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Filed under category: ITEC
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 17

For 5/21/2009:

  • Will complete count the bounces with Paul and Ray, assuming monitor comes in. Will contact MedeaWiz about serial port polling latency.
  • Start wiki trainings?

For 5/20/2009:

  • Researched Arduino Mega / firmata pairing, as we need 15 pins available for the abstract image exhibit; we have 14, because 0 and 1 and serial send and receive for firmata. The new Arduino mega will run firmata, but for the moment will still only address 16 total, according to the header file: http://www.arduino.cc/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1238768997. I'll talk to Ray about this. Perhaps the pin 1 (send) can alternate between a light button and send control. This project just gets more complicated. I like it!

For 5/19/2009:

  • @home

For 5/18/2009:

  • @home

For 5/14/2009:

  • @home

For 5/13/2009:

  • At home for finals week 

 

For 5/12/2009:

  • Checked with Ray on CTB monitor, has not arrived. Ray will track it.
  • Finished Inkblot physical prototype, tested buttons. Next, AS3/Glue input events. Will they fire correctly???
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 16

For 5/11/2009:

  • At home for finals week

For 5/7/2009:

  •  At home for finals week

For 5/6/2009:

  •  At home for finals week

For 5/5/2009:

  •  At home for finals week
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 15

For 5/4/2009:

  •  At home for finals week

For 4/30/2009:

  • Finished formatting XP machines, updated hardware inventory.

For 4/29/2009:

  • Worked on Inkbot wiki, hardware inventory, kiosk XP machine reformatting
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 14

For 4/28/2009:

  • Disassembled old Count the Bounces monitor, tested (it works) gave to Paul S. In shop for new wooden frame around monitor to hold glass plate intact.
  • Updated New Media hardware inventory.

For 4/27/2009:

  • Talked to Paul S. in shop about Count the Bounces housing redesign. He will work on this on 5/8 once Dell monitor comes in.
  • Ordered Dell monitor with Ray G.

For 4/23/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki

For 4/22/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 13

For 4/21/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki

For 4/20/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki

For 4/17/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki

For 4/16/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki

For 4/15/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 12

For 4/14/2009:

  • Updated abstract image wiki.

For 4/13/2009:

 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 11

For 4/10/2009:

For 4/9/2009:

  • Day off for homework

For 4/8/2009:

  •  Day off for homework

For 4/7/2009:

  • Day off for homework 

For 4/6/2009:

  •  Day off for homework
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 10

For 4/3/2009:

  • Worked with Colin to control medeawiz via Arduino. Success. Added pushbutton. Success. Made it blink in "ready" state, go dark while video plays.

For 4/2/2009:

  • Count the bounces: closer and closer and closer to getting media to display on the medeawiz dv-75. Controlled via PC serial port!

For 4/1/2009:

  • Count the Bounces: gathered original media from Bounces computer, captioned in iMovie using same font as Startle, removed Start button from screen, loaded onto solid-state media player as MPEG4.

For 3/31/2009:

  • Worked on docuwiki project for Inkblot

For 3/30/2009:

  • Worked on docuwiki project for Inkblot
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 9

For 3/26/2009:

  • Worked on homework, short day: perused Bill's actionscript 3 book.
  •  I'll be rewriting inkblot using actionscript only, as opposed to using keyframes and scenes.

For 3/25/2009:

  • Prepped the last XP box.
  • Went to the dentist.
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 8

For 3/24/2009:

  • Prepped another XP box

For 3/23/2009:

  • Prepped another Windows XP box.

For 3/19/2009:

  • Bill, I will prep those 4 XP boxes when I come in today (Thursday) and put them on a wiki inventory page.
  • spare kiosk computers: install, harden, hardware specs: processor, ram, gfx card, hd, nic? add to wiki.
  • cleanup wiki worklog formatting code. Ugh. Arrgh.
  •  
  • For 3/18/2009:
    Competent Candidates math fixed.
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 7
Inkblot: Setting up 5 scenes (image plates) with five animations per scene (button triggers), each animation has a labeled cue point (scn1btn1, scn2btn2, etc.)
Spare XP kiosk prepping: hardware and software inventory on wiki, prepping XP kiosks for floor exhibits.
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 6
  • Competent Candidates FIXED! (And now running local):
    I will update the wiki entry for it with a tad more detail, but it involves a simple installation of WAMP, creating a mysql database and table within that database, creating a user 'web' with password '***' that has write permissions on the database, and copying all of the files in the zip archive to a folder called 'candidates.' There was a different, encrypted authentication scheme happening with the original version, because it was transmitting data back and fourth from the internet. Because the program is only talking to itself on localhost now, there is no need to deal with setting up encrypted authentication on the database and adding 17 more steps to the kiosk setup process.
  • I'm also changing the math in the program to accurately reflect how the voting of Exploratorium visitors compares to the actual voting results, and adding a small display area for "visits today" similar to the genetic traits exhibit upstairs if I can have Bill's blessing to do so.
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 5
  • Compentent Candidates:
  • Installed WAMP, will run on startup
  • Deleted A/V software, office trial, other cruft. Instructions posted in maint. log will assume a 'standard' XP installation as baseline for configuring kiosk. DID NOT remove HP recovery manager and recovery partition.
  • Added localhost entries in c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\run hosts for mindinprogress.org, www.mindinprogress.org, and mindsql.mindinprogress.org. Renamed old hosts file to hosts.old
  • Demoted kiosk user to User from Administrator
  • Added ELO non-APR universal driver to calibrate touchscreen
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 4
  • "Fixed" Distorted mirror/anamorphic mirror. Mac mini is having trouble booting when ELO device is plugged in and powered up before the mini. We'll see if the mac mini refuses to power up again in the future. A possible solution would be a 5-10 second delay timer between the ELO monitor and the mac mini boot.
  • Diagnosed Competent Candidates. Discussed situation with Bill, now that dreamhost no longer hosts www.mindinprogress.org and db.mindinprogress.org. We'll most likely install WAMP on the computer for that kiosk and work with a local dataset.
 
ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 3
  • Sound Memories:
  • SUCCESS (for the moment). It looks like the Mac DVD player wasn't the issue at all. It was actually the part in the Quickeys macro/script that had the Mac DVD player open the VIDEO_TS files from a non-default location on the hard drive. Apparently sometimes the Mac DVD player would revert back to the default location, not find the correct files, and then display a black screen. The solution
    was to hard code the sound memories _VIDEO_TS folder location into an apple script that otherwise executes the same sequence as Quickeys.
  • Recorded issue completion in exhibit maint. DB
  • Updated wiki maint. page
  • Had Bill copy working VIDEO_TS files, new applescript, and README SOUND MEMORIES to exhibit server.Kiosk computer tutorials/wiki documents:
 
ITEC 840: Week 2
This week was all about FONTS!
todo
font management software: suitcase fusion?
font creation software: fontlab studio
dafont.com
fontifier
-----
never combine two fonts from the same category:
1. Display
2. Script
3. San-serif (without the foot)
4. Serif

"setting it solid" set the leading size to font side--do this with headlines

use titlecase for headlines
set font left justified/
phrasing
font
leading
tracking
kerning

don't forget to hang the punctuation (quotes hang and letters are aligned)

PRINT IT OUT!
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ITEC 740: Week 2
This week we learned how to manipulate layers in Photoshop.
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ITEC 894: Week 2
This week we met in class and discussed our projects. In case you didn't see the last post, the status of the Inkblot Projections exhibit redesign will be kept here:
openbookconsulting.pbwiki.com/Exploratorium-Exhibit-Redesign%3A-Inkblot-Projections%3A-Complete-Documentation
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ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 2
I copied over files from the original Inkblot exhibit computer and I'm now converting the source MOV files to FLA.
The creative project for ITEC 894 will be documented here:
http://openbookconsulting.pbwiki.com/Exploratorium-Exhibit-Redesign%3A-Inkblot-Projections%3A-Complete-Documentation
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ITEC 894: Week 1
No class meeting, we just uploaded our final project proposal to iLearn.
Here's mine:

 

Background Information

Background

The Exploratorium is a museum dedicated to the hands-on exploration of science, art, and human perception. Exhibits on the museum floor are frequently rotated in and out of the exhibit archive so that on any given week a museum visitor may see an exhibit finished recently or created several decades ago. Some exhibits fall under the category of “art pieces” meaning that they were created by an artist-in-residence and have a permanent place on the museum floor. Inkblot Projections is one of these permanent “art pieces” that needs to be refitted with modern technology so that museum visitors can enjoy it consistently instead of encountering a broken or intermittently unresponsive exhibit. Because it is part of the permanent exhibit collection, it is worthwhile to upgrade and fix the exhibit.

 

The specific task at hand will be to convert the exhibit from an old version of Macromedia Director to Adobe Flash, upgrade or replace the computer to run OS X 10.5, and program the inputs to the buttons and page turns into an Arduino microcontroller interfaced through a USB connection.

 

The entire redesign process will be documented with photographs, Flash code, Arduino code, and Flash-Arduino interface code so that the project can be replicated for other instructional uses.

 

Throughout the rest of this document, I will refer to the functions of both the exhibit and the exhibit redesign separately.

 

Purpose

The instructional goal of Inkblot Projections is to demonstrate to visitors several different perspectives of abstract shapes. The visitor is asked to observe five inkblot drawings and draw conclusions as to what the abstract shapes represent. Then, the visitor can press five different buttons to hear five separate people explain their perspectives. As each inkblot is being audibly explained, the monitor above the exhibit highlights the different areas of the inkblot projection that the speaker is referring to.

 

The instructional goal of the exhibit redesign is to document the process of creating a Flash-based kiosk exhibit using inputs from the physical world that are detected and interpreted by an Arduino microcontroller.

 

Significance

The impact of this exhibit can be measured by how many people interact with the exhibit at the Exploratorium. If the exhibit is functioning properly, several hundred people per day could interact with it.

 

The impact of the redesign documentation can be measured by how many pageviews the instructional wiki receives per day or month, and how many edits and comments are made on the wiki itself.

 

Design Rationale

Introduction

 

Content or Task Analysis

The content in this exhibit redesign documentation will be selected from conversations with professional media developers. The content will be selected based on its relevancy to exhibit redesign at large technically oriented museums so that the documentation and processes are transferable to exhibit design outside of the Exploratorium. This material will be written, and visual in the form of movies and interactive graphics.

 

Learner Analysis

The intended audience is any intermediate to advanced level exhibit designer. Information necessary to understand this audience would include exhibit designer education and skill information to ensure that the information presented is neither too complex nor too elementary.

 

Goals and Objectives

The instructional goal of this project is to make learners feel more comfortable designing exhibits in Flash that can take inputs from the physical world. The main objectives of this project are to train the learner to program events for Flash/Arduino interaction and event handling in Flash.

 

Media Selection

This exhibit will be rewritten entirely in Flash. Flash has been chosen for its strength in non-linear navigation, animation capabilities, video embedding features, Arduino interfacing capability, and compression. Technical documentation will be written on a public wiki and include photos, Arduino code, and Flash-Arduino interface code.

 

The exhibit redesign documentation will be developed on a public wiki.

 

Usability Review

Expert Review

The Inkblot exhibit will be reviewed by an SME (Subject Matter Expert) in the New Media department of the Exploratorium to ensure accuracy of technical documentation and functionality of the exhibit.

 

Design Review

An instructional designer will review the technical documentation to assess ease of use, clear language, and overall production value. The instructional designer will also test out the exhibit at the Exploratorium.

 

One-on-one Review

Review by an additional ITEC student will be used to assess overall usability of the project and clarity of the learning objectives, and will help enhance future software and hardware revisions of the exhibit.

 

 

Read more...
 
ITEC 740: Week 1
We learned about the basics of photoshop
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ITEC 720: Field Study at the Exploratorium Check-In Week 1

Sound Memories:

  • SUCCESS (for the moment). It looks like the Mac DVD player wasn't the issue at all. It was actually the part in the Quickeys macro/script that had the Mac DVD player open the VIDEO_TS files from a non-default location on the hard drive. Apparently sometimes the Mac DVD player would revert back to the default location, not find the correct files, and then display a black screen. The solution was to hard code the sound memories _VIDEO_TS folder location into an apple script that otherwise executes the same sequence as Quickeys.
  • Recorded issue completion in exhibit maint. DB
  • Updated wiki maint. page
  • Had Bill copy working VIDEO_TS files, new applescript, and README SOUND MEMORIES to exhibit server.
  •  

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ITEC 840: Week 1: Why graphic design is important.
Visual literacy reduces cognitive load when done correctly. The US does not make a particularly huge effort to communicate things visually, assuming that you are literate in english. In other countries, China being a great example, symbols are used with careful implementation to allow you to navigate without knowing the language.

