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        <title>Hear One, Do One, Teach One</title>
        <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/</link>
        <description>Random thoughts on educational technologies, adult education, online learning, gadgets, and whatever else I feel like writing about at the moment.</description>
        <language>en</language>
        <copyright>Copyright 2009</copyright>
        <lastBuildDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 10:55:58 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>Cvent Demonstration and Thoughts</title>
            <description><![CDATA[At the ITS Event Planner's meeting, we're seeing a demo of Cvent
today.&nbsp; It's an online hosted service for event planning (the presenter
is comparing it to the MS Word for event planning, but I hope it's more
like the Google Apps of event planning).&nbsp; It has a web site template;
registration system; personalized e-mail based marketing system with
reminders and reports (e.g. opened message, click-through, bounced
messages); a system for collecting fees; a survey tool for collecting
attendee preferences (special meals, etc...); certificate printing;
name badge printing; task management tool with reminders; and budget
tracking.&nbsp; So it actually has a lot more than I thought it did.<br /><br />The
web template has some features like an "add to calendar" button, map
integration, weather, and some other widgets.&nbsp; The registration form
can have any fields you want - like meal restrictions, title, guest
information, job title, company, attendee types (student, speaker,
staff, etc...) and then base the rest of the registration form on
fields that are applicable to that attendee type.&nbsp; Through the survey
tool, you can set up a "regret survey", which is delivered to people
who were invited, but can't attend - so you know if they said no
because of factors like location, cost, time, subject matter, etc...&nbsp;
They have seen around a 35% response rate on these surveys as long as
they're very short (10 second survey).<br /><br />They have a built-in CRM
system with import/export system and APIs to connect to external
systems.&nbsp; From the administrative interface, it looks like this would
work across several different types of events, which is good news for
us since we would be using it for the Symposium, Summer Camp, Tailgate,
speaker events, and more.&nbsp; Example of a company with multiple events:
http://my.epri.com&nbsp; That site has an events calendar with filters, so
you could see only training events, only invited speakers,
faculty-targeted events, etc...<br /><br />The name badge creation tool is
nice for printing on standard name badge stock (like the ones produced
by Avery).&nbsp; The simple form lets you select fields from the registrants
and place those fields on the badge in whatever font, color, size you
want.&nbsp; The more advanced form lets you build a template from scratch
and lay things out however you want.<br /><br />It's funny how many of our
needs have already been taken into account with this kind of system.&nbsp;
We just asked whether we could have two registration groups: people
from Penn State and people who are invited speakers or sponsors.&nbsp;
Another option would be to open a limited capacity for external
attendees for a different fee.&nbsp; All of these kinds of needs seem to be
possible to do in Cvent.<br /><br />I asked if they have the ability to
identify which sessions that you're interested in attending ahead of
time and then downloading to your calendar.&nbsp; You can register for
individual sessions and print a schedule, but they don't have the
calendar integration at that level - but seemed interested in adding
that feature.&nbsp; From the event planning side, you can set capacities for
each of the individual sessions or have people indicate which sessions
they want to attend so you can use that data to put the most popular
sessions in the largest rooms.<br /><br />Costs are $1500 yearly
maintenance plus a per-registration cost of $3-5/registrant whether we
charge for the event or not.&nbsp; The more registrations you do, the lower
the cost.&nbsp; There would be another fee for the API or maybe Shibboleth
integration since that would require special programming work.<br /><br />Overall
reaction: very interesting tool that would add a lot to many of the
events that the university runs.&nbsp; It's definitely worth using for our
big events and possibly for some of our training needs as well,
especially if we can control the costs.<br /> ]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/cvent-demonstration-and-though.html</link>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 10:55:58 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Abilene Christian University&apos;s mLearning Initiative</title>
