Skip to main content

Home/ Wcel_Team/ Group items tagged issue

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Nigel Robertson

JISC_CETIS_Informal_Horizon_Scan_2011.pdf - 1 views

  •  
    This report outlines some technology trends and issues of interest and relevance to CETIS. It should be seen as a set of un-processed perceptions rather than the product of a formal process; a great deal of ground is not scanned in this paper and it should be understood that no formal prioritisation process was undertaken. The CETIS Horizon Scan should be seen as a set of potentially-idiosyncratic "takes", material on which discourse and disputation may occur to make possible futures more clear.
Nigel Robertson

The Story of Stuff with Annie Leonard - 0 views

  •  
    What is the Story of Stuff? From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It'll teach you something, it'll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.
Nigel Robertson

Representations of curriculum design - 0 views

  •  
    One of the activities we are currently all engaged with is mapping our existing curriculum design processes and developing a baseline document of curriculum design which we can use as a benchmark of progress achieved on the projects. A key issue for all of us is how to represent curriculum design - what representations might be useful, for what purposes and for whom?
Nigel Robertson

Large Interactive Displays - HCI at the University of Waikato: LIDS - 1 views

  •  
    The large interactive display surfaces (LIDS) concept started with the creation of the "Whiteboard Paradigm". There were many available technologies that could be used as LIDS, however, most were prohibitively expensive, and many still did not support appropriate interaction styles. The goal of the LIDS research project has been to develop inexpensive technologies to use as displays, and investigate the interaction issues generated by their use. Furthermore work has gone into investigating potential uses for such technologies, and creating the software to support these uses.
Stephen Harlow

Learning Through Digital Media » How I Used Wikis to Get My Students to Do Th... - 0 views

  •  
    "We have heard the complaint or issued it ourselves one too many times: 'They don't read'!"
Stephen Harlow

IRRODL on Connectivism - 0 views

  •  
    "IRRODL (the International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning) has just published a very special issue focused on connectivism."
Nigel Robertson

CLIPP Board » Panopto - 1 views

  •  
    Posts from Aston tagged Panopto - see especially Panopto on a stick - could solve a lot of our issues at WCELfest!
Stephen Harlow

http://www.nitle.org/live/files/36-divided-and-conquered - 1 views

  •  
    "Many of the issues hobbling the digital humanities involve isolation." <--Useful for PG FASS?
Nigel Robertson

ePIstudy - e-portfolio implementations - 0 views

  •  
    Site to support this JISC project on implementing eportfolios. The ePI study is exploring large-scale implementations of e-portfolio use in Higher and Further Education and professional organisations in the UK . It is JISC funded and led by the University of  Nottingham. The study seeks to:Identify a range of examples of wide scale e-portfolio implementations within HE/FE institutions and professional bodies that will inform practice/strategy;Gather a range of case studies to support the articulation of models of implementation;Develop an appropriate means of disseminating the outcomes that enables a potential user to understand the implementation issues and identify the cases that are most relevant to their own contexts.
Stephen Harlow

Recording Lectures and Screencasts Webcast > JISC Legal > View Detail - 1 views

  •  
    Interesting legal considerations on lecture capture and screencasting (in the UK context). Raises some issues for our use of Panopto.
Tracey Morgan

Mozilla Open Badges Issuer Gadget for Google Sites (and issuing Badges using a Google S... - 0 views

  •  
    " Assessment, Badges, Gadget and Google Apps Script"
Nigel Robertson

JISC Inform / Issue 33 / Open researcher | #jiscinform - 0 views

  •  
    Twenty-seven-year-old researcher, lecturer and journalist Jennifer Jones has a fluid but pared-down working approach. She openly conducts her work as a researcher and lecturer through her personal website, using her blog and Twitter, on which she has 3,000 followers. She works virtually as she travels between two university employers in the Midlands and the West of Scotland. Her inspiration comes from media activists and groups like Occupy, who use the free resources of the net to group like-minded people for action and discourse. All of her activity is open for scrutiny and for tracking - there are no pseudonyms - and she records everything she does on her website.
Nigel Robertson

JISC Inform / Issue 33 / Open researcher | #jiscinform - 0 views

  •  
    Twenty-seven-year-old researcher, lecturer and journalist Jennifer Jones has a fluid but pared-down working approach. She openly conducts her work as a researcher and lecturer through her personal website, using her blog and Twitter, on which she has 3,000 followers. She works virtually as she travels between two university employers in the Midlands and the West of Scotland. Her inspiration comes from media activists and groups like Occupy, who use the free resources of the net to group like-minded people for action and discourse. All of her activity is open for scrutiny and for tracking - there are no pseudonyms - and she records everything she does on her website.
Nigel Robertson

JISC Inform / Issue 33 / Future technologies | #jiscinform - 1 views

  •  
    "Sarah believes that in the present, education is at something of a turning point in its relationship with technology, so here she sketches out some predictions for the future to help you stay ahead"
Nigel Robertson

A Rough Guide To Musical Anthropology (paper) - 0 views

  •  
    "As the world becomes increasingly more connected to media, the consumption of music as cultural goods rises as well. It is speculative to assume that this proven increase in quantity will make music a more central part of peoples' lives, but it will certainly attract more scientific attention to the behavior and perception transformations associated with it."
Nigel Robertson

Quality Management of Academic Development Work: Implementation issues and challenges -... - 0 views

  •  
    Chalmers, D. and O'Brien, M. Fraser, K. (ed) (2005) Education development units and the enhancement of university teaching. Education development and leadership in higher education: Developing an effective institutional strategy pp. 50-71. Routledge Falmer , Abingdon, UK
Nigel Robertson

Theories and models of and for online learning - 1 views

  •  
    Caroline Haythornthwaite, Richard Andrews, Michelle M. Kazmer, Bertram C. Bruce, Rae-Anne Montague, Christina Preston. 2007. - Interesting article and I we should look at some of these carefully.  Also some other good stuff in the journal.
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.”
  •  
    Article on trends in publishing and why the university library needs to become a publisher.
Nigel Robertson

What digital literacies? - 0 views

  • I think the evolving Net Literacies relate to the shift to the Web as a resource which requires users to become their own librarians and thus need information retrieval and evaluation skills. As we move to a Participatory Culture, and Open Ed, with issues of identity and co-creation kicking in, we need a broader range of skills to become effective in these new contexts.
  •  
    Steve Wheeler post on facets of digital literacy. Includes some insightful comments.
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 74 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page