Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ beyondwebct
Barbara Lindsey

BRINGing it OUT a notch - 1 Translation(s) | dotSUB - 0 views

  •  
    K12 Online conference keynote and use of dotsub to make it available to those who don't understand Spanish.
Barbara Lindsey

K12 Online Conference 2009 | KICKING IT UP A NOTCH KEYNOTEBRINGing it OUT a notch - 0 views

  •  
    Thought-provoking discussion on how the pedagogical approaches and economical limitations impact the impact of technology on curricula. Terrific critical lens used.
Barbara Lindsey

Mathematweets by Maria Andersen on Prezi - 0 views

  •  
    Great aid to explain the education value of twitter
Barbara Lindsey

News: The Mobile Campus - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  • Powell’s experiment, however, demonstrates the current limitations of Abilene Christian’s mobile learning study. Because the experiment took place on such a small scale, the margins of error were sometimes as high as 13 points, making it impossible to render statistically significant findings.
  • Although the university plans to saturate the 4,000-student campus with iPhones and iPod Touches by the fourth year of the study (giving them out to each incoming class), even then it will be difficult to extract good data, said Perkins, the lead researcher. “We could do this study for 10 years, and then maybe we could talk about statistical significance,” he said. “That’s just simply a function of the sample size.” In order to generate data that would comment widely on the uses and effectiveness of mobile technology on campuses, Perkins added, the study would have to partner with other institutions.
  • Since not all the students could necessarily afford AT&T service plans for their iPhones, and U.S. tax law would not permit the university to subsidize service plans for its students, Abilene Christian offered students the alternative of an iPod Touch — a device that shares many of the iPhone’s functions, but requires a wireless network to support Web-surfing.
Blanca Garcia Valenzuela

Free Technology for Teachers: Free 33 Page Guide - Google for Teachers - 0 views

  •  
    "This guide avoids some of the obvious things, like using Google Docs for collaborative writing, and instead focuses on some of the lesser-used Google tools options"
Barbara Lindsey

YouTube - Subtitles - 0 views

  •  
    Humorous take on subtitling
Barbara Lindsey

LOL! Is this how you curb texting in class? | EducationTechNews.com - 0 views

  •  
    This article stimulated a lot of responses.
Barbara Lindsey

http://www.skillcasting.com/jing-easy-screen-captures-and-screencasts/ - 0 views

  •  
    Blog post on Jing with 11 minute video on 5 real world examples and more.
Barbara Lindsey

Mark McLaughlin: Audiences Don't Pay for Content - 0 views

  •  
    Rebuts popular perception that new media has destroyed the old pay-for-content media distribution model.
Barbara Lindsey

if:book: this progress - 0 views

  • My hypothesis, if correct, would oblige us to recognize the fact that the primary function of written communication is to facilitate slavery.
  • The use of writing for disinterested purposes, and as a source of intellectual and aesthetic pleasure, is a secondary result, and more often than not it may even be turned into a means of strengthening, justifying or concealing the other. (p. 299)
  • Already our ideas about privacy are radically different than they were a decade ago.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • Lévi-Strauss invites us to consider literary freedom (or, more generally, "book culture") as a spandrel in the sense that Stephen Jay Gould employed the term: something that evolves not towards its own end, but because it doesn't impede (and may in fact support) other forces. I think Lévi-Strauss's hypothesis is interesting to consider because it posits our present book culture as an exception, rather than something that naturally happens because of the flow of economic or historical forces.
  • For a piece entitled "This Progress," Sehgal emptied the spiral ramp of the Guggenheim of its art: the visitor ascending the ramp was met by a small child, who asks you to explain what you think progress is. You do this as best you can; there's a back and forth, and this conversation carries on up the spiral. At a certain point, you're met by a high school student, who continues the conversation; then a young adult; and finally an older adult, who walks with you to the top-most point in the Guggenheim. There's a great deal of careful choreography going on, so the conversation breaks and remakes itself across your offerent interlocutors – but what's centrally interesting about the piece is that the visitor is engaged in a sustained conversation with strangers about the idea of progress. There's something deeply strange about this: post-college, we so rarely engage in conversations about abstract ideas. It's equally odd to be engaging with people who aren't your age: the way on talks to a six-year-old is necessarily different from the way one talks to a sixty-year-old. This can be deeply engrossing: on a visit a few Mondays ago, my friend Nik and I went up (with others) and down (together) five times in four hours.
  • Going up the spiral with a friend doesn't work as well as you might expect: the dynamics of a conversation with a stranger are very different from a converstion with a stranger and a friend.
  • One quickly discovers that what happens when one ascends the spiral is different every time, though the structure is constant. Some conversations are interesting; some are less so. Some are over quickly; some carry on so long that you worry that you've fallen out of the piece entirely. While some of the rules can be easily understood
  • some aren't so obvious.
  • One quickly discovers the limitations of language: progress, we think, is the idea that things move forward, but that doesn't explain why something in front of something is naturally better: it's simply a structure of our thought that we construe things in front of us (or above us) as things we aspire to in some way. It's hard not to think in this way when ascending a ramp, though weirdly the ramp as metaphor doesn't seem to arise.
  • k wanted to know, were we essentially different from the Greeks?
  • Greek professor
  • The difference, the man finally confided, was that the Greeks didn't have our idea of progress. He thought they were probably happier because of that.
  • why was there the this in the piece's title "This Progress"? Perhaps it's because progress only exists as an idea when we lend credence to it: our own personal idea of progress rather than something that exists naturally. Awareness of this is important. We need to interrogate the idea of progress, both in terms of what we believe and what society around us believes. Too often we're simply swept along by the flow of time. The power of the idea – the power of the thought experiment, whether Lévi-Strauss's questioning of the goal of writing or Sehgal's questioning of progress – is that it allows reclamation of agency.
Chenwen Hong