            <description><![CDATA[ACU has been experimenting with the use of iPhone and iTouch devices for mobile learning.&nbsp; They distributed devices to their incoming freshman class.&nbsp; Students were allowed to choose either an iPhone or iTouch, but would have to pay the service fees for the iPhone.&nbsp; The iPhone users were mostly people who wanted a new phone or were already on AT&amp;T while the iTouch users were more concerned about costs like the ongoing service fees.<br /><br />Their mobile portal: <a href="http://m.acu.edu/">http://m.acu.edu</a>.&nbsp; They offer links to campus news, sports, facilities, and other services.&nbsp; They offer interaction tools (nano - no advanced notice) with things like quick polls: true/false, likert scale, etc... and word cloud - where students select from a list and then the most selected words are shown in a larger font (like a Wordle).&nbsp; They have lists of blogs that faculty manage and let students contribute to those blogs (Wordpress) through a post-by-email function so they could include media files.<br /><br />Overall students were excited about getting them and found them easy to use.&nbsp; ACU asked questions related to academic and social impact and found that the iPhone outperformed the iTouch in nearly all cases, but most distinctly in areas like social interaction.&nbsp; In other categories like using the device for entertainment purposes, the reactions were more similar.<br /><br />When they implemented this, they ran into some issues.&nbsp; One was that they provided these devices to freshmen, but in a class with about 250 students, about 8% of students didn't have a device because they were sophomores, juniors, or seniors.&nbsp; This was a barrier to faculty since they couldn't assume equal access.&nbsp; They ended up creating a pool of loaner devices to cover non-freshmen who didn't have their own devices.<br /><br />Some of their nano tools had additional functions built in that increased interaction.&nbsp; For example, an attendance tool sent an e-mail to students who did not respond that they were present. [BUSTED!] Those students then contacted the faculty to explain their absence.<br /><br />Overall outcomes were reports of improved: attention, involvement, interest, active learning, contact with professors and teaching assistants, and overall class experience.&nbsp; In a chemistry course, an instructor created a special lab section of only iPhone and iTouch users.&nbsp; She turned the lab instructions into podcasts, which students should watch ahead of time and then come in and perform the lab with the ability to go back to the podcast for reference.&nbsp; Students performed about as well in the lecture version versus the podcast version.&nbsp; There were some unexpected uses as well, for example students would use their devices to look up an online periodic table for reference during the lab.<br /><br />Faculty got the devices as well.&nbsp; In their faculty survey, faculty 87% considered the program a success and felt that the students were more engaged.&nbsp; They thought it was useful, but not for every class session.&nbsp; After one year of use, the vast majority of faculty were on two or more pages of applications that they added. Students and faculty alike were very likely to always have their iPhone with them, but sometimes left their iTouch at home since they thought of it more like a traditional iPod.<br /><br />Some lessons learned: <br /><ul><li>Don't underestimate the bandwidth requirements</li><li>Devices need to be ubiquitous before faculty feel comfortable using them for required class activity</li><li>You need to invest in the development of applications</li><li>There were a lot more than this...They have a year-end report and I'll grab a copy.<br /></li></ul>They formed a consortium for further exploration: <a href="http://www.opencircl.org/">http://www.opencircl.org</a><br /><br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/abilene-christian-universitys.html</link>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 06 Nov 2009 11:39:20 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>ECAR Survey Results on Undergraduate Use of Technology</title>
            <description><![CDATA[I'm at a session where Judy Caruso is presenting the findings of the <a href="http://www.educause.edu/Resources/TheECARStudyofUndergraduateStu/187215">ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology</a>.&nbsp; It's a survey done across many institutions of higher education (community colleges through universities).&nbsp; The 2009 report was just released last week. Some thoughts on the notable results below related student mobility.<br /><br /><b>Student Use of Mobile Devices:</b><br />About 10% of students say that they are using their cell phone in class for course activities, but about 30% are using them in class for non-class activities.&nbsp; This is even higher (up to 40%) for students in the 18-19 age range, who are also less likely to agree with an instructor's right to ask students to turn their phones off.&nbsp; Part of this is that students said that they are connected to campus emergency alert systems through their phones, so they wouldn't want to turn them off.<br /><br /><b>Internet on Mobile Devices:</b><br />Over half of students own an internet capable device (including phones) and about 30% more were planning to buy one.&nbsp; Only about 10% said that they never plan to get one.&nbsp; Half use this feature once per week or more. Portraits of student mobility:<br /><ul><li>35.5% don't own and don't plan to own</li><li>1.5% don't know</li><li>18.1% own, but don't use the internet</li><li>33.1% own and use the internet (or 25% of the total use on a weekly or daily basis)</li></ul>The main reasons that students don't take advantage of the internet are:<br /><ul><li>Plenty of other ways to connect</li><li>Cost</li><li>Usability of internet on a mobile device</li></ul><b>Student Use:</b><br />In the next three years, students expect to be doing more things on a phone that they currently only do on their desktop or laptop this year.