Graphic design: communicate one message using graphics AND text.

singapore: pretty good at getting messages across


America!

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ITEC 823: Final Project
Here's the final draft of my "How NOT to Kill Your Houseplants" project:

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ITEC 823: building out the final project, aim to have mechanics finished this weekend, next week SME
I'm building out the actionscript and animations. Over thanksgiving break I'll add the descriptive text from my in-house subject matter expert.
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ITEC 823: Built out second scene, learned about backwards and forewards buttons
I'm still building out my final project. I added the carnivore scene and make 40 frames worth of animation.
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ISED 797: Final todo: write abstract, revise paper
So, I'm in the home stretch, regardless of whether or not I pass this class. This weekend, I've promised myself that I will:
  • Rewrite my research paper, taking into account her revision comments
  • Write a one-page abstract that I can give as part of my oral presentation
  • Meet with her next monday to go over the paper in its final form and make any last revisions
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ISED 797: Part 4 written!
I sat in bed all last weekend and wrote part 4 of my research paper. It took a long time because I had no idea how to write it.
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ITEC 830: Using Illuminate Again
This class, I attended entirely online. It was a quite different experience having 3 people online and 17 or so offline. It felt even more isolating, because there wasn't a great deal of chatter on Illuminate, and the audio was harder to hear this time. Judy suggested some sort of closed-captioning device, and it got me thinking how awesome it would be to have Dr. Foreman have a copy of Dragon Naturally Speaking open on the computer running Illuminate to get a (loosely) written transcript of the class in real time. Then again, it would just be another giant piece of software running on an overtaxed machine.
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ITEC 830: Using Illuminate for Online Courses
Last week we held our course entirely online with Josh playing the role of Illuminate guru, instructor, and moderator. That was a huge amount of responsibility and technical skill to manage, and Josh pulled it off flawlessly. I attended part of the class in person, and then biked home during the break and attended the second half on Illuminate. From that first experience, I can say that I like the environment, and it felt more immersive then simply watching a video feed. At the same time, the audio and video were compressed and I didn't feel very "in the moment"
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ITEC 815: Formulating an Essential Question
Well, I'm at a critical junction here: My curriculum redesign project will either be to redesign material I developed for the GIIP program at UCSC or perhaps to combine this final project with my instructional mashup project for ITEC 830. The problem lies with what the Essential Question is. Sounds fishy to me. What will people learn from this project? Why does it matter? I'm not sure....
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ITEC 815: Distance Learning
Last week's class was amazing--we had a videoconference with teachers all over the world...
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ITEC 823: Secondary navigation scenes completed...
I'll post the final version when I'm done in another week.

Todo:
Create sub-scenes
Delete evil tweens
Tween scene transitions with opacity fade
Create Universal "close" button
Create reverse animation button
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ITEC 815: Podcast progress

We're now finishing up the companion website that goes with the Podcasting for Education workshop that we gave a couple of weeks back.
I don't have much to add, except to say that developing a website with Google Sites is both the best and worst experience I've ever had.
Worst because uploading images and tweaking the layout of the site is a nightmare.

Best because this is the only way for our group to collaborate on a single website in and out of class. Otherwise we’d all be using Dreamweaver and keeping track of multiple site revisions and overwriting each other’s work and it would just turn into a steaming mess.

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ISED 797: Research paper part 4: the literature review
Wow, this is not a lot of fun!
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ITEC 830: The Design of Everyday Things: A lowly washing machine
Picture this:

photo by w00kie on Flickr.

A lowly washing machine.

 

After digesting Donald Norman’s points regarding design aesthetic, I’d like to use the washing machine as an example of good/bad design and make a distinction between consumer and institutional product design.

 

Consumer products are sold on feature sets—a washer is sold on the basis of what separates it from other washers: an insane set of features, modes, cycles, and cleaver names for each of these options. After it is taken home, how many of these advanced features are used? Who really becomes a laundry expert and reads the manual? Institutional products, on the other hand, are sold on the basis of durability and simplicity. At our oiled wildlife washroom in Santa Cruz, our giant, stainless steel washers have three settings for water temp (cold, medium, hot), and four settings for washing (heavy/moderate/light/delicate). I can tell you that these washers have been used on all four settings and all four water temperatures, i.e. 100% of the design features have been used to their full advantage.

 

So, in terms of Norman’s design principles, aesthetics matter greatly in the design of consumer washers, but not institutional ones and good aesthetics don’t indicate simplicity or intuition. Creeping featurism is present in consumer washers, but not in institutional washers. Lastly, standardization: in institutional products, less options make it much easier to standardize the interface on the washing machine—a washer from the previous generation looks essentially similar to the current product model. On the consumer side, designers are forced to reinvent the wheel with every new product model.

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ITEC 823: Flash intro animation--now with "replay" button!
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ITEC 815: Podcasting workshop comments

Here, I’ll tell you a secret: when I was young, I never worked well with others. It was either that I wanted to have control over everything, or that the other people in my group were so stoned that it was useless to have a meeting because they had forgotten what the project was about. That was Santa Cruz, this is San Francisco. Not only have all of the people in my group here been rockstars and endured the soft rock in our favorite café, but every member has contributed something unique from their skillset to make the Podcasting for Education workshop greater then the sum of its parts.

We taught two 1-hour classes back-to-back. We initially had a lot more instruction planned for the workshop, including how to upload and syndicate, and extend a podcast. After running through the presentation at least three times, we paired the instruction down to creating a podcast using a pre-recorded script in Garageband. It was essential to run through the workshop beforehand! Because we did, we encountered no surprises during the workshop.

We have a website that will be finished in the next couple of weeks:

http://sites.google.com/site/itec815podcast/

Google likes it a lot: if you ever find yourself pining for podcast instructions and can’t find this link, just google “itec 815 podcast” and we’re the first hit on the search results. Nifty, eh?

