Fortnightly Mailing

Categories

  • ai-course (25)
  • Books (1)
  • General (3)
  • Guest contributions (46)
  • JimFarmer (6)
  • Lightweight learning (35)
  • Maths (1)
  • Moocs (32)
  • News and comment (411)
  • Nothing to do with online learning (49)
  • Oddments (102)
  • Open Access (7)
  • Resources (433)
  • Snippets (5)
See More

Archives

  • July 2021
  • April 2017
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • June 2015
  • March 2015
  • January 2015
  • November 2014

More...



  • © Seb Schmoller under
    UK Creative Commons Licence. In case of difficulty, email me.
  • Validate

Teenage use of social networking sites

Via Jane Hart's excellent E-Learning Pick of the Day I came across the latest report - actually a 10 page "data memo" rather than a full report - in the Pew Internet and American Life Project, under the Family Friends and Community topic: Social Networking Websites and Teens. The survey, conducted by telephone between October 23 and November 19 2006 among a national sample of 935 youths ages 12 to 17, asked about the ways that teenagers use these sites and their reasons for doing so. 55% make use of such sites, use of which "rocketed from a niche activity into a phenomenon that engages tens of millions of internet users".  For a well informed commentary on the survey, including some interesting points about the Pew research methods, read this piece by dana boyd.

If any readers know of current UK data on the use of social networking sites, please post a comment below.

Posted on 08/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

Grid computing, Facebook, and YouTube (and other technologies) summarised in useful EDUCAUSE 2 page guides

Last year I wrote a short piece about the excellent EDUCAUSE 7 things you should know about... series, each of which provides a practical 2 page overview of a particular learning technology, summarising how it works, where it is going, and why it matters to teaching and learning.

Since then, EDUCAUSE has published several more in the series. As with similar "how to" guides I think there is a case for publishing them in wiki format so that the community can weigh in and update them, and I wonder if EDUCAUSE considered this approach. Here is a complete list, current on 5 January 2007:

  • November 2006 E-Books;
  • October 2006 Google Earth;
  • September 2006 YouTube;
  • August 2006 Facebook;
  • July 2006 Mapping Mashups;
  • June 2006 Virtual Worlds;
  • May 2006 Google Jockeying (!);
  • April 2006 Remote Instrumentation;
  • March 2006 Screencasting;
  • February 2006 Virtual Meetings;
  • January 2006 Grid Computing;
  • December 2005 Collaborative Editing;
  • November 2005 Instant Messaging;
  • September 2005 Augmented Reality;
  • August 2005 Blogs;
  • August 2005 Video Blogging;
  • July 2005 Wikis;
  • June 2005 Podcasting;
  • May 2005 Clickers;
  • May 2005 Social Bookmarking.

Posted on 05/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

Comparison of CMS, Course Materials Life Cycle, and Related Costs

Thanks to Mark van Harmelen for sending me this link to Scott Leslie's recent posting about a July 2006 report for MIT [444 kB PDF] by Scott, Bruce Landon, and Russ Poulin. Scott writes:

"My colleagues Bruce Landon and Russ Poulin were commissioned last year by MIT to produce a report which compared the CMS practices and costs, as well as the life cycle of course materials, at 'peer' institutions in an effort to provide a benchmark for future decision making. I was just informed that MIT has generously made the report more widely available online at the above location. In addition to MIT itself, the peer institutions surveyed included Carnegie Mellon, Stanford, Columbia, Berkeley, Harvard (College of Arts and Sciences), University of Chicago, Middlebury, University of Texas at Austin, Princeton and Yale."

Posted on 04/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

BBC Music web resources updated and integrated

Link to image on BBC web site

Useful short piece by David Jennings, who recently emerged from book-writing purdah (and with whom I've collaborated in the past on several commercial projects), summarising changes in the way the BBC organises its online music resources and pointing out that the BBC is now linking extensively to Wikipedia entries about music and musicians:

"There have been previous cases of online sites like GoFish and Upto11.net placing their trust in Wikipedia instead of licensing commercial sources like Muze or AMG, but is the BBC the first large traditional media corporation to do so?"

Poking about on the BBC 6 web site I see that the BBC is also now freely linking to search-returns from MySpace and YouTube.  See, for example, the "across the web" links on the right hand side of this page about Bob Dylan's (excellent) Theme Time Radio Hour, which sadly seems only to be available in archive form if you have a UK IP address.

Posted on 03/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

A walk in the software patent forest - with an interesting "concept map" - by Derek Morrison

Longish essay by Derek Morrison (whose long-running Auricle web log has been quiet of late) examining the implications of software patents on e-learning, from a UK/European perspective, followed on by Part 2, which contains this interesting active concept map [225 kB JPG], but is about the use of concept mapping tools rather than about software patents.

Posted on 02/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

Google Earth - new version available, and details of GE's high resolution coverage

Western EuropeMiddle East

A new version of Google Earth is available for download - for Windows 2000/XP, MAC OS 10.3.9 +, and Linux - with an improved user interface (or so it seemed to me). The extent of Google Earth's high resolution coverage (you can see individual buildings and cars at high resolution) is gradually increasing, though there are wide variations, with Iraq, for example, rather better covered than much of Europe, as the thumbnails above indicate.

Posted on 02/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

The Impact of Policy on Learning and Inclusion in the New Learning and Skills Sector

[Updated 20/12/2006 and 11/4/2012 with working links to papers and diagrams.]

Frank Coffield caught my attention some years back when he was based at Newcastle University. In 2004 Frank and his team "did for" learning styles inventories with the two research reports they produced for the then Learning and Skills Development Agency, most of whose functions are now within LSN. Frank also wrote sceptically, but as a critical friend, about some of the incoming Labour Government's more aspirational policies on lifelong learning.