&nbsp; Currently, students mostly use their phone most commonly to check info (news, weather, sports, etc...), check e-mail, use social networks, look at maps, and instant message.&nbsp; They said that they would be most likely to use campus e-mail (63%), student administrative services (47%), and course/learning management system (46%).&nbsp; Other uses were under 30% such as checking administrative systems, paying for services (like LionCash), and using phones as clickers.<br /><br />What I thought was interesting was that students are using their phone for text messaging, but when asked if they were using their phone for instant messaging, only 40-50% of the mobile internet-using students said that they were.&nbsp; Judy also said that Twitter use was very low.&nbsp; So during the Q&amp;A section, I pointed out that a lot of students will be using the internet without knowing that they are.&nbsp; In a session that I attended yesterday, a lot of students said that they didn't think of Facebook as a web site.&nbsp; Likewise, I have dozens of iPhone apps and nearly all of them use the internet, but they aren't web browsers.&nbsp; <br /><br />I think surveys like this may get more difficult to administer if they use a binary Internet/not-Internet language.&nbsp; The network has faded into transparency to the point where students are doing a lot of things without thinking about getting connected - they're always connected. <br /><br />Overall: good discussion.&nbsp; I'll have to take a close look at their report.<br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/ecar-survey-results-on-undergr.html</link>
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                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">survey</category>
            
            <pubDate>Fri, 06 Nov 2009 10:27:39 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Sakai at Marist College</title>
            <description><![CDATA[I spent some time at the ELI member meeting and I'm back to regular sessions now.&nbsp; Currently, Josh Baron from Marist College is giving a presentation about Sakai.&nbsp; He went through an LMS analysis and implementation between 2005 and 2008.&nbsp; Some take-away points:<br /><br />Open source tools are decoupling code and service - meaning that the people who contribute code to Sakai are different than the people (often consulting companies like Unicon and rSmart) who are offering services like hosting, training, consultation, integration, etc...<br /><br />To evaluate the tools, they did a gap analysis between their existing home-grown tool and Sakai with categories of desired, essential, or critical.&nbsp; Their goal was to make sure that there were not critical gaps and solutions for essential gaps.&nbsp; Faculty appreciated being a part of the gap analysis and followed the committee's progress.&nbsp; Through today, Marist has been able to close all of the essential gaps that they had identified such as a global student view (activity across all courses), grade import, weighing grades in the gradebook, and the ability to edit published assignments.<br /><br />The evaluated staffing requirements by talking with other institutions and asking them about the number of FTE staff they had dedicated to Sakai, Java programming resources, instructional designers, end-user support, interface designer, etc...&nbsp; It depended on the institution.&nbsp; Michigan had 14 FTEs assigned to across various roles.&nbsp; Rice was more like 2 FTEs.&nbsp; Marist didn't need a lot of permanent new staff since they worked with rSmart to get started. <br /><br />In the end, they were able to save money compared to a commercial LMS, they used the license fees to invest in human capital (e.g. an instructional designer), technical issues were quickly resolved, and student suggestions were incorporated into the tool.&nbsp; They are also using more than 20 tools that have been contributed by the Sakai community such as the citation helper that integrates their research journal database with the Sakai discussion tool.<br /><br />How healthy is the community?&nbsp; They look at the size of the Sakai community, whether goals are being met, commercial affiliates, and potential threats such as the Blackboard litigation.&nbsp; They have also given some thought to reliability and scalability issues - such as giving all of their students lifetime access to their portfolio, which would grow their number of active users over time.<br /><br />Overall, nothing too surprising, but it's interesting to have him walk through their process.&nbsp; It also makes me want to get an evaluation account on Sakai 3 to see if they have done some work on the instructor flow issues that I noticed in Sakai 2.<br /><br />UNC has recently done an <a href="http://www.unc.edu/sakaipilot/blog/">evaluation of Sakai in comparison to Blackboard</a>, which includes faculty interviews and a<a href="http://www.unc.edu/sakaipilot/evaluation/FinalRept-Oct15-09-sm.pdf"> final report</a>.&nbsp; I'll need to take this with a grain of salt - they may be evaluating an older version of Blackboard, not version 9, which is the version that I tested.<br /> ]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/sakai-at-marist-college.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/sakai-at-marist-college.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">CMS</category>
            
