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Nigel Robertson

Two Thoughts on the crash of the "Fundamentals of Online Education" MOOC | stevendkrause.com - 2 views

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    More on the FOE crash
Nigel Robertson

The remix culture; How the folk process works in the 21st century - 0 views

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    Article from John Egenes at Otago Uni on remix culture. "The internet and our digital convergence are rapidly transforming long-held views regarding the traditional relationship between performer and audience ("creator" / "consumer"). This change is giving a new voice to the audience, literally bringing them into the mix. With unprecedented access to the creative process, and with an audience for their creations, consumers of music are also its producers, and are reshaping concepts of creativity, individuality, and intellectual property. This paper examines fundamental shifts in the way the "Folk Process" works within this context. Remix culture, once a bastion of beat-driven dance mashups, is expanding to include all styles of music, film, theatre and art. I will argue that its long-term significance lies in the notion that it blurs lines between the traditionally separate roles of creator and consumer, and challenges long-held concepts of intellectual property and copyright. Over the protests of many traditional folk musicians and devotees, folk music is entering this new digital arena, where the Folk Process is changing from gradual to immediate, from slow to rapid, adapting to fit the new digital paradigm."
Tracey Morgan

Open Wikis and the Protection of Institutional Welfare | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    "Much has been written about wikis' reliability and use in the classroom. This research bulletin addresses the negative impacts on institutional welfare that can arise from participating in and supporting wikis. The open nature of the platform, which is fundamental to wiki operation and success, enables these negative consequences. A finite user base that can be determined a priori (e.g., a course roster) minimizes the security implications, hence our discussion in this bulletin primarily concerns open or public wikis that accept contributions from a broad and unknown set of Internet users."
Nigel Robertson

No Content | Abject - 0 views

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    Brian Lamb with another insightful and inciting post on the poverty of critical thinking in Higher Education regarding the future of that self same education. If they don't pull their fingers out their fundaments we are all doomed is the message. And by the way, the 'they' is us.
Stephen Harlow

Kaltura Launches its New Video Package for Moodle 2.x - Engage Your Students with Video | Kaltura Community Blog - 0 views

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    This duplicates quite a lot of the functionality of Panopto, but the student Moodle video assignment (starts @3:25) looks nice. Kaltura is fundamentally an open source streaming server.
Nigel Robertson

Science in the Sands: 7 Habits of the Open Scientist - 0 views

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    "Science has always been based on a fundamental culture of openness.  The scientific community rewards individuals for sharing their discoveries through perpetual attribution, and the community benefits by through the ability to build on discoveries made by individuals.  Furthermore, scientific discoveries are not generally accepted until they have been verified or reproduced independently, which requires open communication."
Nigel Robertson

Twitter goes down and the world falls silent | Charles Arthur | Media | The Guardian - 0 views

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    Good article exploring a fundamental difference between news in Twitter and (lack of) news in Facebook
Nigel Robertson

'New Schemas for Mapping Pedagogies and Technologies', Ariadne Issue 56 - 0 views

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    In this article I want to reflect on the rhetoric of 'Web 2.0' and its potential versus actual impact. I want to suggest that we need to do more than look at how social networking technologies are being used generally as an indicator of their potential impact on education, arguing instead that we need to rethink what are the fundamental characteristics of learning and then see how social networking can be harnessed to maximise these characteristics to best effect. I will further argue that the current complexity of the digital environment requires us to develop 'schema' or approaches to thinking about how we can best harness the benefits these new technologies confer.
Stephen Harlow

Blog U.: On Lecture Capture and Course Quality - Technology and Learning - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    "I'm convinced, however, that lecture capture is a fundamental enabling and catalyzing technology for improving learning (and may be a tool to open access and drive down costs as well)."
Nigel Robertson

Should Teachers Friend Their Students? | Powerful Learning Practice - 1 views

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    Post arguing that teachers should keep a professional distance from their students. I think I profoundly disagree with this post, not around the act of staying distant but about the power differential built into his argument. Acting ethically and modelling good and realistic practice in life is more fundamental to a useful educational stance. This post refers I think to non-adults and emotional transference is something that teachers need to be conscious of. I'm not arguing that teachers should friend all their pupils online, rather that his reasons for this are flawed.
Nigel Robertson

Why Jobs Is No Edison - The American Magazine - 0 views

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    Interesting post on invention and why Edison was fundamentally different from Jobs. Will annoy the fanboys!
Nigel Robertson

ALT_SURF_ILTA_white_paper_2005.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    This paper summarises the results of the Reflective Learning, Future Thinking research seminar jointly held by ALT, SURF and ILTA at Trinity College Dublin. At this seminar 50 leading researchers from three nations came together to share thoughts about the direction of learning technology development. Summary At the heart of all three discussions we still see concerns about status and valorisation of knowledge, disciplines and roles. Repository discussions touch on quality and gate keeping, portfolio discussions touch on the ownership of identity as a learner, while ubiquitous computing and informal learning touches on fundamental questions of access and learner control.
Nigel Robertson

2020 Forecast: Creating the Future of Learning - 2 views

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    "A Radically Different World If you think our future will require better schools, you're wrong. The future of education calls for entirely new kinds of learning environments. If you think we will need better teachers, you're wrong. Tomorrow's learners will need guides who take on fundamentally different roles. As every dimension of our world evolves so rapidly, the education challenges of tomorrow will require solutions that go far beyond today's answers. Browse this website to explore the forces shaping our world. Work with us to explore your organization's role in creating the future of learning."
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