Some nice features of this website include:

  • Viewing the powerpoint presentation we gave in class (visual learning)
  • Viewing the brochure we handed out (visual learning for low attention spans)
  • Downloading the entire workshop as a Flash movie (auditory and visual learning)
  • Viewing the steps to create your podcast on the website itself, with extended lessons on how to upload, syndicate, and extend its reach to greater audiences (visual learning)
  • Getting help from the Masters of Podcasting (MoPs) – that’s us!
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ISED 797: To-do list
As we pass the halfway mark in the semester, I always find myself making a final list of items to finish for the class. Given that we have thanksgiving break and final presentations, that suddenly leaves us with only 3-4 more classes to finish everything. So, here's my final ISED 797 list of crap to do:

1. Revise Part 1 (intro, justification)
2. Rewrite part 1 section C (research questions and sub-topics)--in progress
3. Revise Part 2 (data collection plan)
4. Revise Part 3 (data collection instrument)
5. Write Part 4 (lit review)
6. Write abstract for final presentation

wish me luck, k?
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ITEC 830: Comments on Eugene Lee, CEO of SocialText, speaking in our class.

We had a great class last Thursday when Eugene Lee, CEO of SocialText, dropped by to speak. He was a charismatic speaker and I remember a lot of his talking points.

Mr. Lee was demonstrating many tools he used in his daily life to keep up with industry buzz, including using twitter alerts to stay abreast of comments and problems relating to his product and also to those of his competitors. I didn’t ask if he also had a twitter alert set up to poll for new content with “Eugene Lee” tagged in the post, but after lecturing to our class, I have a feeling that he may have set up a “Eugene Lee ITEC SFSU” alert, in which case it would be pretty neat if he read this message.

Here are some other comments: Mr. Lee talked about “weak connections” in relation to how he got his job as CEO of socialtext. An acquaintance of his knew the former CEO of socialtext, and helped him made the final connection through LinkedIn, demonstrating the importance of “it’s not WHAT you know, it’s WHO you know” or more succinctly: “you know they know”. He framed this as the importance of having people act as “hubs” in social networking: individuals who know a large group of people and are thusly mined for their knowledge of others.

Also interesting was Socialtext’s notion of “followers” instead of “friends” which is a similar concept to Twitter. A friend relationship requires a two-way handshake that implies there is a relationship, a sense of bi-directionality. A follower, on the other hand, is more like a person aware of the other person’s skills and interests, but not necessarily in a formalized, friendly way. Again, back to “weak connections” proving valuable.

And lastly, to Mr. Lee, you are one of the few people that use the word “rockstar” without me wanting to gnash my teeth. I can see how MBA types have a standard set of adjectives they use to describe high performers, but I’ve heard people on cellphones in suits using the word “rockstar” on crowded busses as they attempt to manipulate the person on the other end of the phone “you’re a rockstar!! Now sell them that support package!!” and it has always irked me. At least you’re using it to show genuine respect for the people you work with. I’m curious, however, where you first picked that term up…and thanks for the lecture.

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ITEC 797: Parts 1, 2, 3 of research paper written. Part 1 needs a rewrite.

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ITEC 830: Social Media for Adult Learners and Online Educators
Our current reading had a lot to say about Web 2.0 technologies as they relate to adult learners. Specifically, collaborative activities between adult learners are now facilitated though Web 2.0 technologies. My curiosity is about how a blended learning course, i.e. a course with collaborative online and offline components affects classroom interaction. Does distance and lack of face-to-face contact affect collaborative groups negatively or positively? The text lists conditions for educational collaboration as:
1.    Socially bonded communities of learners
2.    Collaborative activity designs
3.    Explicit scaffolding or teaching of how to collaborate
4.    Evaluation of collaborative participation

Out of those four conditions, I would say that conditions 1 and 3 have to be met offline before all four conditions can be met online. Social bonding, particularly in a single course, may not be possible if it is taken entirely online. Neither is teaching collaboration or explicit scaffolding effective in a strictly distance learning course. Therefore, if a course is collaborative, it must be blended. If it is not collaborative, it should be fine being purely onine.

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ITEC 815: Using technology effectively in the classroom
What makes technology memorable and engaging? A novel idea, like the Common Craft “Plain English” videos, or a constructive analogy to explain a technical concept: “Your computer is like a car, the processor is like the engine” or a really engaging teacher, or all three, if I’m lucky.  People have to be motivated to learn using technology. Part is intrinsic—do they know why they’re even in this class or seminar? Do they really want to be here? Part is extrinsic—yes, the movie was attention-grabbing, yes, the instructor was charismatic and patient. Technology is boring when in instructor is lecturing non-interactively and expecting the technology to essentially sell itself to the students. Technology is boring when there are no clearly defined objectives “this program is cool, you can do a lot of stuff with it, mess around a bit…”
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ITEC 830: 5 Frame Story
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ITEC 815: Blog Midterm Splash
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ITEC 830: My stroke of insight (the TED lecture) and Chapters 1-3 (A Whole New Mind).
My stroke of insight (the TED lecture) and Chapters 1-3 (A Whole New Mind).

The materials we read for class today were paired well. The TED lecture was about a brain scientist who actually experienced a stroke in her left hemisphere and was able to describe its effects in such vivid detail as to really convey the emotional side of left-brain versus right brain thinking. In short, the right brain is responsible for a collective sense of being (and by extension empathy, sensing, feeling, compassion) while the left brain is responsible for the sense of being a single individual within the world—a self-contained, autonomous vessel. She also described the left brain as a serial thinker, a maker of lists, an itemizer, whereas the right brain is more of a parallel processor—good at taking in simultaneous stimuli and processing items collectively while the left brain decides how to categorize this sensory input, compare to past experiences, and predict future outcomes.

In a similar vein (or shall we say BURST blood vessel), Pink’s introductory chapters were collectively about right brained traits in society—essentially how “asia, automation, and abundance) make it possible for other countries to compete with the US in cheap skilled labor that is getting increasingly complex, automation of processes formerly done by pointy-headed engineering types in the US, and a wealth of material abundance where we’re no longer faced with “CAN” we buy something but rather “WHICH” item to buy—his argument is that products designed with creativity and that can elicit emotion and appreciation will now be the traits that distinguish themselves on the mass market. Further on in the book he relates this purchasing during an age of abundance to a sense of loneliness and overall lack of meaning that most people feel on our lives today. Creative, empathetic, right-brained thinkers will be bale to guide the next generation in their living and spending habits, as we no longer have the corner on left-brained, rote hardware, software, and design tasks. He also compares different eras: agricultural, industrial, informational, and conceptual, which we are in now. The conceptual age is suited to creative, empathetic, right-brained thinkers.
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ITEC 815: Understanding by Design and NCLB
Understanding by Design asks “How do we make it more likely – by our design – that more student really understand what they are asked to learn?” This book appears to advocate a “backwards” design process, wherein we first identify results, next determine the evidence that will show these results are achieved, and lastly plan learning experiences and instruction that will result in evidence of learning. I don’t have a large amount of knowledge about NCLB, but I do know that it promotes standards-based learning, and so in that regard has a set of learning objectives that it tests for. The problem here is not that the learning objectives are unclear, but that a standardized test may not accurately measure whether or not those objectives have been met. In short, testing may not be the best judge of evidence in learning, particularly given that time is now taken out of elective blocks at schools to “teach for the test” and in this case, I’m sure students are told “the objective of this tutoring is to get you to score higher on the test” and the function of actually learning new material, be it history, English, or science, is downplayed secondary to raising a particular score. I don’t believe NCLB has raised the quality of education in the United States. I think it has left students already struggling in school more disenfranchised then they were before.
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ITEC 823: Flash intro animation
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ISED 797: First draft of paper part I done. Yay.