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            <pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 16:21:30 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Social Networks for Teaching and Learning</title>
            <description><![CDATA[I thought I'd take a break from the CMS sessions and catch this session on implementing and assessing social networks for teaching and learning.&nbsp; The presenter (<a href="http://www.profsieber.com/">Diane Sieber</a>) is using a combination of MediaWiki, SharePoint, GoogleSites, Google Apps, and Ning.&nbsp; She is exploring the impact of these tools in blended learning courses - which other research shows have more of a sense of community than traditional or distance education courses.&nbsp; Class sizes vary between 12 and 150 students.<br /><br />Results from students: peer editing of student work, more frequent access to the instructor, and instructor-written contextual descriptions of content were all rated as unimportant.&nbsp; However, students did rate increased peer interaction and peer-written contextual descriptions as useful.&nbsp; Other important features: ease of use (syntax, intuitive commands, search, quick start) especially if the interface is similar to something like Facebook, customizable interface per student, commonly-established rules of engagement (social contract) which is created every semester for a sense of ownership (covers things like texting in class, can be amended by a 2/3 vote), periodic instructor feedback, and frequent peer feedback.&nbsp; Google Sites and Ning scored well on these tasks.<br /><br /><span class="mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image" style="display: inline;"><a href="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0004-81057.html" onclick="window.open('http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0004-81057.html','popup','width=829,height=648,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img src="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0004-thumb-450x351-81057.jpg" alt="SocialNetworkChart1.JPG" class="mt-image-none" style="" height="351" width="450" /></a></span><br />[SP = SharePoint, MW = MediaWiki, GS = Google Suite, N = Ning]<br /><br />Assignments that can't be done in another medium such as anchored collaboration (discussion with links and collaborative editing) were very useful.&nbsp; Other ideas: hot pages where students can recommend books/movies to each other to help them practice using the environment.&nbsp; Peer reactions to instructor and other students' points of view.&nbsp; All of this was pretty easy in Mediawiki and Ning compared to the other tools.<br /><br /><span class="mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image" style="display: inline;"><a href="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0005-81061.html" onclick="window.open('http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0005-81061.html','popup','width=824,height=658,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false"><img src="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/assets_c/2009/11/IMG_0005-thumb-450x359-81061.jpg" alt="SocialNetworkChart2.JPG" class="mt-image-none" style="" height="359" width="450" /></a></span><br />[SP = SharePoint, MW = MediaWiki, GS = Google Suite, N = Ning]<br /><br />Additional social effects: Students developed more consideration for others when writing for their peers (or the public, I would imagine), students gave more sources for what they were posting, grading was more fair since the instructor could track changes and see who contributed what, the online environment helped increase the in-class engagement since students had already been thinking about a topic and writing about their opinions.<br /><br />Learning outcomes: topics discussed online were 19% more likely to be explained successfully on a final exam than topics discussed in class. At the beginning of the class, 71% had concerns about the online environment, but by the end, 76% rated the online environment as necessary or very important to learning.&nbsp; Students requested that the course remain online after the course was finished and over 1/3 of students continued to interact in the online course space.<br /><br />Best practices:<br /><ul><li>Establish common goals and a culture of collaboration</li><li>Seed the content before opening the space</li><li>Orientation is required</li><li>Start with an opening activity: personal pages and hotlists (non-course discussion)</li><li>Allow a variety of forms for handing in assignments<br /></li><li>Instructor must contribute content at least every 3 days</li><li>Expert reviews - bring in external people to review class projects</li><li>Allow self-forming group project and informal collaboration spaces<br /></li></ul> Into the questions now.&nbsp; I asked about the importance of having students establish the rules from scratch at the beginning of every semester (she agreed that it should start over, but students may get stuck at some point and ask for examples).&nbsp; For the actual class interaction spaces, she has typically cleaned them out every semester or started new ones, but will be investigating how things can change if one group of students can see a space from a previous semester, which may still have an active discussion.