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James OReilly

SLEDcc2008 - 0 views

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    As part of the education track of the Second Life Community Convention (SLEDcc 2008), we'd like to showcase great educational machinima. Work will be featured at a Machinima Festival that spans the three-day,
Julie Lindsay

ISTE Eduverse Talks: ISTE Eduverse Talks Episode 5 - 0 views

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    Eduverse website for Flat Classrooms session in Second Life coming April 21, 2009 where Vcki Davis and Julie Lindsay will be interviewed!
James OReilly

HUMlab - stream Virtual Macbeth - 1 views

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    ,Virtual Macbeth was designed to demonstrate how we might best use the affordances of virtual environments for Education. Shakespeare’s Macbeth reimagined in Second Life provides an adaptive bridge between classic texts and new media technology.
Stéphane Métral

SLOODLE - Simulation Linked Object Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment - 0 views

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    SLOODLE is an Open Source project which integrates the multi-user virtual environment of Second Life® with the Moodle® learning-management system.
Kyle Murley

Former Education Ambassador for Second Life Discusses New Role With Competing Virtual W... - 0 views

  • “hypbergrid adventuersrs club.” We meet three times a week, an hour each time, and we go into different grids.
Nik Peachey

Development - Is the 140 character 'micro interaction' enough? | Delta Publishing - Eng... - 0 views

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    Twitter could not possibly be further away from the concept of a computer game or a three dimensional visually rich virtual world. Suddenly instead of learning to fly and exchanging our money for Linden bucks (the currency of Linden Labs' Second Life) we were exchanging grammatically correct sentences for status updates of less than 140 characters! Who could have seen it coming? Perhaps Gartner, who also predicted that "90 Per Cent of Corporate Virtual World Projects Fail Within 18 Months".
James OReilly

EduNation II Happy Hour For Newbies - Second Life Tool Ranking - 5 views

Dennis OConnor

Natalie Goldberg | Keep The Hand Moving - 11 views

  • I consider writing an athletic activity: the more you practice, the better you get at it. The reason you keep your hand moving is because there’s often a conflict between the editor and the creator. The editor is always on our shoulder saying, “Oh, you shouldn’t write that. It’s no good.” But when you have to keep the hand moving, it’s an opportunity for the creator to have a say. All the other rules of writing practice support that primary rule of keeping your hand moving. The goal is to allow the written word to connect with your original mind, to write down the first thought you flash on, before the second and third thoughts come in.
  • The idea is to keep your hand moving for, say, ten minutes, and don’t cross anything out, because that makes space for your inner editor to come in. You are free to write the worst junk in America.
  • A writing practice is simply picking up a pen — a fast-writing pen, preferably, since the mind is faster than the hand — and doing timed writing exercises.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • . “You have to pick up a pen and write regularly for specific periods of time,” she instructs, and put into words what you most need to say. The product, Goldberg contends, is not as important as the process. Ultimately, she says, writing is “a way to help you penetrate your life and become sane.”
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    ". "You have to pick up a pen and write regularly for specific periods of time," she instructs, and put into words what you most need to say. The product, Goldberg contends, is not as important as the process. Ultimately, she says, writing is "a way to help you penetrate your life and become sane." "
clarence Mathers

How to Extend the Shelf Life of Your B2B Email Content: Ideas from a Content Marketing ... - 0 views

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    The average corporate recipient sifts through 105 emails a day, according to IBM's Email Deliverability Report. A study published by the Nielsen-Norman Group reveals that email users typically spend about 51 seconds reading a single newsletter. This means emails already take up 1.5 hours from the daily schedules of contacts like decision-makers in your managers business list.
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