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December 28, 2006

The 2007 predictions have started...

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The predictions for what we'll see happen in 2007 are already beginning to circulate, and Robin Good has done a pretty good job in my view with his New Media Trends and 2007 Predictions: What's Coming? entry on his blog.

In it he takes a look at 14 new media and web-related technology areas and trends he sees moving forward, providing a glimpse of what you are to expect for the next 12 months. Robin has done a good job of summarising and explaining what these trends are, and providing links to examples and illustrations. Anyone serious about remaining at the "leading edge" would do well to read this entry and keep an eye on the areas that Robin has identified.

On a lighter note, Lore Sj??berg lists his tech predictions for 2007 in Wired News. The one I liked best is:

Aliens from the planet Rylos descend upon the planet and reveal that they gave Nintendo the technology for the Wii so they could train and recruit young people to fight in their desperate interplanetary battle for freedom. One brave teenager volunteers to fight for them, but the war is lost when the wrist strap on his starfighter breaks.

December 27, 2006

Another online whiteboard

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Something else to play with and explore during the Christmas break - a sharable online whiteboard called Skrbl.. Designed to make online collaboration simple, with a simple selection of fonts and editing features - or, you can set the privacy features so that you simply use it as your personal set of notes or information you want to store. Text you copy and paste into skrbl retains its formatting, so you can copy notes from anywhere and paste them into your skrbl. You can also copy images from the web into skrbl.

I rather like this one - you can have a play with it without even registering.

Web2.0 Design Guide

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Here's an interesting site that I came across this morning while browsing - The Web2.0 How-to design guide. . The guide is a summary of many of the common features of typical "Web 2.0" sites, and provides some useful pointers for those interested in interface design. It's worth a read - such a lot has changed in the field of design since the days when I first studied it!

In a similar vein, Jakob Neilsen has posted his 2006 list of Top10 Mistakes in Web Design. Since 1996, Neilsen has compiled many top-10 lists of the biggest mistakes in Web design. (Links to all these lists can be found at the bottom of this article.) This article presents the highlights the very worst mistakes of Web design.

December 24, 2006

Merry Christmas for 2006!

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Christmas is a time of traditions and rituals for many people, and in our home one of these is the setting up of a Nativity scene in our lounge. In the weeks leading up to Christmas we use that scene to remember and re-tell the story of Christmas. Our children place the figures of the wise men in different parts of the house, and each day move them closer to where the nativity scene is, eventually arriving there on Christmas day. This year we have two Nativity Scenes set up - the second one (below) was brought home by our 20 year old daughter from her trip to Central America earlier this year!

To all readers of "Derek's Blog" - a very blessed Christmas for 2006!

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December 22, 2006

Top 100 lists and other end of year awards!

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It's official - the Time magazine Person of the Year for 2006 is "YOU"!!! In a world where stories of war, political intrigue and natural disasters have dominated the news, Time magazine has chosen a different perspective for 2006...

look at 2006 through a different lens and you'll see another story, one that isn't about conflict or great men. It's a story about community and collaboration on a scale never seen before. It's about the cosmic compendium of knowledge Wikipedia and the million-channel people's network YouTube and the online metropolis MySpace. It's about the many wresting power from the few and helping one another for nothing and how that will not only change the world, but also change the way the world changes.
Supporting this view of an online world where community and collaboration is occurring is the Guardian's list of The new 100 most useful sites. (Thanks Douglas for the pointer). Their list shows a dramatic change in emphasis, with a proliferation of social networking technologies, usefully categorised. The one category that is missing, they note, is mobile technologies, but hte list authors see this as a possible addition in 2007.

And from the Online Education Database is a list of their Top 100 Education Blogs. These were selected from the 5000-odd blogs that are tracked through Technorati. I'm not sure about the categorisation they've used, but there are some really useful blogs to check out here! (Including yours truly - see under the "Technology" category!)

