20
Jul 12

Campus Technology 2012

Boston is not an easy city to get to, it would seem. At least out of the University Park airport, which canceled my early morning flight and saw me instead arriving at 3:00pm on the day of pre conference workshops. So began my trip to Campus Technology 2012 – and so much for tightly scheduled plans.

Luckily, day two was far more productive. I attended the keynote session lead by Mark Milliron of Western Governors University.  Gary Chinn had mentioned Western Governors to me only a few weeks before so I had a passing knowledge of what the concept behind this online institution was going into the session.  Milliron is a very clear and concise speaker and shared a lot of insight with the audience about who our students are now – and who they are likely to be increasingly in the future.  The days of teaching to students who walk from their dorms to your classroom during bank hours are not going to end completely, but we should really expect more evening classes, more flexible scheduling of assignments and, most encouragingly to me (since I did school in three years and made my own major), more ownership of educational pathways taken.

It all sounds a bit like what I encounter on campus travel.  Many students are employed during the day in various fields (nursing, coal mining, factory IT staff, high school teachers) and are looking to upgrade their careers.  Many work odd shifts that require evening classes.  They are also engaged in online classes when they can’t find them on campus at convenient times.  And all are only interested in learning what they absolutely need to to increase their career hunting capacities and ensure they know what is necessary for their own growth.

What was alarming was the amount of laughter and even derision heard in the crowd at the mention of things like teaching late at night or offering à la carte educational paths.  It seemed like folks were aware of the shift coming their way in education but perhaps aren’t willing to accept that it’s not only coming soon but already here in a lot of ways.

All that aside, the rest of Tuesday consisted of some standard issue sessions on re-purposing classroom spaces at Indiana University to promote collaboration (a good session but they included far too many examples – more in depth on one example, particularly the one with no new furniture purchases, would have been better), a student panel on learning with mobile tools (which was hosted by CDW-G and felt a bit too much like a promotional session on their products and services) and a lunch in the vendor hall followed by poster sessions.

It was during a lap around the vendor booths that Hannah and I had a great conversation with the three reps from Media Core.  Their product can best be described as Kaltura if remade in Apple’s image.  It’s a gorgeous platform for sharing videos within a controlled environment and seems to make managing, encoding and even uploading videos a very simple process for not just the administrative team but also the end users.  There’s even a robust iOS app for mobile video sharing.  What they lack is an online editor with group collaboration capabilities – but they took our information and let us know that they are looking for pilot testers of exactly that.  To say we are intrigued by this is an understatement.  I’m not usually one for this sort of vendor interaction, preferring to thoroughly research on my own and then get in touch but I’m glad we stopped by!

The second day was spent listening to Greg Siemens of Athabasca University talking about the history of educational changes coming about because of shifts in technology.  He also made clear that we are not just on the cusp of major changes in the way we educate and learn but probably in the midst of the changes already happening.  It was a great talk and met with a more subdued and introspective seeming audience.  Perhaps it was sinking in?

After a final session on an iPad pilot at University of the Sciences I headed to Boston’s Logan International for my 2:30 departure which would connect to Philadelphia and send me on to State College for a mid-evening arrival – plenty of time to be back for presenting at Learning Design Summer Camp.  Except Stormpocalypse 2012 occurred, grounding all planes and royally screwing everything up.  10 hours in the airport, a very late flight into Philadelphia, an overnight stay at a friend’s house, a three hour drive across PA and a lost and found bag later and I finally arrived just in time to miss presenting at LDSC.  Ah well – that’s the joy of air travel via State College, I suppose.


10
Jul 12

Text in Place

Klagenfurt, Austria has no traditional public library.  But what they do have is an intriguing solution to  giving their citizens access to books.  By using near field communications and QR codes, the municipality will be linking residents to public domain works in appropriate locations.  An example given in Engadget‘s posting about this project puts The Killer at the police station.  The creators of this distributed library hope to include other media in even more locations – and to offer up the recipe for creating a similar “library” in your own town.

It’s certainly a unique concept, especially as e-readers take on ever more prominence in our lives – and libraries find themselves tossing out physical collections that only continue growing at an alarming pace.  I like it much better than on-demand library printing (it just seems wasteful)!


21
Jun 12

Cyberpunk Saves the Day

Just as when we were on the cusp of cyberpunk and didn’t know it, I’m hoping now for another new breed of writers, people who can craft drive-by speculations that leave us gasping with surprise.

My love of all things 80s and 90s artsy/techie of course has bred in me a fascination with the ethos of the cyberpunk.  It doesn’t help that I’m also a Stephenson junkie and a Gibson supporter…  Paolo Bacigalupi’s “How Cyberpunk Saved Sci-Fi” was a delightful find in the latest issue of Wired magazine.  (And it’s available to read for free online now, too.)

Perhaps not too surprising since the staff at Wired’s always been on the cyberpunk bandwagon, though.  Probably actually helping turn its tenets into our reality.

(A re-post from my personal blog.)


21
May 12

Sketchy

Sustainability 200

Believe it or not, what you are seeing in this Paper by 53 sketch is a map for an entire, statewide sustainability course.  It’s always almost laughable to me how humble the beginnings of projects often are.


14
May 12

The View from Here

“Audacity is easily written off as naïveté, as overshooting your resources or talents. And that’s a danger. […] But you can’t make the future without imagining what it might look like.”

And I think all of us in the field of instructional technology at least aim to walk the fine line between dreaming up a future for our faculty, staff and student clients…and overstepping the (sometimes scant) resources we have to help shape it.

