Periodic Fable

My websites

HelenWhitehead.com
creative digital writing

Reach Further
Consultancy and professional services in online content, community and e-learning

The eTeachersPortal
creative uses of ICT for teaching writing and literacy in school

Kids on the Net
Website for children to publish their writing, plus digital writing projects for schools

Links

The Beyond Distance Research Alliance at Leicester University

Add to Technorati Favorites

Helen is currently feeling:
The current mood of Helen at www.imood.com

Monday, 3 December 2007

Advent (of technology) calendar

This December at ELKS (the community of expertise which I manage for the UN's Global Alliance for ICT in Development initiative) we've adapted a December tradition to produce an "Advent of technology" Calendar - with a resource, tool or tip about e-learning for every day of December.

There are 30 days to fill - so we need your contributions! Tell us what tool (including software, hardware or gadgets), or what resource (such as website), or what conference, journal, model of best practice, or even person has greatly impacted on your practice as a teacher using technology. What's been the greatest boon? What changed your life? Well - at least what changed your teaching practice, at least a little!

Email helen.whitehead AT le.ac.uk with your suggestions to add to our calendar, the sooner the better. If you can accompany it with a photo related to your location (as square as possible), that would be even better. You'll see December 2nd is a view up the Attenborough Tower at the University of Leicester, where the Beyond Distance Research Alliance (where ELKS is based) has its offices.

There's also a discussion - please let us know what your tool, resource etc. means to you.

To find the Advent Calendar go to ELKS and click on Showcase in the left hand menu. Click on the Advent of technology Calendar then double-click on today's picture and "view details" to see the resource behind it. You don't have to login to see the calendar.

DIRECT LINK to calendar

If you have an interest in the role of e-learning in development, and would like to become a member of ELKS, just get in touch with me and I'll send you a password. helen.whitehead AT le.ac.uk

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 9:39 AM

(0) comments

Monday, 22 October 2007

Links for week commencing 22nd October

Some interesting social software for learning:

Ecto
http://www.ectolearning.com/
Their blurb: "Ecto is a hosted, open networked Personal Learning Environment. Use Ecto to transform learning into an interactive, collaborative, and student centered activity. Ecto is the only learning management system built from the ground up on the principles and architecture of social software."

It's an online service and at the moment you can join for free although it's a commercial offering. At the moment it looks pretty vanilla - it seems to be social networking aimed at learning and teaching, nothing really new about it.

ELGG
http://elgg.org/
Elgg is an open source social platform based around choice, flexibility and openness: a system that firmly places individuals at the centre of their activities. ELGG is being used by a LOT of universities and educational organisations, but you do need a server to run it on so it's not a solution for individuals.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 9:20 AM

(0) comments

Friday, 3 August 2007

Join me on the Creativity in E-Learning network

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 4:06 PM

(0) comments

Friday, 22 June 2007

Embedding?

At a conference I attended recently, there was much discussion about what "embedding" means in the context of e-learning in Higher Education.

I was thinking maybe we should be talking about "Mbedding" because possibly the whole point is to lose the "e"... Technology should be just one of the tools which teachers use to develop, deliver and facilitate learning, no more or less important than any other. To use technology that way, however, there need to be a lot of things in place - infrastructure and support (including availability of IT experts and learning technologists), training and awareness building, piloting of technologies, and research into the pedagogical aspects of using technology (as there should be research into pedagogical aspects of all learning practices).

Labels: , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 11:18 AM

(1) comments

Tuesday, 12 June 2007

Google pitching to Higher Education

According to this story on the BBC today, Google is expanding its empire into universities - with entire campus e-mail networks switching over to using Google's e-mail service. Apparently Trinity College Dublin has switched over entirely to Google's e-mail.


The new Google-based e-mail addresses (which can still be applied to a university domain name, but which can be accessed from any online computer) can be kept by students when they leave. I'm not sure this is a good idea. There are all sorts of reasons (e.g., authenticity and identity) why a university email address should be limited to those actually studying or working in them. Surely it would be better if university email accounts simply automatically redirected once a student leaves, with a notification that "this student has left".

Google says its higher education tools, hosted by them, allow students to work on files from any internet-connected computer, to engage in collaborative work - working together in real-time on the same document - and to use online timetables and calendars.

What's next - the Google VLE?

I would have serious doubts about privacy and security of data by entrusting all to Google - but it's certainly true that Universities can no longer ignore the rise of Web 2.0 applications.
As Michael Nowlan, director of information systems services at Trinity College Dublin, is quoted as saying, "The digital natives will find their own way, make their own discoveries."

Labels: , , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 9:56 AM

(0) comments

Monday, 5 February 2007

Curt Bonk's advice...

Curt Bonk - a larger-than-life e-learning expert from the University of Indiana - has posted "A Quick 30 Writing Tips for the Start of an Academic Career" on his blog at
http://travelinedman.blogspot.com/

He's also briefly mentioned the Learning Futures conference at Leicester, and discusses Ten Observations Related to E-Learning in the UK.

Labels: , , , ,


posted by Helen Whitehead 12:40 PM

(0) comments

Powered by Blogger