<br /><br />Another question about using Facebook: she says no, students have requested that she not use Facebook.&nbsp; Students see it as an artificial attempt to be cool.&nbsp; It's a social space, not an educational space.&nbsp; However, Ning has similar features and interface plus it scored very well in all of the questions that she asked her students.<br /><br />Orientation takes about 1 class for introducing the tool and other times for reinforcement and introducing new features.&nbsp; Also, you need a space set aside to describe how you do things like add your pictured, edit your own comments, and then ideas for creative uses of the tool, which may not be related to the course.<br /><br />Overall, a very interesting session.&nbsp; I'll have to post the recording and the charts that she used here when I get a chance.&nbsp; <br /><div><br /></div><div><br /></div>]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/social-networks-for-teaching-a.html</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 13:45:40 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Moodle, Sakai, and Blackboard Discussion</title>
            <description><![CDATA[This afternoon, I went to a three-person panel session: one for Moodle, one for Sakai, and one for Blackboard.&nbsp; I was hoping for a knock-down drag-out fight that would leave one clear winner in my head, but frankly, the people on this panel were too polite for anything like that to happen.&nbsp; [<a href="http://educause.mediasite.com/mediasite/SilverlightPlayer/Default.aspx?peid=3f76ff6fc7354dbdb81202bb6a00146c">Recording here if you want to watch it.</a>]<br /><br /><span class="mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image" style="display: inline;"><a href="http://educause.mediasite.com/mediasite/SilverlightPlayer/Default.aspx?peid=3f76ff6fc7354dbdb81202bb6a00146c"><img alt="SMBB.jpg" src="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/SMBB.jpg" class="mt-image-center" style="margin: 0pt auto 20px; text-align: center; display: block;" height="211" width="450" /></a></span><br />Even without the fight, they had some interesting points.&nbsp; The first was my favorite.&nbsp; To paraphrase, a free open source course management system is more like Free Puppies than Free Beer.&nbsp; There may be no up front cost, but there is still an ongoing cost of ownership.&nbsp; All three agreed that the cost of the software should not be the most important decision point.&nbsp; The ability to support the chosen tool within your infrastructure is much more important.<br /><br />The other issues that they discussed included support, risk involved with one product or another, roadmaps/innovation, and looking toward the future.&nbsp; The overall sense that I got was that on each topic, the issues were different, but fairly balanced.&nbsp; Again, I think they were just being a little too polite.&nbsp; I don't think that you can look at the list of tools or the number of people on each platform (although Moodle has 30 million users world-wide).&nbsp; <br /><br />The real differences will emerge as you look at cultural activity: the culture of the central organizing body (if there is one), the composition and activity of the developers, the degree to which an individual institution can be heard or even make changes, and the affordances of the tool itself.&nbsp; How do all of these mesh with your institution's culture and the teaching and learning activity that happens there?&nbsp; Does the tool assist with an academic workflow or does it fight against it?&nbsp; These are questions that are as important - maybe more important - as the questions about initial cost versus integration within an infrastructure.&nbsp; In this case, it's the cultural infrastructure.<br /><br />A final note: If you listen to the recording, you may be able to faintly hear me bring up this issue of flow around the 44 minute mark.&nbsp; I brought it up by comparing course management systems to operating systems.&nbsp; They all have the potential to write e-mail, browse the web, play movies, edit documents (that checklist again, right?), but the user experience is very different between Linux, Mac, and Windows.&nbsp; Anyway, I didn't get a very good response, but after the session, I was approached by four people who were interested both in my question and with what Penn State was planning to do. I told them that we hadn't made a decision yet, but gave them my card and invited them to check out this blog to keep tabs on us. <br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/moodle-sakai-and-blackboard-di.html</link>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 23:06:57 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Moodlerooms Joule, Google Wave, and Blackboard Mobile</title>
