Click picture to enlarge
In 1992, before the Web, before the likes of you and I had email, in the days when a 2400 baud modem costing £300 in today's money felt like a terrific deal, when people not in big companies or universities could only connect to each other by dialing at great expense into a BT-run "point of presence", I was lucky to run a TUC project that investigated the use of computer conferencing in distance learning.
The project involved making and running an on-line distance course (about the EU, oh joy!) for union representatives in Denmark, Sweden and the UK, and then assessing the impact. The design of the course was much influenced by my reading of work by Robin Mason, who died on Monday, and who 12 years later I got to know through her involvement as a trustee of ALT and as Chair of our Research Committee.
Today, prompted by discussion about Robin's contribution, I dug out a box file in my attic with some stuff from the project. I was particularly struck by the piece above by a learner, that I used in an overhead projector transparency for a talk I gave at the time.
For a pretty astonishing mixture of views about Robin, here is the Memorial Page on the OU's web site.
Using Second Life to help mentally impaired people give informed medical consent
Image from Imperial College
Interesting piece in the Economist about research by Suzanne Conboy-Hill of the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton, in collaboration with Imperial College, and using the latter's virtual postgraduate medical school, built in SciLands, a large scale Second Life user community devoted exclusively to science and technology.
The purpose of the research is to establish determine whether or not simulations of this kind can provide an improved way of obtaining informed (and real, rather than led-by-a-nurse) consent.
See also Millions being wasted in a deserted Second Life, October 2007
Posted on 27/06/2009 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
|