December 20, 2006

Quintura for Kids

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I just received an email from Jakov today to say that Quintura for Kids has been launched. I've had a quick play with it, and it's pretty impressive. Here's what their press release has to say:

Designed specifically for kids, this new experience demonstrates Quintura???s continued commitment to change the way people search and find information on the Web. Based on the same cutting edge Neural Network technology used on Quintura.com, Quintura for Kids utilizes the Quintura cloud, which allows kids to find what they are looking for faster and easier than ever before.

Quintura for Kids brings a unique experience to an increasingly important group of Internet users. The intuitive nature of the cloud allows kids to develop and refine their search by clicking on key words that appear in the cloud. The interface also allows for relevant searches around a set of rotating icons on the site.

???We are striving to bring our users a new search experience. It is visual and intuitive.??? ??? said Yakov Sadchikov, co-founder and CEO of Quintura. ???We wish everyone Happy Holidays and a prosperous New Year!???

Try Quintura for Kids out for yourself at http://kids.quintura.com

About Quintura

Quintura (www.quintura.com) operates the See & Find?? visual find engine. Quintura, Inc. is a U.S. corporation with offices in Alexandria, Virginia, and software development operations in the Moscow region of Russia. In the near future, Quintura plans to offer blog and web publishers an affiliate program to create and display the Quintura clouds for their web-sites and related search themes. Quintura was named as one of the world's hottest startups in the August issue of Business 2.0 magazine.

For more information, please visit www.quintura.com


December 19, 2006

The Invisible Web

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Seems that the web is growing at such a rate that we may never be able to keep track of everything that is "up there". The diagram above is one I drew up for a presentation a couple of years ago to illustrate (not to scale) how what we discover using a search engine such as Google fails to penetrate the "deep" or "invisible" web. On the other hand, search engines associated with specific collections such as TKI allow us to search to the depths of that particular collection in a vertical slice of the web. My diagram was intended to show that, by creating alliances between various collections of educational resources, and 'federating' the search among them, we might go some way towards being able to search the deep or invisible web - at least within that small sub-category of the web.

My reason for reflecting on this comes from an email I received this morning from Jimmy Atkinson from the Online Education Database.. He's just written a feature article titled The Ultimate Guide to the Invisible Web . He begins...

In the early days of the Web, computing power and storage space was at such a premium that the few search engines that were around often indexed only a tiny fraction of Web pages and not even full pages at that. But eventually space became relatively cheap and engines started indexing pages in full (full text), as well as more pages. Still, engines miss a lot of pages. Here's a guide to those "invisible" pages.
The article provides a useful background to the invisible web, followed by 9 reasons why a web page is invisible, then 10 ways to make invisible content visible. There's also a list of 15 invisible web search tools that I'll be interested to try out over the next few weeks. Jimmy's article is succinctly written and well worth the read!

While talking about internet searching, I also received a follow-up email from Jacov this morning advising that he and his team will are soon going to launch Quintura for Kids ??? a visual search portal for kids with a unique design and intuitive way to find sites. Apparently due out before Christmas - so watch this space!

December 15, 2006

ePortfolio roundup

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ePortfolios are a hot item in the news this week with several items worth noting. One is the posting of the ePortfolio Project and Mahara Update No.3 on eduforge which got a mention by Stephen Downes who also points to a powerpoint presentation you can download for more information.

Mahara is is a collaborative venture funded by New Zealand???s Tertiary Education Commission???s e-learning Collaborative Development Fund (eCDF), involving Massey University (lead provider), Auckland University of Technology, The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand, and Victoria University of Wellington. The project is charged with developing an open source ePortfolio application and to provide implementation strategies for the New Zealand tertiary sector - although it is clear that what is being developed will have much wider appeal, both nationally and internationally.

A Review of the Literature on Portfolios and Electronic Portfolios (.pdf) that was completed as part of the Mahara project has also been released. it provides an overview of benefits, functions, and successful criteria of portfolios, and an exploration of portfolio use in teacher education, medicine, and nursing. The second half of the report explores eportfolios (the section on benefits is quite thorough).

