Thursday, 28 June 2007

Visualisation and Presentation (Part 2)

Hans Rosling gave a follow-up talk at TED 2007, showing the next generation of his TrendAnalyzer software, which was subsequently bought by Google. In another stunning presentation he discusses world poverty, and ends by swallowing a sword. Seriously!

Tuesday, 26 June 2007

Photo-web?

Fiona has pointed out this fascinating demonstration of an amazing photographic software system (Photosynth) which has to be seen to be believed. It can link multi-scale imagery and produce complete representations from all existing images of a location on the web. Have a look at the video, it takes about 7 minutes.

Monday, 25 June 2007

Stephen Heppell's keynote

It's coming...just a wee bit of editing to be done and should be with you soon, completing the 'full set' of keynotes.....then we'll look at adding some info based on the parallel sessions and other materials online. See - all the more reason to subscribe to this blog.....

Bill McDaniel's Keynote

Bill McDaniel who works at the Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), here in Galway spoke about some of his perceptions of the future of learning in the digital age. Bill (who hails from Texas) previously worked for Adobe and ran a number of his own companies before he moved over here to lead the E-Learning Cluster in DERI.

DERI itself is an interesting organisation which has successfully attracted significant external funding and is the world's largest research group on the Semantic Web, working to develop the new technologies that will transform the web (into, for example, a resource that can be searched on the basis of natural language, meaning and concepts instead of straight text matching searches as at present).
Anyway, here he is:

Saturday, 23 June 2007

virtual mud bath?

Well, this weekend is, in England, the traditional time of mudbaths (photo credit), loud music and quack crystal healers that constitutes the Glastonbury festival. For geeks and those of us who live in another country (if not another world) the Guardian newspaper has teamed up with Intel to provide a three day music festival in Second Life. This might be an opportunity to give this bizarre world, constructed entirely of electrons, a try whilst also hearing some music. Of course, you will no doubt come across all sorts of strange people there - but if it gets too heavy, skip over to the education zones including the NMC Campus.

Speaking of the NMC (New Media Consortium), they have produced an entertaining promotional video for their next conference (in 2008 at Princeton University).

Friday, 22 June 2007

More keynote videos

We hope, next week, to be able to provide you with a wider range of choices for viewing the conference keynote presentations. Whilst the best quality is via the Camtasia/Flash versions, these do take a little while to get started as they need to download a fair amount of the content before they can start playing. For those who are really impatient and can't wait for the 20-30 seconds or so it takes to start (sometimes a wee bit longer if your connection bandwidth isn't great), then we'll also provide a 'streamed' version. The streamed versions are similar in layout to the iPod video files, in that the video is in a 'picture in picture' view.

Anyway, for those who want to see more now, try this from Michael Kerres:

http://www.nuigalway.ie/celt/webcasts/MichaelKerres/MichaelKerres.html

Or this, from our local Director of Computer Services, Dr. Kieran Loftus:

http://www.nuigalway.ie/celt/webcasts/KieranLoftus/KieranLoftus.html

Thursday, 21 June 2007

Ray Land - Keynote presentation


Prof. Ray Land, the opening keynote speaker, is captured here in the first of our recordings to go online. We are using Camtasia to provide these (in Flash format) and when you click you will have to wait about 20 seconds or so for the recording to start, but it's worth it! Ray also wanders off camera for the first couple of minutes, rattles his microphone, etc. All well known subversive actions to challenge the AV team - but we still caught him! ;-)

You can also download the PowerPoint slides, the audio only (in MP3 format) or a video iPod file (m4v).

Enjoy and discuss.

http://www.nuigalway.ie/celt/webcasts/RayLand/RayLand.html

Monday, 18 June 2007

Visualisation and Presentation

Many folk commented about how it was great to see the confidence with which speakers like Stephen Heppell can throw away the PowerPoint crutches that so many of the rest of us are still hobbling along with. An interesting example of presentation using a statistical representation system (Gapminder) was the talk by Hans Rosling (Professor of Global Health, medical doctor and researcher at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden - oh, and an amateur sword-swallower!) at the TED conference last year. Just look at these lovely statistics!

