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Nigel Robertson

Boycotting Amazon Is Boycotting UKUncut! - Or Why A Thin Understanding Of Post-Fordist ... - 0 views

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    The net is tangled. You can't avoid evil (well companies you don't like) because of the background hosting. Interesting read.
Nigel Robertson

How education startup Coursera may profit from free courses - Tech News and Analysis - 0 views

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    Some thoughts on how Coursera might make money - and some insights into how they currently organise e.g. more than $1m per staff member in venture capital available.
Tracey Morgan

Digital Storytelling 106: Open, Participatory, Student-centric, Social...the Future? | ... - 0 views

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    "Far more important to me than all the venture-capitalized consortia of elite university MOOCs (Massively Open Online Courses) and the hundreds of thousands of students flocking to them is a course taught by an adjunct professor at University of Mary Washington."
Stephen Harlow

Online vs. Face-to-Face Throwdown: Good Teaching Transcends Course Format - 1 views

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    "Shibley talked about how the online classroom differs from the traditional face-to-face classroom, and suggested strategies for capitalizing on those differences to improve student learning."
Nigel Robertson

Event Eye - 0 views

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    Unfortunately it's quite expensive "Event Eye is the first in a new generation of tools to enable event organizers to capture the backchannel and to integrate it with the main themes and presentations of the conference, to create a fluid dialogue that demonstrates an understanding of the audience and makes the links between the disparate comments. By using Event Eye, organisers will understand the mood and interests of their audience and will be able to react in real time to audience feedback and need. Event Eye has the potential to build the social capital of a conference, capture the collective intelligence and to turn an event into a movement."
Nigel Robertson

Rethinking "Edtech" - FOLLOWERS OF THE APOCALYPSE - 0 views

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    Dave Kernohan deconstructs the narrative of EdTech.
Stephen Bright

The (Coming) Social Media Revolution in the Academy - Daniels and Feagin - Fast Capital... - 0 views

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    Article proposing that a revolution is coming to academia because of social media and web technologies. Possibly a rather optimistic view given the attitudes of some academics and institutions...
Dean Stringer

Rotorua aims to become NZ's 'e-learning' capital - 2 views

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    Hey all, not really a Tertiary thing but thought you might be interested... "Rotorua has embarked on a bold plan to equip all of its pupils with personal learning devices - connecting all of them to the internet and creating a New Zealand-first "e-learning community".
Nigel Robertson

Libraries and the changing role of creators and consumers - 0 views

  • For the past two years, Catherine Mitchell, Director, Publishing, California Digital Library, has been involved in an effort to coordinate the services of the library and University Press in order to better support and manage the University of California’s scholarly output. The goal of the initiative—the University as Publisher—is to help the university reclaim its core intellectual asset (i.e., the knowledge it produces) and assert itself more powerfully in the marketplace of scholarly communication. In the process, the university shores up its values, and its value. “Despite the daunting complexity of the task, universities must take responsibility for managing their own scholarly output or risk losing control of that core intellectual capital,” she says. “If we don’t, someone else will. And it won’t be pretty. We’re talking about our institutions’ major asset. “If we miss the boat on this, we hand off opportunities to partner with our faculty around issues of intellectual property, curation and preservation standards, and transformative models of scholarly communication. We simply become the ‘buyer.’ And, we risk getting locked into untenable licensing agreements in order to gain or regain access to the very research that our own faculty are producing.”
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    Article on trends in publishing and why the university library needs to become a publisher.
Nigel Robertson

PILOTed: Trends I learned from Educause - 0 views

  • IT has often resisted outsourcing, but significant pressure to reduce costs is forcing them to reconsider and define their core competencies.
  • desktop virtualization, may be hitting critical speed.
  • cloud computing can move a solution from requiring a large initial capital outlay, to just an operational expense while also adding the flexibility for the institution to only pay for what is used.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • today’s mobile students, there is also demand for applications that can function through smart cell phones with tiny screens, individual computer screens, and shared large screen output devices, depending on the location and needs of the student at the time.
  • ectures are increasingly being captured, either so that students can use them as reviews, or so that students can miss the live lecture.
  • Lectures are increasingly being captured, either so that students can use them as reviews, or so that students can miss the live lecture
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