Also recently released is the EduTools ePortfolio Review, a review of seven ePortfolio products on the behalf of seven partner institutions or systems of institutions. I wasn't able to locate a print form of the report, but there's a link to a webcast featuring the research results of the ePortfolio project.

And lastly, a list of ePortfolio readings and papers posted on Helen Barrett's blog. This includes an article from the Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology by David Tosh, Tracy Penny Light, Kele Fleming and Jeff Haywood titled Engagement with Electronic Portfolios: Challenges from the Student Perspective. A line from the abstract sums up a lot of my feeling about the use of ePortfolios in education:

If students do not accept the e-portfolio as a holistic means with which to document their learning in different contexts and more importantly, agree or wish to use the e-portfolio as an integral part of their educational experience, then the potential impact the e-portfolio will have on learning will not be realised.

December 11, 2006

LMS Tips - free book

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I'm always a sucker for anything that is "free" - so when I saw reference to a free book titled 339 Tips on the Implementation of an LMS or LCMS from the eLearning Guild I had to have a look.

It's a collection of tips and suggestions from professionals who have gone through the process of deciding about the implementation of an LMS or LCMS etc within their institution or organisation. All 339 tips are referenced to the person who made the comment, so you can easily distinguish the context that the person is making the suggestion from (eg education, business etc).

Probably not the sort of book that I'd spend a lot of money on - but a useful read to gain an overview of the considerations that need to be taken into account, and lessons learned from others who have been there before us. The Implementation tips are organised into ten major groups:

  1. Comprehensive tips: This is the largest single group. Each of these 105 tips addresses several key areas or best practices.
  2. Tips on change management and obtaining stakeholder buy-in.
  3. Tips on selecting and managing the implementation team.
  4. Tips on involving the IT Department in the implementation.
  5. Tips on project management.
  6. Tips on system management and configuration.
  7. Tips on testing and piloting the LMS/LCMS.
  8. Tips on training users.
  9. Tips on managing vendor relationships.
  10. Miscellaneous tips on a variety of topics: Some tips simply didn???t fit any category, but they are valid and worth considering.
These headings alone provide you with a useful framework for consideration when facing the task of implementing a LMS.

Informal Learning

Great post from Stephen Downes on his "Half and hour" blog titled The form of informal in which he further explores the difference between formal and informal learning. Summed up well in this statement I feel:

What makes informal learning different from formal learning is not that it is formless, but rather, it that it is conducted outside the domain of the formal education infrastructure, with the associated and not trivial implication that it is managed by the learner, and not the professor or institution.

December 6, 2006

Digial Content Strategy

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I took the opportunity on Tuesday to attend one of the presentations on the draft Digital Content Strategy. One of the things I was particularly pleased to see was the inclusion of a category of content called "informal" content (which I often refer to as "user generated content" - the sort of thing created in blogs, wikis and other forms of social software.) I'd argue that this is an important dimension of a digital content strategy given the emerging discussion about "informal learning" that is taking place in the e-learning world (see recent contributions by Stephen Downes, Juliett White and Tony Karrer for instance)

Not all would agree however. One gentleman at the presentation challenged the presenter by asking "why are we taking this (informal) content seriously?" He contended that such content was untrustworthy, opinionated, and not worth the time and effort to classify or store for the future. Such traditional views of the nature and value of content are bound to inform the way the final document is developed - which is why I guess it is important for those who regard the importance of informal content as a part of the Web2.0 should make a response to the writing group by the due date of 20 December. Response forms, along with copies of the discussion document are available on the Digital Strategy website.

December 5, 2006

Creative Advent Calendar

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Here's a great idea for an advent calendar - sent to me by my friend Jonathan Furness from pupils at Stepping Stones School in the UK that caters for students suffering from hemiplegia, a condition, similar to cerebral palsy, affecting one side of the body.

These students have done a wonderful job with this calendar, with each day being made "live" in the lead-up to Christmas. These links open up a file (movie, image, cartoon etc) with a Christmas theme or message that has been created by the students. Well worth taking a look! And if you like it, why not leave a comment in their guest book?