Wired has pulled together 7 fantastic steps that they themselves employ for helping to predict what’s coming next. Ranging from “explore the willful inefficiency” to “look for deep design”, the list has lots to learn from – and lots to apply to our day to day. 20 years of experience can’t be too wrong, right?


07
May 12

Getting Gestural with TeleHuman

“Communication breaks down even with a subtle little thing,” Vertegaal said. “When you think about preserving human communication, it’s more about what you leave out rather than what you add. With this system, we’re trying to leave out as little as possible.”

Roel Vertegaal of the Queen’s University Human Media Lab discusses the benefit of making remote communication more natural with the TeleHuman projection system.  The device allows for a 3D image to be projected at life size into an environment and further allows users to glean subtle information about a presenter that would have been lost by transmission in 2D.  While this device isn’t perfect (yet), the technology already has clear classroom implications.  Imagine sending yourself to any campus in the Commonwealth without going anywhere at all.  Certainly much less jarring for the learner than the alternate, “Big Brother” on TV approach.

Check out the video for a few previews of how the TeleHuman system works:

There’s more about the TeleHuman and its sister, BodiPod at Wired‘s site.


19
Apr 12

Elementary

AT&T demoed something remarkable that it calls Watson – and made it available as an API for developers today.  To quote Engadget, since they were on-hand:

“One day AT&T hopes to make this a standard feature of its services, eliminating the language barrier once and for all.”

Learn more by reading “AT&T Translator app hands-on: smashing the language barrier” (video included).

I hope AT&T does both make this a standard feature and smash the language barrier, because this is the kind of sci fi wonderfulness that makes me excited for the future and glad to be in the field of instructional technology.  Some might say that eliminating the need to learn a language may diminish the nuanced understanding of other cultures that language skills unlock.  To the contrary, I think Watson pulls down the barriers that prevent many people for getting curious enough about other cultures to even want to learn the language.  Were more people able to connect human to human with a mitigating tool to bridge the distance between tongues, it would bring the world just that much closer together.  Watson, then, is a beautiful thing.


18
Apr 12

Very Inspiring (and Validating)

What I love about this image above is what it’s actually depicting:  three game developers working together on a delightful new iOS title, Waking Mars, that their company, Tiger Style Games put out recently.  All without ever actually sharing an office space or any set of company resources.  

The workplace is changing dramatically and the fact that top-notch, critically acclaimed products can be created without ever actually sharing any physical meeting space is proof.  Having worked on several freelance projects with clients in multiple separate states, I know just how well this model works.  And continuing to work remotely with clients at 9 Penn State campuses in all corners of the western half of PA shows me daily just how well it can work.

(Wired)


09
Apr 12

Unexpected Classroom Inspiration

I think there’s a lot to be gleaned from this dim sum focused travel guide for Hong Kong, especially with all the community-based, student storytelling going on across the Commonwealth. What better way to get to the heart of a place than through the stomachs of its residents? With so many food traditions in the ethnic enclaves of Pittsburgh in particular, I could see this being a boon for faculty hoping to get their students out amongst the local business people.

In particular, I really liked the added layer of history attached to the ritual of eating the food in question and the places that the citizens eat that food.  The writing is crisp and concise and imparts all of the information while weaving a story. The only way to achieve such great results is to have a thorough understanding of the background material so the subtle connections can be made. The tie-in with our Scholarly Storytelling workshop does not escape me here…

Another thing I really liked about this clip is that – despite being decidedly high budget – many of the effects and devices are entirely approachable. Making paper cutouts of letters and using stop motion animations are both very accessible to first time filmmakers and add a certain charm to the finished product that would be missing otherwise.


06
Apr 12

Encouraging Exploration

Lauren had an idea the other evening.

Following the rush of activity that was the TLT Symposium this year, we met up for a drink with other equally exhausted-but-happy coworkers.  She ran this idea past me as she handed me a vodka tonic (always the best way to ply me) and I loved what I heard.  Basically, the concept was to share inspiring content – the sort of thing we each naturally gravitate towards while browsing between tasks – in a way that also connected the physical space we all work in to the online world.

What we came up with Snewokolis.  The site (a WordPress-based installation) is the home of what we termed the Snewoks, creatures of pure inspiration, creativity and curiosity who will curate the content.  Each posting or “Wok” highlights something that the human behind the avatar has deemed worth sharing.

Where this gets fun is in the sharing, though.  The posts will be tied to QR codes and one of each code will be printed out and hidden somewhere in the ETS areas of Rider Building.  The preference is for the code to be stashed somewhere that either adds meaning to the media artifact it links to or vice versa.

An example of how this could work is found in my avatar’s first posting.  My Snewok, Trill posted a music video that explores the concept of the creatures of inspiration that live in each of us (an apropos first posting, to be sure).  I stashed it around the side of an information kiosk that displays the latest news about projects in our unit and from other departments and institutions.  A bit of a play on the creativity coming from within to be put on display and also a link to the video nature of the object to be found.

We wanted to make it really easy to take part in this activity, too so we took active steps to ease the migration to the Snewok’s home.  Lauren put together a default avatar, Fedault as well as a PSD file with other options for his appearance, should anyone want to customize him.  We also opted to do basic QR codes on nothing more than regular office paper held up with tape because we want to make it simple to quickly share posts and to ensure that they are a non-permanent, ever-changing part of the office.  We also assembled a Migrate page of the Snewokolis site to get everyone up to speed quickly.

Lauren’s hope and my own is for this to grow legs really quickly and to be adopted by others in the building.  The more unique viewpoints that can shape the course this art project/game takes, the better as I’m sure there are lots of directions Snewokolis could be taken that we hadn’t even the remotest inkling of.


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