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ITEC 830: 15 years of emerging technologies and we're still falling behind

Today’s reading was a through exploration of how mobile technology could perhaps have a positive impact on education. There are a few important points that the author made about what it would take to make this happen, and barriers between technology and education

First, not every child can afford to have a computer at home, but more often then not they will at least have a cell phone. At the very least, there could be some way to extend learning from the classroom to a location-aware device such as this. Hopefully, learning situated in a contextually relevant place would stimulate the curiosity of the learner and provide a more authentic learning environment.

Second, programmers and engineers, including those writing programs FOR educational purposes, are generally not educators by trade. This results in programs that are innovative but have little educational value.

Third, and something we’ve covered before—education doesn’t drive technology, it simply adopts technology that was developed for other purposes. Social networking was not developed with academia in mind, but it can be used towards that purpose.

Fourth, gaming, whether ALICE or an augmented reality treasure hunt or instructional manual, has been an excellent way to involve students in learning in a way that is fun and engaging.

 

My response to all of these points that the author makes is that we’ve had 15 years to develop effective educational tools based on the technology of the Web, and we’re still behind the rest of the developed world, academically. The cynical side of me says that computers aren’t worth anything to education if students are already overloaded by non-educational technology around them, and alienated by education as an institution. The practical side of me thinks that this issue could be attacked on a single front: Education, and just as importantly, teachers, need to be elevated in society in terms of respect and pay (they already go through enough schooling). This is the responsibility of parents, administrators, and policymakers. Because, even with the slickest, most intuitive educational game to learn algebra I, what percentage of children would even bother trying if they didn’t care about school in general?

 --notes from reading below--

Mobile, wireless, connected information clouds, and learning

  • Expectation of communication at our fingertips
  • Mobile AND connected
    • 3.2 billion cell phone users
    • diversity of mobile devices and offline browsing
    • cloud computing – keeping all of your data in a web-accessible location, ability to share with others
      • device and platform independent
        • java, ajax, flash
        • remember mac vs pc compatibility?
      • Personal, local, global, and external infoclouds.
      • The importance of context, including device awareness of physical location
        • Tagged objects
      • geotagging
  • Personalization
    • re-used,
    • changed, mixed, re-organized and shared by others using Web 2.0 technologies on mobile devices
      • Uh, twitter, anyone?
  • Media-rich experiences
    • Web 2.0: mixing and re-mixing
    • Access information in a local context
      • Again, geotagging
      • QR tagging
    • Aggregate information from local sources
  • Learning while mobile and connected
  • How do the above three characteristics affect learning?
    • Learning at times and locations previously not considered practical or useful.
      • Concept: Personal Learning Environment (PLE)
        • But, does personal time=personal learning?
      • MyArtSpace: online-offline collaborative learning
      • National Museum of Art and Science
        • Learner-defined experience, context aware
      • Projects online that are physically removed from the classroom
      • E-portfolios (SFSU), updateable on the fly, interactive with other ITEC students?
      • The writing of the article itself (ohh! Post-modern, self-referencing!)
  • Barriers and Issues
    • Privacy and Safety
    • Authenticity: Will you be truthful? Who is the SME?
    • Data security
    • Ownership of data
    • Connectivity: we don’t all live in the first world
    • Ownership of devices: can schools afford to buy equipment in the long run? Probably not. Are equipment grants a good idea? Only if there is a guaranteed lifecycle replacement. An even better solution: use the mobile devices that children are already carrying.
    • Are we in search of true learning or just the latest fads?
      • Again, does tech influence learning, or does learning influence tech?
      • Why hasn’t the IT revolution sparked a learning revolution? We’ve had, uh, 15 years to make this work.
    • Technology and media literacy: just because these tools are available doesn’t mean the user knows how to use them for learning
      • Cognitive, literacy demands to get the most out of these tools, exercise good judgment.
    • Safe, ethical, responsible use of the internet
    • Whatever trail you leave behind can be followed by others, including future employers
  • Conclusion
    • Use technology to provide opportunities for learning that don’t exist without then

 

 

  • Location-based and context-aware education: prospects and perils
  • The roots of ubiquity
    • Now a part of everyday life
    • Weiser: industrial computing. Reality: personal computing
      • Insight: he was applying the concepts of industrial computing to micro-computing
  • Towards locational and contextual computing
    • GPS
    • Inference engines
      • “information pushed to you varies with where you are, who you happen to be with, and what tasks you’re currently engaged in.”
    • Social dependency on these devices?
  • What does this have to do with education?
    • “place plus narrative equals a more resonant and memorable experience than either place or narrative alone.”
      • AI is sorely lacking to bind these together effectively.
        • The conference room example, gestalt theory, computers lacking the “right brain” and having only the “left brain”
        • Electronic autism
      • Engineers are not social scientists
      • Cultural nuances: “the values and orderings encoded into a system at the time and place of its development will rarely prove to be the appropriate ones for other venues and audiences”
    • So what works then?
      • Games: ALICE, and that one we played in 815.
      • Crossroads: combining the real and virtual
      • Reliving the Revolution
      • Shift from “student” to “player”
      • Informational overlays extended to the terrain “augmented reality”
      • Heat maps to show housing values
    • New approaches to assessment
      • Real-time testing based on previous answers
      • Environmental sensor grids: think Blade Runner: sense robots (and measure text anxiety)
    • New horizons: anywhere can be a classroom
    • “education will, of course, be competing against a great many other prerogatives for use of the local information infrastructure, and that for a variety of social, economic, emotional and psychological reasons, these other claims will often be seen as more pressing”
    • “The success or failure of such initiatives will hinge to a great degree on decisions made at the level of their architecture, and to the humility and realism with which they are devised. The clear lesson of the last decade of research into the question is that the promise inherent in location-based and context-aware techniques is very real, but that delivering the promise – especially in the educational domain – will depend vitally on the degree of insight and sensitivity the designer is able to call upon.”
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ITEC 815: Mindmap and Response: Using Technology with Classroom Instruction…that Works!

