Wednesday, August 6, 2008

CT 2008 - Avoid a Wiki Wasteland





Avoid a Wiki Wasteland: Learn How Wikis Work in Higher Education by Robert E Cummings, July 31st, 2008

Used mediawiki and pbwiki

What is a wiki anyway?

-wikis are not Wikipedia even if Wikipedia is a wiki.

-Wikipedia is the largest wiki

-simplest definition is “a web site which users can edit”.

-most wikis require registration before user people can make edits or if not then your content is buried in SPAM

History

-1st wiki, May 1, 1995. Hillside.net Patterns List Cunningham developed a listserve that had history. Came up with wiki format. He wanted casual writing style.

Why would I want to have wikis on my campus?

-Purpose for creating and disseminating original knowledge.

Successful wikis on college campuses

  1. Involve large numbers of students across courses and disciplines
  2. Create meaningful interactions with web users beyond adopting courses
  3. support authentic research
  4. are durable, and outlast the semester

What are the different types of wikis on campuses?

  1. Internal or external?

Top 20 Most Hotly Revised Wikipedia Articles

Jesus, Adolf Hitler, October 2003 (edit compute glitch caused it to rise to top), Nintendo revolution, hurricane Katrina, India, runeScape, anarchism, Britney Spears, Playstation3, ,etc…

Mark Phillipson’s Wiki Taxonomy

  1. resource wiki
  2. presentation wiki
  3. gateway wiki
  4. simulation wiki
  5. illuminated wiki

1. The Resource Wiki

-repository of information

2. Presentation Wiki

-serves as collection point but differs with audience. Cheaply used inside the class but focus is not beyond the class.

3. Gateway wiki

-acts as collaboration of idea that stands apart (metrics, data sets, etc…) discovered data with discussion. Once collected and stored then transitions from collection to interpretation and presentation. Purpose usually with scientific courses.

4. Simulation wiki

-designed to explore and unfold a situation. Example is the holocaust wiki project. Engages through role playing.

5. Illuminated wiki

-focuses on communal mapping and object analysis. Less formal presentation and is work in progress but communal markup of source documents.

Why is it important for IT departments to support wikis in the classroom?

Why is it important to use them?

Yochai Benkler “Coase’s Penguin, or Linus and the Nature of the firm”. Benkler’s work talks in macro terms about what is going on culturally. Worker sends products to market – market sends signals to worker ast to what it finds valuable, usually in the form of prices. (Market Model of Production) example - farmer

(Firm Model of Production) Worker reports to manager and manager makes decision. Example – manager at factory

(Commons – Based Peer Production)

-Conditions….

*Costs of fixation are low

*Costs of publication are low

*All information is public

Example? No manager, group project contribution based on interaction. Work has to be modular for it to work. Each contributes own piece. Has to be granular – do as much or little as you want to do. Have to achieve low cost integration. CBPP project. Example – Wikipedia

Market – Audience

  1. Market Model – replace market with audience to get “blog”
  2. Firm Model-replace market with audience to get “nytimes.com”
  3. CBPP Model-replace market with audience to get electronic network, includes wikis (and social networks such as myspace and facebook)

Why not use a blog or LMS?

  1. Wikis create an electronic version of disciplinary knowledge community in which students participate
  2. Wikis can remove teachers as the audience and replace them with a genuine audience
  3. Participating in a wiki, students are asked to judge their content in terms of the project’s needs and not just what the know.
  4. Participation in a wiki places maximum value on student creativity

Conclusion – Wikis are the platform which offer your students the best chance to develop collaborative skills for electronic environments.


CT 2008 - Feedback and Workload



CT-Improving Feedback and Reducing Workload – Bethany from New Mexico University 7/30/08

AV Tools help with Feedback

1. Setting the stage

*1 key is varying the amount and type of feedback

* 2 key is varying method

*3 key Differentiating between group and individual feedback

2. Audio Feedback Tools & Strategies

*a word about non-Web 2.0 tools: Adobe Acrobat and MS Word (mac issues)Voice Commenting

*going or mobile feedback (Abbyme)

-allows you to send voice messages from phones

*Individual or group feedback (Yakpack)

-allows for a synchronous or asynchronous tool. Allows you to prerecord or have live feedback or add pictures of your self. Can also send text.

Free synchronous Conferencing systems

*dimdim (web conferencing) Integrates nicely with Moodle

*Talkshoe (own private radio station) 250 people can login at one time and talk via web

-use voice or telephone in – TRY OUT! Dial-in number is toll free!!!

*Gcast – Phone in podcasting tool. Free. Can have multiple podcasts. Can have a different pod cast for each class. Dial-in number is toll free.

CT 2008 - Keynote Address - Next Gen Learners



Campus Technology 2008 Conference

Keynote-Next Gen Learners

By Adrian Sannier from AZ State

A New American University

-Need to extend higher education to a larger society. Need an open university. Everyone needs a higher education so they can participate in this economy.

-Next-Gen.edu – Everything you need to know to survive – and Trive – in a Web 2.0 World

No flying cars but we do have “telepathy”. STRONG communication tools. Next-Gen students really take this for granted.

Amazing tech marvels

-Wikipedia created in 3 years. AMAZING! The knowledge out there is amazing.