            <description><![CDATA[Before lunch, I spent some time in the vendor area, spending the most time at the Moodlerooms, Google, and Blackboard .&nbsp; <br /><br />At the Moodlerooms booth, I talked with them about their hosting service and then stuck around for a presentation about Joule.&nbsp; Joule is a tool that they built to extend some key functions of Moodle that are in high demand by their customers.&nbsp; The main features that I caught were an alerts function that could monitor Moodle activity and send automated alerts if students are falling behind on assignments, a tool that monitors course activity (content hits, etc...) and does some item analysis, and a tool that allows you to search and add materials from content repositories.&nbsp; So this is something to consider if those types of activities show up in a gap analysis.<br /><br />I went over to the Google booth (staffed by young and informally dressed staff) to talk with them about Google Apps and Google Wave.&nbsp; The Apps discussion wasn't anything new - mostly what is included in Apps for Education.&nbsp; Regarding Google Wave, I told them that we had a group of people looking at it and we had some issues when trying to do something like simultaneously edit the same document.&nbsp; We talked about using two Waves, connected waves, wavelets, widget pallets, etc...&nbsp; They're putting together a research session this evening to discuss how Wave can be used in education, so I'll go to that.<br /><br />Finally, I went over to Blackboard and saw what they did with Stanford's iPhone app (built on Blackboard mobile).&nbsp; It was really slick - location aware maps, athletics, course search and registration, sports scores, news, campus photos and movies, and a campus calendar.&nbsp; They're working on an integration with Blackboard Learn now (the course management product).&nbsp; I'd like to see a mobile application like that at Penn State.<br /><br /><br /> ]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/moodlerooms-joule-google-wave.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/moodlerooms-joule-google-wave.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">blackboard</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Educause2009</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">google</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Google Wave</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">iphone</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">mobility</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">moodle</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">moodlerooms</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">psutlttraveltraining</category>
            
            <pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 15:55:47 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>ePortfolio Lightning Round</title>
            <description><![CDATA[I'm at Educause and I'm currently at a Lightning Round discussion of ePortfolios: five presentations at 7 minutes each.&nbsp; I'll try to capture some of the key points here.<br /><br />Patrick Lowenthal, University of Colorado Denver<br />They created a staged gate system where students would have to assemble a portfolio at various stages in a teacher training program before being able to continue taking courses.&nbsp; This portfolio would be assessed by an evaluator, who would then approve the students progress to the next group of courses that would lead to the next gate.&nbsp; This is a much better system than the previous one, where students would create a paper portfolio at the end of their learning process.<br /><br /><a href="http://myportfolio.usc.edu/geoff_student2/">Geoffrey C. Middlebrook</a>, University of Southern California<br />Their approach is blog-based, similar to ours.&nbsp; In addition to static profile pages and ongoing blog posts related to their field of study, they create a list of sites in their sidebar that should be sources of reliable information for their field.&nbsp; Students are also expected to make comments on the blogs of other people in their fields and link to those external posts/comments in their own blog.<br /><br /><a href="http://sites.google.com/site/easterncsueportfolio">David L. Stoloff</a>, Eastern Connecticut State University<br />Using Google sites to have students create their portfolios.&nbsp; Elements include a resume, annotated transcript, commentary on their program's goals, and a five-year plan.&nbsp; It's the kind of ePortfolio that we used to ask students to build, but using some newer tools.&nbsp; One interesting point is that when they talk to their students about an ePortfolio, they use Facebook as a point of comparison - their "social portfolio".<br /><br />Ivy Tan, University of Saskatchewan<br />Online version of a traditional paper portfolio for people who are identifying their clinical practice skills. It was built using <a href="http://mahara.org/">Mahara</a>.&nbsp; They have also integrated a search tool that instructors or programs can use to find students who have/have not achieved a goal as well as identify gaps in their courses.&nbsp; Their system has a very administrative feel. <br /><br />Lorna Wong, University of Wisconsin System Administration<br />They have 13 comprehensive and 13 two-year campuses.&nbsp; Some of the campuses were already using ePortfolio systems, but they decided to look for a centralized system to get central support, documentation, consistency, save money, etc...&nbsp; They launched the D2L ePortfolio product in 2008 because they are already using D2L for some of their courses.&nbsp; They had some initial problems (training materials, faculty training needs, production environment, etc...) but seem to be running well now.<br /><br />Out of the five presentations and the following discussion, the USC approach is the most exciting to me.