December 4, 2006

e-assessment and e-portfolios

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Helen Barrett recently posted a number of new articles about e-portfolios on her blog, one of which is Becta's View: E-assessment and e-portfolios (pdf).

It's an interesting read, with relevance to many of the educational issues that we're confronted with here in NZ, including personalising learning and life-long learning.

The paper intro reads:

Within a few years,e-assessment and e-portfolios will be integral parts of modern learning and teaching.They are vital elements for personalising learning,with benefits for both learner and practitioner.E-assessment provides the flexibility for learners to strengthen their understanding of key concepts,and to formally demonstrate that understanding at a time that is right for them. E-portfolios allow learner and practitioner to track progress,carry evidence of their work across transition points (for example, from school to college),reflect on their learning and build a skills profile across a lifetime.
This document provides a short introduction to e-assessment and e-portfolios,how they might develop,and why Becta strongly believes that they will support engagement and achievement in learning. "

One of the things that caught my eye is the list of "Essential Functionality" that appears on page 5. The paper states that whatever e-assessment and e-portfolios may be used for in a local context, Becta believes that both should:

  • allow 24/7 access
  • be based on open standards
  • support nationally agreed interoperability standards
  • be based on functional specifications
  • be convergent with national approaches to MIS architectures in all sectors
  • be transferable across phases of learning
  • be usable over mobile and wireless technologies
  • be able to incorporate many different types of learning and evidence of learning, including multimedia files
  • allow the learner to maintain access to their learning and evidence of learning across a lifetime.
  • be built with accessibility for all learners in mind.
I really like the cross-sector emphasis here, and the reference to mobile learning. It's a future-focused, 'embrasive' position that I'd like to see inform what we're doing here in NZ.

December 1, 2006

Social Software for Learning

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I had the opportunity yesterday to participate in an online forum using Elluminate as part of The Social Software/Web 2.0 Technologies Research Project which is funded by the Australian Flexible Learning Framework's Knowledge Sharing Services and Research and Policy Advice Projects.

It's really great to be able to be a part of this sort of forum and participate in discussions focusing on research around this emerging area of interest and activity in the online world - particularly as it pertains to education.

There were some really interesting examples of the educational use of Social Software being shared in the forum - and a whole lot more shared on the wiki, some relating to the use of SS with students, and others in relation to the use of SS for professional development. It always impresses me how creative and imaginative some teachers can be with new tools and environments like this.

I can't help but observe, however, the ongoing point of tension in these sorts of discussions. The very fact that we are looking at how to integrate the use of SS into our teaching and learning programmes assumes that this is (a)possible and (b)desirable.

Social software, by its very nature, is essentially about providing forms of expression for individuals who are then connected with other individuals to form multi-layered networks based on common areas of interest or concern. These networks thrive on the contributions of the individuals, both to their personal environments and to the environments of others. The networks tend to be very democratic and fluid, with structure and form being determined by the participants.

Contrast that with the adoption of such environments within formal education processes. Regardless of how well intentioned the teacher/tutor may be, there is inevitably a level of imposed structure and expectation brought to bear. Formal education experiences are by nature characterised by being time bound, requiring assessment and adhering to a curriculum. All of these parameters are (generally) established externally to the participants. Further, choosing to become a participant in a course does not automatically assume one might choose to become a 'blogger' for instance - and we observe how important personal motivation and 'ownership' is in maintaining a profile within the social networking space.

The relationship between the use of social software by individuals and its appropriation within formal teaching and learning situations is what I've tried to illustrate in my recent post on MLEs and PLEs, and also in my paper on the scope of the PLE.

Our use of these environments is still at an emergent stage, and research such as this will provide some much needed insights into what is working well - and what isn't. The research team of Val Evans, Susan Stolz and Larraine Larri have also established a blog in which they invite people to contribute thoughts and ideas connected with their research questions. With an increasing number of people becoming interested in making the use of social software a focus of research, this might be a useful forum to become a part of. Although it is focused on the post-school sector (VET), there are plenty of lessons that could be learned (and contributed) from those who are using social software in other areas of the education system.

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