I finished reading Using Technology with Classroom Instruction…that Works! I found it to be a good resource for further ideas on how to deliver our workshop’s website. Not only has our group been using the collaborative features of Google Docs to allot the time of each presenter and the PowerPoint visuals, but we are also collaboratively editing the website that will be paired with the instruction we deliver.
The Mindmap that I created has the actual tools and programs highlighted in green, on the periphery of the map. The higher-level concepts are towards the center of the Mindmap.

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ITEC 830: Learning for the 21st Century: mindmap and response

This week yields another impressive result in mind-mapping (see below). In reading Learning for the 21st Century, mindmapping is a great way to keep track of concepts, suggestions, and ultimately, best practices for modern education.

If you look at the mindmap, you’ll see the broader headings closer to the center of the mindmap, for example, critical elements for creating learning, which are then refined to sub-parts, one of which being teaching and learning in a 21st century context, which can then be distilled into a specific best practice, such as comparing the information between different media sources and judging reliability. I highlighted the best practices in green, because after reading through this report, it was really the suggestions, not the observations that were helpful.

Also, see the mindmap below this one. I had some extra time traveling this weekend and read A Whole New Mind. I guess we’re reading it later on in the semester, but many of the ideas in the book regarding using your right-brain functions to engage your creativity and ability to recognize patters and empathize with others in order to become a successful person connected well with the Learning for the 21st Century piece.

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ITEC 830: A Whole New Mind: Mindmap and Response

A Whole New Mind was quite a fun read (though I guess I read it somewhat in advance of the due date), extolling the virtues of right-brain (i.e. creative thinking, empathy, pattern recognition) as the single saving grace in the American rat race to remain successful. Mr. Pink laid out the history of the US as: agriculture age->industry age->information age->conceptual age. The factors that have influenced this shift to the conceptual age are: automation, Asia, and abundance.

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ITEC 815: Cybersafety and Copyright
We had a great class today with discussions about cybersafety and copyright.
After taking note from journalism classes of two types of content you can NEVER print (Disney material and threatening to kill the president), Kathleen Ferenz added a third: Infringing upon Google's intellectual property.
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ITEC 815: Response to Using Technologies with Classroom Instruction
I read our book Using Technologies with Classroom instruction up to pg. 119 and created a MindMap (see previous post).
The segments highlighted in green reflect specific technologies mentioned in the book (such as using Word to create a KWHL chart, Kidspiration, Inspiration) and the orange highlighted segments reflect specific strategies we can use in our teaching segment to better impart the objectives of our one-hour lesson.

Specifically, I see advance organizers and pattern organizers as effective techniques for us to use when introducing the concept of podcasting:

For a pattern organizer, we could start with the word PODCAST and visually bread it down into an iPOD and broadcasting symbol. Combined, we could ask what the word has come to represent.

Similarly, the top of our instructional website (using Google Sites) could itself be an image that serves as an advance organizer or conceptual framework that we'd be working within. I'm designing a graphic that will be the banner across the top of the website that will show from left to right the recording, uploading, and syndicating steps.

http://sites.google.com/site/itec815podcast/
 
ITEC 815: Mindmap of Using Technologies for Classroom Discussion
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ITEC 830: Response to Emerging Technologies reading
Analysis of Emerging Technologies Article
(see Mindmap in previous post...entries highlighted in orange were notable points of discussion)

I think the bulk of this article wasn't laying out what technologies teachers should use, but rather what the Net generation (those born after 1982, and I am NOT one of them) are familiar with.

Some themes associated with the Net generation include:

-images rather than text (overlooking LiveJournal)
-expectation of immediate access to information
-quick searching rather then researching
-speed over ethics

Disturbingly, the implication is that Net Gen students view technology, and by extension education through technology in a consumer-oriented fashion. It needs be be fast, flashy, and available whenever they feel like partaking. This isn't the right approach to education. It should be a methodical process that is carefully thought out. Rather then catering to a generation of brains trashed by television, how about starting by imparting the importance of single-tasking, skill testing, and intense single-subject study rather then allowing carte blanc access to every technology tool out there?

That being said, we're applying much of this technology in ITEC 815 with good results.
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ITEC 830: Mindmap of Emerging Technologies for Learning
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ITEC 823: Stage Buildout
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ISED 797: Start of Research paper: justify your project (rough draft)

Learning management systems are centralized electronic programs that educators can use to develop and administer courses. More here, please.

Quantitative Approach:

Research question:

Does using a learning management system affect the amount of time teachers spend developing and administering courses in higher education?

Hypothesis:

Teachers will spend more time developing and administering a course using a learning management system during the first academic year they utilize this resource in comparison to teachers who do not. During subsequent years, the amount of time teachers spend developing and administering courses using a learning management system will decline in comparison to teachers who do not.

Operational Definitions:

Learning Management System: An electronic program overseen by the university to centrally manage students, teachers, course material, and evaluative material.

Course Development: Any time associated with researching, acquiring, and organizing material to present to a class. Course material can be electronic, paper-based, auditory, or lecture preparation.

Course Administration: Any time associated with teaching a class within higher education. This includes time in class lecturing and demonstrating ideas and concepts, and all of the time spend out of class facilitating online discussions between the teacher and students, along with assessment activities.

Qualitative Approach:

How is course development and administration affected by a learning management system?

Categories of Inquiry:

Teachers – Course Development:

Learning management systems can accomplish two tasks in relation to course development:

First, putting course material online that would traditionally be in the form of handouts and lectures. For example, a handout could be converted to a PDF and made available online so that it could be searchable and available to all students enrolled in the course so that a student would not have to be physically present to receive the material. Similarly, course lectures could be pre-recorded and played during the semester, or recorded at each class and made available after the conclusion of the class for further study.

Second, learning management systems enable teachers to use so-called web 2.0 tools to facilitate discussion between students and themselves. As part of course development, teachers could choose to set up discussion boards that would hold responses to weekly questions posed by the teacher, or the discussion boards could be used as a place for students to ask questions about the class that could be answered by the students or the teacher. Any of these discussion boards would have to be set up ahead of the semester.