&nbsp; It looks great and blends students' development and interaction with professionals in their field.<br /><br /><i>Edit: I talked with Geoffrey Middlebrook after his presentation and he said that he knows about the Blogs at Penn State project and has been "borrowing" ideas from it.&nbsp; I said that's great as long as we can borrow ideas back!&nbsp; He has some additional thoughts related to building connections with outside experts - it's worth a conference call between him and Jeff Swain.</i> <br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/eportfolio-lightning-round.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/11/eportfolio-lightning-round.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Educause2009</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">eportfolio</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">psutlttraveltraining</category>
            
            <pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 12:31:07 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>7 Things You Should Know About Google Wave</title>
            <description><![CDATA[<a href="http://www.educause.edu/Resources/7ThingsYouShouldKnowAboutGoogl/188963">http://www.educause.edu/Resources/7ThingsYouShouldKnowAboutGoogl/188963</a><br /><br /><blockquote>Google Wave is a web-based application that represents a rethinking of electronic communication. Users create online spaces called "waves," which include multiple discrete messages and components that constitute a running, conversational document. Users access waves through the web, resulting in a model of communication in which rather than sending separate copies of multiple messages to different people, the content resides in a single space. Wave offers a compelling platform for personal learning environments because it provides a single location for collecting information from diverse sources while accommodating a variety of formats, and it makes interactive coursework a possibility for nontechnical students. Wave challenges us to reevaluate how communication is done, stored, and shared between two or more people.<br /></blockquote>I wanted to make sure everyone saw this.&nbsp; I spoke with some folks at the Educause Learning Initiative a few days ago and asked about Google Wave.&nbsp; They said that they were within days of releasing their 7 Things... paper on Google Wave.&nbsp; Sure enough, it came out yesterday.&nbsp; Our own investigation of Google Wave will continue though - both because it will provide us with some hands-on experience using the tool and because we will need to personalize what we learn to a Penn State audience.&nbsp; It's good to see what they came up with though.<br /><br />I will be meeting with members of the ELI leadership group next week when I go to the Educause 2010 conference.&nbsp; The scheduling and production of their 7 Things... series is one of the topics that I'd like to discuss with them.<br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/7-things-you-should-know-about.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/7-things-you-should-know-about.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Educause2009</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">ELI</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Google Wave</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Hot Teams</category>
            
            <pubDate>Fri, 30 Oct 2009 16:50:00 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Blackboard in 5 Minutes</title>
            <description><![CDATA[Last week, I did quick Jing recordings about Moodle and Sakai.&nbsp; Today, I made a recording of Blackboard to show what it looks like to log in and create some items, and then I go into a fleshed out course to show what the finished product could look like.&nbsp; I got this account by going to <a href="https://behind.blackboard.com/s/bb9newaccount.aspx">Blackboard.com and requesting a Preview Account</a>.<br /><br /><br /> <object height="341" width="575"> <param name="movie" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/jingswfplayer.swf" /> <param name="quality" value="high" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="flashVars" value="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=575&amp;containerheight=341&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/00000004.swf&amp;advseek=true" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="scale" value="showall" /> <param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /> <param name="base" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/" />  <embed src="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/jingswfplayer.swf" quality="high" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" flashvars="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=1156&amp;containerheight=683&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/00000004.swf&amp;advseek=true" allowfullscreen="true" base="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/3931e790-670e-4c7a-90a6-35309e103f0b/" scale="showall" height="341" width="575"> </object><br /><br />I was prepared to dislike Blackboard, mainly because of what I've heard about their corporate culture, but I have to admit that I like the look of Blackboard.  The interface made sense to me, seemed very flexible, and looks polished compared to Moodle and Sakai.  I don't think that Blackboard has the advanced controls that ANGEL has (for example, releasing content on a particular date or based on their completion of other items), but the majority of our faculty don't use those features.  Then again, the ones who do rely on them pretty heavily.<br /><br />Now that Blackboard owns ANGEL, there is nothing to stop them from taking the best of both products, so those missing features may exist by the time we would move to Blackboard.]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/blackboard-in-5-minutes.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/blackboard-in-5-minutes.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">blackboard</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">CMS</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Jing</category>
            