If you want to see some really amazing examples of what you can do with 'multi-touch' (mentioned in one of the talks), then have a look at this, also from TED last year. Now Microsoft have just released their 'surface' - also worth a look. Much better than your average coffee table - every student cafe should have one!

Sunday, 17 June 2007

Big Brother - here I am and this is what I'm up to

What better way to run a surveillance society than to get enthusiastic citizens to agree to post onto the web their whereabouts and a short report (micro-blog) of their current activity? Make it easier for them by integrating it into their mobile phone and let them post up pictures, videos and other information. Self-tracking made easy - that's jaiku, the latest Finnish innovation.

Alternatively, it's a nifty way of keeping in touch with friends, family and colleagues. Perhaps in education, students, tutors and peer-groups can post updates quickly and easily by text message as they work collaboratively on projects and courses. Listen to/watch the inventor in the video below giving a really interesting presentation about social networking media, including an historical overview.

You decide which it is. Meanwhile, I'm available on my own personal Jaiku channel as per the link on the right hand side of this blog!





p.s. thanks, Ina for the info.

Saturday, 16 June 2007

'in world' or out of this world?

In response to some emails enquiring about Second Life:

Well, my Second Life (SL) avatar, Iain Wise, tells me that he has started up an official group in SL for anyone who was at the conference or who works at the university to join. The group is called, rather imaginatively, "NUI, Galway." If you want to join and perhaps meet up for an exploration and some 'in world' seminars and discussions, then please do. Second Life membership is free and the membership of this group is also without charge.

So why not give it a go? As you'll see there are many universities and other organisations within SL (Sweden even has an embassy!). Go to http://www.secondlife.com/ and follow the instructions. Once you get 'in world' and sort out your avatar's appearance, basic controls, etc, then click on 'search' at the bottom of the window and type in NUI, Galway and then choose 'join group'. Let's see if you can manage that.

It's odd at first, but honestly you'll get the hang of it. Iain, in the meantime, will try to contact some experts and arrange some sessions with them, as well as tours of various education locations (including, for example, Harvard University's Berkman Centre). Oh, there's a handy pub called "The Blarney Stone" in SL's version of Dublin city centre, just along from Trinity College, so if you fancy a virtual pint of Guinness and to try Irish dancing....

Related links:
  • Interesting project from OU and others, is schome.
  • Harvard Distance Learning courses in SL: example of Law, intro for students
  • JISC (UK) online conference, Second Life session in YouTube. (I know, it's getting out of hand!)
  • Sloodle - first attempts to integrate SL with a VLE, interesting project at University of Paisley & partners in San Jose State University.
  • Article in Times Higher this week on campuses in SL.

Thursday, 14 June 2007

serendipitous learning - academic on leisurely stroll makes interesting discovery!

How's this for an interesting by-product of the conference? Jana Tietze, of Humboldt University in Berlin, who was speaking at the conference (on attempts to introduce e-learning into Horticulture courses in her university) was wandering around our campus looking at the various trees (her particular interest) and discovered a really interesting looking, old oak near the "quad" of the university (the old building dating back to the 1840s). She photographed it and when she returned to her department consulted a colleague and they identified it as a very old example of Holm, or Holly, Oak (Quercus ilex) which originates in the Mediterranean Region, this species from Spain. This particular one seems to date to a period before the university building (and indeed shows on old maps as a large tree, according to local head gardener). The species was first introduced to England around 1600, thence to Ireland, and this one is likely to have been planted sometime in the 1700s!



The things you learn......


p.s. if you happen to be in Berlin next week (and why not?) then pop in to the Multimedia Days at Unter den Linden or Adlershof.

Wednesday, 13 June 2007

Presentations - update

Hi. Just in response to a couple of email queries - Yes, the keynote presentations will be available online via this blog! When? Well as soon as we can, we're a bit tied up with a small matter of a VLE upgrade and integration exercise this week! But we'll pop them up soon, probably in the next week. The key though is to either subscribe to this blog using our RSS feed (see the right hand side) or simply to visit us here often and experience the continued discussion and new items that appear almost every day!