Teachers – Course Administration:

A learning management system can accomplish three tasks in relation to course administration:

First, it can act as a repository for course material, whether it is loaded into the system during the development of the course, or loaded into the system as the course progresses.

Second, facilitates Web 2.0 interaction

Third, manages student grades

Students:

Instructional Technologists and Trainers: Instructional technologists and trainers

Network Administrators: The network administrators are generally the farthest away from the daily operation of the learning management system, and rely on feedback from teachers and instructional technologists as to how the software has impacted their teaching experiences. The following questions might be asked of this group of people: How reliable is the technology that underlies a learning management system? Has student and teacher material ever been lost? Has the learning management system gone down unexpectedly during critical times in the semester or quarter? Has the learning management system ever become slow or intermittently unresponsive? Have requests for features by teachers and instructional technologists been evaluated and fulfilled? If not, have teachers and instructional technologists been given adequate explanations as to why these features have not been made available?

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ITEC 815: Considering the use of social bookmarking as an organizing strategy for K12 content

Social bookmarking – though I’ve never used it--seems like a good way to organize collections of related links for a K12 class. I think the real power lies in how the information can be aggregated in a single web page, updated frequently, and in some cases, be displayed alongside similar content chosen by similar users rather then the teacher, giving him or her “fuzzy” control over the entirety of information displayed.
Julie brings up a good point, though…most associated information that is generated alongside your bookmarks/videos/blogs is relevant but also popular. And, what happens to be popular may not be appropriate for the grade level. Teachers have been suspended for introducing controversial literature during various educational dark ages our country has been through, and this was a voluntary risk. Who will help the poor teaching soul that finds inappropriate links and content generated by his or her own collection of links and content?

Though this book doesn’t target K12 specifically, we’ve been reading the free, collaborative e-book “Education for a Digital World: Advice, Guidelines, and Effective Practice from Around the Globe” in Dr. Foreman’s ITEC 830 class. If we think of social bookmarking as a Web 2.0 technology and as something that has the warm and fuzzy potential to make the teacher a collaborator and facilitator instead of a lecturer, we also need to think about how this loss of authority affects the classroom. Do K-12 students prefer to think of students as their peers or their superiors? And, alternately, if a teacher sees him or herself in an authoritative role, does using a Web 2.0 technology threaten this authority and erode their credibility? Is that just a pessimistic view?

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ITEC 830: Did constructivism influence Web 2.0 or was it the other way around?
Check out my WIKI in the for future projects using the link at left.

Reflection:

Looking at the relationship between education and e-learning while reading this chapter, I was struck by the question: do trends in education effect the development of e-learning technologies, or is e-learning simply an outgrowth of web 2.0 technology that is focused on education and is developed at the whim of web 2.0 companies and individuals.

If I state that trends in education have affected web 2.0 technologies, and essentially have provided a teacher-learner framework that web 2.0 technologies have been built around, I need to prove that student-centric teaching came before web 2.0. Sure enough, it did. Constructivism, placing greater emphasis on the student’s individual role in learning, rethinking the role of the teacher as a facilitator and peer, encouraging learning from peers via small group discussion—this came about long before web 2.0, arguably even when the web itself was in its infancy.

But the converse argument has valid points as well. Social learning, wikis, myspace, Google documents, in fact, any of the emerging technologies listed below all can be used in support of education, but they were not developed specifically for education. And, as Kathleen Ferenz told us regarding Google: there is only one employee acting as an official liaison between Google and the instructional community, and even she is doing this on her “20%” free time at the internet behemoth. As a comparison, WebCT/Blackboard, a longtime commercial LMS, did not have many features considered “web 2.0” until the past couple of years.

So, my basic answer is that approaches to education changed (mid 1990s constructivism), then Web 2.0 came along (2002), then the two became intertwined (2005 connectivisim).

What is your opinion?

My notes from the reading are posted below. I highlighted the red parts as I was reading as important points to discuss.

homework reading summary:

Summary: Create – Communicate – Collaborate.

web 1.0 is commerce, web 2.0 is people.

“makes sense to take students’ ideas and upgrade them using 21st century technology”

identify emerging technologies:

  • digital storytelling
  • online meetings/interactive distance learning
  • communities of practice
  • personal broadcasting (blogs, syndication)
  • wikis
  • educational gaming (ALICE?)
  • MMOGS (second life)
  • Extended learning (blended online-offline learning)
  • Intelligent searching
  • Webcam/cell phone digital video
  • Mashups
  • Social networking
  • Peer-to-peer file sharing (centralized copy, version control)
  • Mobile learning
  • Content aware environments and devices
  • Augmented reality
  • Smart mobs

incorporate these technologies to engage learners

  • sharing resources
  • user-created content—which voice has the most validity?
  • Lecture-based approaches fail to engage students online
  • Online course development takes time not given to faculty.
  • Shift from lecture to facilitator, place alongside instead of in front of classroom.
  • e-portfolios exist but there is no technology to systematically grade them.
  • “Learning should never be old methodologies delivered through new technologies.” Rosen (2006)

explain how emerging technologies will effect education and vice versa (which direction is more dominant?)

identify challenges in adoption of these technologies

  • administrative policies, government (age appropriate registration requirements < 13), culture.
  • Quality of instruction, lack of hands-on training—can e-learning replace direct experience?
  • Intellectual property rights, digital rights management, large for-profit corporations (WebCT?). Answer: Creative Commons (some rights reserved)

Parallel shift between student lead learning and web 2.0? No, that was constructivisim, and that came BEFORE web 2.0. I would argue that constructivism made learning between student and teacher bi-directional, and working in small groups introduced student to student learning. Web 2.0 is the technological equivalent of constructivism-based learning.

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ISED 797: One paragraph down.
...and about 60 more to go.
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ITEC 823: Converting pixel-based images to vector-based images
All,

Because I've used this feature a few times today, I thought it might be useful:

If you have a jpeg, gif, or png that you'll be using in your Flash project, you have the option of converting it to a vector-based image. This could be important if your project zooms in on any part of the screen. Oh, and it makes your picture look cool.

Import your image into your project.
Select your image.
Modify->Bitmap->Trace bitmap
by monkeying around with the settings, you can create anything from a realistic-looking vector image to a pastoral thomas-kinkade style waste of screen.