-Amazon can pick customized gifts based on profile

-Consumption spreads faster today

--telephone took 85 years, cell phones, ipods, iphones are faster

-Us educators need a revolution because we are falling behind even though we invented it

-We pretend like we are moving it forward but we are not

-Even today it is just lecture and then have a test regurgitate it. How many have wireless turned off so they can’t cheat? Why are students looking at internet? Maybe because class is DULL? Make it interesting and interactive? We got to get a little more serious about this. Need to address Next-Gen style.

-Frank Rhodes – president of Cornell, “The business of learning is largly untouched by technology. It is though a business computerized its business section but left other areas unchanged. Education has not diverged much from method of Socrotes instead now we have come “indoors””. State of Education needs to change!!!

-“If I was starting a University how many books would I have? I would have ZERO, which flies in the face of current standard of measurement.”-Adrian

-Six things that have to happen

  1. Context to Core (enabling transformation)
    1. How are we doing compared to commercial market? We’ve been spending money on technology. In the 1990s we had better technology than businesses had. We had the internet back in early 1990s. Now, that is over. How many development projects are we undertaken in education?
    2. Core processes – are the ones that differentiate your institution. Everything else is context. Do students choose your place because of the way you send your bills? Who cares? What will get your students in? I.E. – Psychi, Moodle, etc… They don’t come to your place because your network is really great. What differentiates your instituation?
    3. Change yourself so 80% is spend on core instead of context. Pay attention.
    4. Does IT matter? “The Big Switch”. Nicholas Carr says it is all electricity?
    5. How do you do it? Apple story…Apple faded a while back. The concept of one. Streamline EVERYTHING! Combine and consolidate. Collapse!!! Money falls out of trees!

Missed section due to phone call

  1. From Cattle-Car
    1. Have got to support students with their technology!!!
    2. Also have to deliver some value to them! ASU – locks laptops in tables. NO! Need to deliver apps at scale!!!
  2. From Cop to Conciege
    1. Focus on service not slapping wrists! Quit saying no! Be flexible!!! Next Gen is used to flexibility and service.
    2. Have word – “Amazon.com-ification need a heavy dose of prune concentration. Need to take website and prune it! Need a mechanism for a unified online look. It took them 2 years to get their website streamlined. It was political fight. Find pages people go to and put those spots in the webflow. One stop shop. You can teach people!
    3. Helpdesk is massively data driven. NextGen wants an answer beyond 8-5. Want an answer all the time.
  3. Digitalization of books – buy digital! Single search should turn up everything you have. Release your stats to see how many people are using your digital libraries. Have to pay for online journal? “The Creation of the Future” book.
  4. From Traditional to Hybrid – go from traditional classroom to hybrid. Problem is cultural. Need to convince faculty. They believe only technology they need is a “death-ray” from their eyes. Maybe innovators awards is a way to do this?
  5. Isn’t it time for something radical? Does the CIO cease to be a strategic officer?

CT 2008 - 2nd life in Higher Ed

2nd Life in Higher Ed Talk

Pedagogy First

Technology Second

Students First

University Second

Chickering and Gamson 7 Principles for Good Practice in Higher Ed

  1. Encourages contact between students and faculty
  2. Look these up!!!!!!! Google them

Powerpoint is up on blog.

Lifestyle, engagement, motivation Divide

Cell Phone survey difference in age. 18 year old sees cell phone differently than older folks. It is their lifeline to social connectivity.

Creepy Treehouse – one group creating a product thinking that is what the group likes, instead of allowing the real deal and integrating that.

-Identify problems or opportunities First then match technologies with opportunities.

What problem do you have that these technologies will solve. If not, don’t use them.

Faculty and students sense technologies that won’t solve their problems. Need to explain them better but also give them technologies that suit their needs.

Shirky book, “Here Comes Everybody”. 2008 READ THIS! Why social networking works.

The Promise, the Tool, the Bargain (process)

What’s the SL Promise?

-Increased sense of presence

-Community Bonding

-More engaging and immersive learning (when used correctly)

-Great example of teaching discrimination and diversity. The Koolaid avatars got kicked out of the 2nd life bar due to their looks.

The Tool (Aspects)

-Stigmergy – ablility to send a message to someone who comes after you. Any of you can change the environment. Can create content and change the space. Absolutely critical to using 2nd life at its best.

-Customizable Avatars

-Global Community

-Multi-modal communication (text chat and voice – one to one, group, area)

The Learning Curve

-Install and learn to get around

-Customize your Avatar

-Learn to build stuff

-Learn to script to make interactive stuff

It is not easy. Need to justify why you are learning it. Keep promise real and strong enough to justify learning curve.

The Bargain

-Students suspend self-limitations

-Best, justified use of the tools. Better technologies for just 5-6 people to chat then use something else. Only use if it can do it better. Example – not for 2nd grade math but great for graduate architecture

-Necessary expertise to serve as guide, advisor, AND instructor.

-it is an “event” based world

In evaluating 2nd life….

  1. Attend an event
  2. Make some friends

SL is used for mainly two reasons

  1. The escapist (exciting life in virtual world)
  2. Extend themselves (me everywhere and online)

Blog is ubernoggin.com

Also sl-educationblog.org