Repositories and open content

Following on from the comments earlier by Niall, Fiona and Mary about repositories, whether you like 'em or not, funders seem to! There are many projects around the world developing repositories, some built on open-source platforms, others proprietary; some hosting free (or Creative Commons) content, others not so free; some holding basic text documents and or PowerPoint slides, some with rich, interactive multimedia; some publicly accessible, some not....

Certainly they can be useful in helping in the mad rush to find materials ahead of a deadline, or help with random browsing and sampling of content produced by others, but whether the 'learning objects' within will enrich the student experience or go the way of clip art collections, is up to how they are used (and any intrinsic value or 'affordances' for learning).

In projects such as Ireland's NDLR, much of the emphasis is now on building 'communities of practice' around subject areas to motivate teachers to share their materials with each other.

Anyway, for interest, some repositories and content collections that were mentioned in the conference and around the coffee were:

Enjoy.

Tuesday, 12 June 2007

Acknowledgements

I'd like to thank a number of people who were instrumental in making this conference a huge success.

First of all, the conference office (Patricia, Kym and the others) who helped to make sure that registration, accommodation, catering, bag-packing (and other details) went smoothly.

The session chairs - Kelly, Iain, Kieran, Caoimhín, Paul, Labhaoise, Tim, Fiona, Marie, Máire Áine, Catherine, John and Éilis. Many thanks for volunteering your services, and keeping everyone in order.

Our fantastic Audio/Visual team - Pat, Tom and Garrett - who made sure there were no technical hitches.

Mike, in the bar, for the lunches. I think this venue worked very well.

Thanks to Alejandra, Ruth and Fiona, for being "official" photographers.

And finally, the CELT Learning Technologies team and the conference committee - Fiona, Gráinne, Paul, Labhaoise, Bernie and Mary - for doing all the real work. In particular, Fiona put together the book of abstracts, as well as helping with A/V and network arrangements. And Gráinne was responsible for the celtconf email, and dealing with any queries that came in. This conference could not have happened without your efforts.

Sunday, 10 June 2007

day 2 - setting sail into the new century?

On day 2, Prof. Wim van Petegem (KU Leuven) who is the Chair of the Coimbra Group (of which NUI Galway is a member) Learning Technology Taskforce spoke about his own internal institutional structures, and very briefly highlighted the underlying educational philosophy of Leuven which is based on 'Guided Independent Learning.' His talk complemented that of Kieran Loftus, the Director of Computer Services, who introduced and chaired the session and allowed some focus on matters of operational service provision.

In the afternoon, following a delayed flight and a nail-biting wait for a taxi, we were entertained, stimulated and enlightened by Prof. Stephen Heppell (in the photo, doing what he loves best - sailing!) and his random walk through magnificent examples of technological innovation in education, with children designing their own schools, producing their own 'TV' stations and challenging preconceived notions of success and achievement. An excellent way to round off the event, even if we did all leave realising that the university 'as is' is potentially finished if it obsesses with the "1970s industrial production model"! Stephen's contention that the last 50 years of academia have been an aberration and we need to get back to engagement, creativity, transformation and, above all, the 'community of scholars,' rather than mass programmes of bureaucratic accreditation, was thought provoking. Discuss......(not via a 1500 word essay, of course)



Ray Land in conversation

The opening keynote was given by Ray Land of Strathclyde University and was a fascinating perspective on the impact of some of the new "Web 2.0" technologies on higher education. In the time limit, Ray could only mention some of the issues briefly, so we asked him (on day 2) if he wouldn't mind popping into our studio for a more detailed chat on the very powerful idea of "threshold concepts".

Links

Other seminars/presentations

James Morrison, editor of Innovate - the Journal of Online Learning has dropped an email to notify us of some forthcoming live internet seminars. These are presentations by authors in the journal and are run using Adobe Connect (which was previously called Macromedia Breeze, which was originally built on Macromedia Flash Communications Server - FYI!!). You can book a place on these, which will let you ask questions, but the number of spaces is limited. However, anyone can register to look over the archived versions. I've also added the RSS feed to Innovate on the side of this blog so we can keep an eye on recent papers.

