educational processes and learning assessment provides serious arguments and contrary to the bases of edupunk . The debate is already and served in the coming years will be a topic of great interest to educationalists.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Hidden Blade Mechanism For Sale

edupunk (ii) ...

Chatting with Antonio Fumero

purpose of the seminar on 'The era 2.0: web, democracy, urbanism and citizenship'

Download Upload your own Slide dentist deserves an explanation because, apparently, is recurrent. Yesterday, the Congress of 2008 GUNI , J. Philipp Schmidt , explained about the accreditation of quality in an educational plan based entirely on the logic of the open, how anyone would be willing to pull out a tooth at a dentist whose title came from a university with such a system. Well,
presentation offers the keys to prove such teachings, but not bad as first thought.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Funny Save Date Quotes

edupunk ...


Elluminate is a suite that contains synchronous collaboration tools and runs on the main
LMS. Nial Sclater
presents it in his blog and points that have been used in the Open University
quite successfully in studies of mathematics. The most interesting is how educational software developers are beginning to offer micro-applications for virtual platforms. The logic begins to increasingly resemble that of the social software
known


and sharing strategy

development standards. In the case of LMS, as in the rest of the operating software web development approach aims to create basic applications that give Holidays multiple external developments. Which means that their quality will be increasingly less tied to the construction of virtual environments autorresolutivos (as was the tradition) and more to the ability to offer converged and inclusive spaces that accommodate a variety of applications 2.0.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Communication Boardfree

the 2.0 era ... Hollywood

... This is what we mean by e-leaning 2.0 and convergence of media and applications to face and online settings (in this case it is advisable to ignore the media machine of iphone ):


"Connected" Part 1: Social Uses

"Connected" Part 2: Academic Uses


Moral: educational technology is always ahead, because all the technology being developed at present is capable of being used in educational contexts, of what is she is appropriating and adapting to the needs in each context :-)

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Chilling Fever Lower Back Pain

and university 2.0 ...

If a college in the world that has taken seriously the OER In this interview, Andy Lane (Director of OpenLearn space ) explains the keys to your model.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

1stbirthdayinvitation Card

Web 2.0 and the natural evolution of the LMS ...

Source:
2.0 Octet
Declaration Cape Town Open Education , sponsored by the Open Society Institute Shuttleworth Foundation, "is both a statement of principles, a strategy statement and a statement commitment. Its aim is to provoke dialogue, inspire action and help grow the open education movement. " The statement invites teachers and students to participate actively in this movement, which includes use and improve the resources available and how to publish own resources through open licenses. It also calls for institutions to give priority to open education policy. "All educational resources funded with taxpayer dollars should be open educational resources. Accreditation processes should give preference to open educational resources. "
Sign the Declaration

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Toddler Red Swollen Toe

mobile learning? ... Andy

Manuel Acebedo I spoke in the International Workshop on Information Technologies and Communication for Development Cooperation of "Challenges for the integration of ICT in a networked cooperation."
answer some questions and proposing initiatives:
(1) Human development in the network society. Internet can act in providing opportunities not only to meet needs. That can be theorized from the approach to the space of flows
of Castells . To Acebedo is not clear that the space of flows act the same way when it comes to the exchange of capital in a global market or to facilitate peripheral countries. To benefit from the network society must take into account a dimension often neglected, "the value of ICT in cooperation is a function of the information appropriate to the context where they apply." (2) ICT for development. Following the metaphor of the reed and fishing, the spread of ICTs is that they add value to the instrument. Not only allow fishing in the local context, but which puts people in 'mainstream' global. (3) Integrating ICT cooperation. How? Implementing them in all phases of project development, from needs analysis to impact assessment. (4) Networking for development. Difference between institutional and enabling networks: access to information versus knowledge generation, etc. Types of networks for development: corporate knowledge or topics, projects, projects, networking, open source and diasporas.

(5) Cooperation 2.0. The co-network is a different way to work from lattice dynamics, guidance for the generation of knowledge in the nodes and the use of information in the space of flows. The aim is to carry out a reengineering based on the knowledge gained from the co-network.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Make Suction Cups Stick

lane and view of OER in the open university ...

CitiLab-Cornellà, Barcelona ,