Also, Illustrator has a similar function called LiveTrace that has a few more bells and whistles, if you really want to refine the conversion.

before:


after vector (closeup):
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ITEC 830: RSS presentation
ITEC 830ians,

Here is the text to my RSS presentation:

RSS:

Really simple stalking, aka really simple syndication.

The key being an easy way to syndicate information that is rapidly updated.

First, what is a non-internet way to describe it? Let's start with the concept of syndication:

A small hometown newspaper wants to have a blend of local and national news. Local news is written by a small number of staff reporters. National and international news in written by a large pool of reporters in a standardized format:

UPI, AP, Reuters are three wire services, or syndicates, of information, that sell these articles to local papers for placement alongside local reports. Oh, sold to the tune of $36,000/week.

Standard newspaper format:

Headline, byline, lead, nut graph, supporting information.

The difference between syndication then and now: controlled, edited, subscription-based service vs. free, voluntary, and democratic.

In RSS, if you have content on your website that other people find useful and you ALLOW it, they can syndicate, or in this case, partially replicate, your content on their website/in their feed reader..

Similarly, if you see content on someone else's website, and see an orange radio wave signal, you can add their content to your website/feed reader.

This is all about efficiency in web browsing. Rather than having to visit your favorite 50 websites each day to check for updated news and commentary, you only have to visit one. (Aggregation)

If you wish to syndicate your own content, you need an RSS-generating program that takes the content from your website and puts it into a standard format

If you wish to read syndicated content, you need an RSS-reading/aggregating computer program (Firefox) or a web-based reading/aggregating program (iGoogle, Google Reader, Netvibes)

In RSS,



http://www.xul.fr/
Xml graphical interface etc...

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ITEC 830: RSS Feed URL For This Blog
All,
Here is the RSS URL for my Blog:
  http://openbookconsulting.org/index.php?option=com_rd_rss&id=3
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ITEC 815: YouTube Video Blog Post
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ITEC 823: How NOT to kill your houseplants Flash animation.
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ISED 797: I'm going to die.
I'm not sure I can pass this class. I'm not sure anybody else will, either.
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ITEC 830: Connectivism.

The BORG may share a lot, but it sure makes them vulnerable to catastrophic failure.

I realize that the connections the learner has to others in society has a huge impact on learning. But I it is a mistake to think that connectivism is inseparable from technology.
Siemens mentions informal learning and communities of practice—theories that recognize that learning takes place outside of the classroom. I agree, and I ascribe to these beliefs that knowledge can be acquired without the intentionality of a classroom setting.
But Siemens is sneaky. He intersperses our supposed dependency on technology within these theories, and this is incorrect. Technology does not have to facilitate connections between people. Informal learning and communities of practice have been around hundreds of years before the internet—they’ve just not be formally recognized. And, it is dangerous to think of the internet, let alone any artificial commodity, as a pillar of this emerging theory of education.In many years of working in IT, there is one scenario that is never planned for but will inevitably happen: catastrophic failure.
So I’m asking Mr. Siemens to put people before technology, in spite of its widespread use.

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ITEC 815: Back channel communication: blogging and chatting
It's always a contrast coming from a harshly lit room with two rows of desks facing forward and content projected on transparencies to a cool, dark computer lab where each user has five applications open and has their attention divided between the instructor and their computer. It's a contrast because it is the old guard versus the new guard. People space out in my other class. They can only focus for so long on a single person up front, and then their eyes glaze over and their mind wanders. It's a personal trip--you're not privy to where their mind has wandered or why, at a certain point, their attention shifted away from the instructor. In this class, by contrast, the need to temporarily shift your focus to something else can result in something that is still interactive with the class. An entry on the NING chat applet, or a message to a classmate. Or a note on your blog or e-mail account that a certain technology mentioned would be REALLY useful for a project you had planned. So, backchannel communication, if you want to call it that, has its merits. We can force K-12 students to come to class but we can't force them to pay attention to a single orator for the entire period. Even speaking loudly with brevity and repeating things becomes a stimulus that students acclimate to, so there has to be a sanctioned way to switch focus between mediums in order for instruction to be continuously effective. And, as Vicki Davis mentioned in her blog: http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2007/09/installing-backchannel-in-my-classroom.html the most prolific back channel communicators were the quiet kids in class, and the inverse was true for verbal participants. Also of interest is an article from NY TIMES from 2003 about the first sanctioned chat rooms in classrooms: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=980DE1D7153FF937A15754C0A9659C8B63 And, in terms of how to use social networking, I think that chatting online in class and blogging outside of class are two complimentary tools: blogging can help summarize a body of knowledge from the view of a single student after the fact, whereas chatting in class helps construct the body of knowledge as learning is taking place and makes it easier to remember the content later.
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ITEC 830: 4 blogs, 4 classes
I have a password manager called Splash ID. Today, I've had to add an ITEC category because I've signed up for igoogle, ning, logged into the itec 830 netvibes, and spent a lot of time customizing various all-in-one homepages. The problem is that there is no way to have one all-in-one page that aggregates content from all of the other sources. So, I now have to check several accounts to make sure I'm staying on top of everything. Oh, and I still need time to procrastinate.
Taking four ITEC classes results in INSTANT information overload.
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ITEC 830: Using Joomla to blog...

Using Joomla to Blog.

Well, it all seemed so simple. See, I have a website, openbookconsulting.org. I use a content management system called Joomla. Now, Joomla is great for keeping track of individual web pages on your website. It is terrible, however, for syndicating content, and for blogging in general. I could have just installed Wordpress, but I get easily overwhelmed by using too many types of software, and so I figured out how to use a Jooma add-in called RUN-RSS to syndicate the Blog part of my website. You should now see it in the feed aggregate on Netvibes...you're probably reading this from Netvibes right now....

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ITEC 815: About me
I had a nice visit to the Conservatory during the carnivorous plant exhibit. I'm a second year (but now full-time) ITEC student. I normally work at an Oil Spill Response facility in Santa Cruz, MWVCRC, but I've decided to accelerate my learning and take a leave of absence from my job for this academic year. I've never gone to school without working, so this will be interesting. I like biking, physical computing (interactive technology exhibits you might find at 'zeum or the Exploratorium), and cheap healthy food. If you have any tips on how to eat in SF on $6/day, please let me know...I'm getting sick of beans and rice. I hope to use this MA to design exhibits at a tech museum in the Bay Area or teach at a public school or anything but doing front-line tech support.
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Open Book Consulting. Located in a small city old timers call San Francisco, CA