Friday, 8 June 2007

Thank you!

Thanks to all of you who attended, participated in and helped organise the conference. From the feedback thus far it seems to have gone well, with lots of food for thought. Now the extended plenary session begins using the technology we talked about - blogs, etc. So I've freed up the silly login requirement for posting, so that it should be easier for anyone to comment.

The conference presentations will also be up in due course, along with reports and supplementary material. In the meantime though, we'll take a wee break - for at least this evening!

Conference Photographs

Day 2

Day 2 it is, although admittedly by only a couple of minutes! Remember that this blog site will keep running after the conference. We'll be using it to link to the recordings of the keynote presentations and also to provide copies of PowerPoint slides from other sessions (where available). But, the important point is that its a blog with 'comments enabled' - so post away with questions, queries or points for discussion. An event like this can only really serve as a taster for some of the issues and that's what is so powerful about this technology; we can carry on the discussion, refine viewpoints and provide useful links. So go on, give it a try!

Links to topics mentioned in passing on day 1:

Thursday, 7 June 2007

issues and themes

Today, most of the keynote speakers talked about aspects of Web 2.0, touching upon what its implications are, or could be, for teaching and learning. We didn't get a chance to go into things in a great deal of depth during the rather short discussion sessions, but then the idea of this conference has always been to get that discussion happening informally in small groups over coffee, a drink in the bar or a walk on the prom.

Ray Land talked briefly about the ideas of "troublesome knowledge" and "threshold concepts" and raised the question about how these new technologies might align with (or not) these ideas. They are at the very heart of what is often held to constitute 'higher education' (indeed all levels of education, to be fair): that previously held knowledge and preconceptions need to be challenged, that students need to experience a disconnect of sorts, an uncomfortable, troublesome feeling in which they can't see quite how to reconcile this new information or new way of thinking with how they have previously, personally "understood" the subject they are studying. All academic disciplines have 'threshold concepts', fundamental ideas that must be grasped before the student can move on.

The question, then, posed by Ray and also raised again in the discussion after Michael Kerres' presentation, is how can Web 2.0 (or whatever we want to call it) technologies help in this personally transformative, intellectual journey? In the rush of 'fast time' how can students carve out space and time to think, to reflect, to face up to these conceptual challenges and to move to the next level? Surely the barrage of information, the bombardment of communication, all of these are in danger of pushing things aside? Perhaps this is an indicator of what the role of the teacher, the expert practitioner might then be in this new era: designing, shaping, guiding and focusing on the real 'learning', the processes of coming to know, to act and to "be" in the subject or discipline under study.

Bill McDaniel's enthusiastic embracing of new technologies shows that we needn't fear them, but equally we need to come to terms with this wider context in which more and more of our students are going to be inhabiting. That we need to be clear as to what constitutes learning, to focus a little more on the processes than the content is also part of the message of today.

Anyway, those are just first random thoughts at the end of a busy day. Keep up the discussion and get ready for more tomorrow.

Photos

Conference photos from the first day are now available here on our little link to flikr - thanks to Alejandra and Fiona. The recordings of the keynotes and other "vox pop" videos will appear shortly!

Wednesday, 6 June 2007

The trick is to keep breathing...

Too late now for any last minute changes, the momentum has built up and launch takes place at 9:30 am. But what of this blog? Well, we will keep it going after the event if there is demand for continued discussion and knowledge sharing. Recordings of the conference keynote presentations and short interviews will also be added, along with copies of papers and handouts, but only after we've had at least a couple of days to recover!

tick, tock, tick, tock

The countdown has begun. Twenty-four hours from now we'll be heading towards the first coffee break after the introductory presentations and first keynote address!

The weather is excellent here in Galway, so if you're packing don't forget your sun-block and cool shades, particularly if you plan in taking a stroll along "the prom" at Salthill in the evening - important to look your best there.

Last minute dashing around, tweaking things and wondering whether we've ordered enough biscuits for the tea break, receiving calls and emails with obscure queries from attendees, and remembering to keep smiling even in the absence of sleep - all part of the normal preparations for such an event!