Coffield has recently moved to the Institute of Education where he, Ann Hodgson, Ken Spours, and Ian Findlay head the TLRP project after which this post is titled. On 5/12/2006 Coffield gave a public lecture "Running ever faster down the wrong road: an alternative future for Education and Skills" [360 kB PDF], which has some choice observations on the way in which the UK Learning and Skills Sector has been pushed about, albeit whilst getting a massive and welcome injection of additional funding. Here are two examples:

"Charting the impact of government policy on practice has not been, however, a simple matter of recording linear, evolutionary, coherent or cumulative progress. Rather, the processes of change have been complex, uneven, dynamic, ambiguous, hotly contested, and often contradictory. Policies have not only evolved or been radically altered, as Secretaries of State and senior civil servants have come and gone, but some polices were abandoned, while others were from the start internally inconsistent or flatly contradicted existing policies."

"In all the pelting torrent of official documents which have flooded the sector since 1997, there is, however, one significant silence: there is no discussion of, and not even a definition of, the central concept of learning, although the word 'learning' is pervasive in such texts and deliberately used in preference to the term 'education'. And yet the whole programme of reform is dependent on some unstated notion of what constitutes learning, and, especially, how we become better at learning. The implict model is a simple input-output one; and government concern to improve the quality of everyone's learning has not spilled over into an interest in learning itself. No learning society is likely ever to be created in the UK or anywhere else without an appropriate theory (or theories) of learning."

For me the best parts of the paper that went with the lecture are its diagrams [130 kB PDF]. These clearly identify the excessive number of levels (10) between learners and central Government (I wonder if there are that many in China?), and the extreme complexity of the policy and planning landscape, and the lack of democratic accountability. Learner-centred it certainly is not.

Posted on 19/12/2006 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (1)

|

Google's "Patent Search"

Sap_search
Search result from Google Patent Search using the terms SAP e-learning

Thanks to Michael Feldstein for mentioning Google Patent Search, which looks to be new. Above you can see a screen shot showing the sort of initial output you get from it. (Alternatively, here are the actual results using the same search term.) Underneath each of the links is a well structured, quick-to-load rendering of the full text of each patent, with nicely organised, clear representations of any images in the original patent application. Here, for example are the results for a 1997 patent about role based access control. Currently Google Patent Search only covers the 7 million patents that have been granted by the US Patent and Trade Mark Office, as the FAQ page explains, alongside a clear outline of its powerful advanced search capabilities.

Posted on 15/12/2006 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

Wireless Ghana - making internet access in rural communities a reality

Out of the blue, Boateng Neezer, Chief Technology Officer of the Wireless Ghana project sent me this 35 page in-depth case study [1.2 MB PDF], which was commissioned by and developed for the World Bank’s infoDev group.

The Wireless Ghana project, run by an NGO called the Community-Based Libraries and Information Technology (CBLit), is a rural project that was developed in 2005 in response to "the local community’s requests for connectivity to help them break their isolation and move their children and community closer to the 21st century, and be competitive with their urban counterparts". The project is taking place in the Akwapim North district in the Eastern Region of Ghana, an area with a total population of about 1.2 million people. Here are some of the project's goals:

  • Promote a reading culture.
  • Train rural schoolchildren and teachers in the use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT).
  • Empower rural communities by providing access to information and breaking the isolation.
  • Provide and use ICT to help increase direct participation in development and decisionmaking processes at local and national levels.
  • Help to make Internet access in rural communities a reality.

Whilst much of the case study has an educational and organisational focus, some of it will interest readers who understand wireless networking, with a clear description of the practical solutions being found to overcome difficulties like poor and unreliable power supplies with voltage fluctuations, and an innovative "mesh" network architecture developed by the US Champaign-Urbana Community Wireless Network which describes itself as "the worldwide leader of dynamic wireless mesh networking software".

Posted on 14/12/2006 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

What's the state of ICT access around the world?

Charta3_72dpi_1
Source: International Telecommunications Union

Thanks to Dave Pickersgill for this link to the World Summit on the Information Sociey's Digital Divide at a glance web site, which seems to have last been updated at the end of 2005, and which contains a wealth of data and charts, mostly much less blurred than the one above.

Posted on 12/12/2006 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

|

« Previous | Next »

Recent Posts

  • A leaving speech
  • How algorithms manipulate the market
  • Clayton Wright's Educational Technology and Education Conferences, January to June 2016
  • Alphabet
  • Paul Mason's Postcapitalism - talk and discussion
  • FE Area Based Reviews should start by making an assessment of need
  • Citizen Maths - powerful ideas in action
  • Robotics - someone who ran DARPA's Robotics Challenge looks ahead
  • On the long-term future of artificial intelligence
  • A ten year old interview

Recent Comments

  • David Hughes on A leaving speech
  • Liz Perry on A leaving speech
  • Khaled on If ever you need a really comprehensive "title" drop-down
  • Mark Sosa on If ever you need a really comprehensive "title" drop-down
  • Richard Stacy on Video and Online Learning: Critical Reflections and Findings From the Field
  • Mike Jones on "The Facebook" Kyle McGrath's August 2005 assessment
  • G Kelly on Syria-related readings
  • Kris Sittler on Second report from Keith Devlin's and Coursera’s Introduction to Mathematical Thinking MOOC
  • Robert McGuire on Second report from Keith Devlin's and Coursera’s Introduction to Mathematical Thinking MOOC
  • Keith Devlin on Second report from Keith Devlin's and Coursera’s Introduction to Mathematical Thinking MOOC