Wiki Project Aims to Document the World's Public Art - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of ... - 0 views

  • But they don’t just write new articles, they also tag pre-existing entries
    • Chenwen Hong
       
      Thus this project not only exemplifies "the mob rule" by contrubuting knowledge, but it also embodies the hyperconnectivity by tagging those already exusting articles. This act of tagging instantaneously bring together the students at Indianna-Purdue with those who share the same concern over public art.
  •  
    A Wiki project to digitize public art--Wikipedia Saves Public Art-- was started by Jennifer Geigel Mikulay, an assistant professor at Indiana-Purdue, together with Richard McCoy, an assistant conservator at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. 40 articles are added and another 912 already existing articles tagged.
  •  
    This Wiki project is the best example of what Mark Pesce emphasized in his talk: "a project of the mob, for the mob, and by the mob."
Chenwen Hong

YouTube Launches Auto-Captioning for Videos - 0 views

  • ouTube, Google, Stanford, Berkeley, and the California School for the Deaf (CSD) are about to speak on YouTube and accessibility.
  • Now the Google Speech Technology team is speaking about the challenges they faced to get auto-captioning operational. Their vision was to create accurate captions for all videos in all languages, but had to deal with huge vocabularies, background noise, poor recordings, accent variability, and distinguishing between song and speech.- Google’s approach is to deliver captions from the cloud, given them the ability to rapidly iterate and model at a large scale.
  • You can only caption your own videos — you can’t just caption someone else’s videos.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • You can see the full caption file with timestamps and even download them as a text document. You can also upload your own captions as its own track — useful if auto-captioning isn’t doing the job or to make edits to the auto-captioned text.
  • With auto-captioning, these people can simply use text-based search to find what they need.
    • Chenwen Hong
       
      This means auto-captioning works well as an index for videos. One of its strengths, particularly for us instructors, can be that it helps us effeciently locate relevant clips of videos. This function should also be helpful to our students because we can add notes into the clips at specific frames. Well, the downside is that one might misinterpret videos or misunderstand creators' intentions when using only parts of the videos to suit one's own purposes.
  • You can specify search only brings up videos with closed captioning (it shows the cc icon in search). In the past, when he was at MIT, he couldn’t understand lectures because he had no sign interpreter. Now he can use the captioning to watch lectures he missed.
  • Now students of the California School for the Deaf are speaking (sign language) on how they feel not excluded anymore from the major phenomenon of web video and are grateful to Google for building this technology.
Barbara Lindsey

A Brief Summary of the Best Practices in Teaching - 1 views

  •  
    Could have done a much better job of making this text more readable. Focuses on how to optimize lecture-style learning environments.
« First ‹ Previous 3421 - 3440 of 3887 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page