            <pubDate>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 15:32:52 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Moodle Demonstration</title>
            <description><![CDATA[A quick demonstration of Moodle for those who haven't seen it before.&nbsp; I got access by going to <a href="http://demo.moodle.org/">demo.moodle.org</a> and the login information is listed right on the home page.<br /><br /><object height="276" width="510"><param name="movie" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/jingswfplayer.swf" /> <param name="quality" value="high" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="flashVars" value="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=1017&amp;containerheight=556&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/00000003.swf&amp;advseek=true" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="scale" value="showall" /> <param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /> <param name="base" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/" />  <embed src="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/jingswfplayer.swf" quality="high" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" flashvars="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=1017&amp;containerheight=556&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/00000003.swf&amp;advseek=true" allowfullscreen="true" base="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/7fd5c7bb-b28f-4677-999c-a8f15591d122/" scale="showall" height="276" width="510"><br /><br />My take: The interface isn't as nice as I'd like, but it has some interesting ideas built in, such as branches within a the presentation of course content and collaboratively constructed glossaries and resource databases.&nbsp; Moodle has more of an academic-flow metaphor built into it, so you could have someone read some information, then take a quiz, download a template, and submit a document for a grade all within one block.<br /></object>]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/moodle-demonstration.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/moodle-demonstration.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">cms</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">Moodle</category>
            
            <pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2009 10:14:27 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Sakai in 5 Minutes</title>
            <description><![CDATA[Five minutes goes by very quickly, but I was able to record a basic video that shows what Sakai looks like.&nbsp; I got this account by going to <a href="http://testdrivesakai.com/">testdrivesakai.com</a>.<br /><br /><br /><object height="400" width="550"> <param name="movie" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/bootstrap.swf" /> <param name="quality" value="high" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="flashVars" value="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=550&amp;containerheight=400&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/2009-10-21_1625.swf&amp;advseek=true" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="scale" value="showall" /> <param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always" /> <param name="base" value="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/" />  <embed src="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/bootstrap.swf" quality="high" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" flashvars="thumb=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/FirstFrame.jpg&amp;containerwidth=893&amp;containerheight=633&amp;content=http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/2009-10-21_1625.swf&amp;advseek=true" allowfullscreen="true" base="http://content.screencast.com/users/agyorke/folders/Default/media/0158b101-d3d0-4517-ae9d-36c33f3b1d26/" scale="showall" height="400" width="550"> </object>
<br /><br />Overall thoughts - most of the basic features are present, but there are several things that were confusing such as the "Modules" tab.&nbsp; I didn't like that all of the tools were separated without a good way to link them into what I would consider to be a natural academic workflow for a student or instructor.&nbsp; I didn't see a good way to rename or reorder the list of tools.&nbsp; Also, the course blog feed seemed to be broken, but it lets you import an RSS feed from another source into the course.&nbsp; What I didn't get to show is that there is a lot of good in-line help on each of the tools.&nbsp; <br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/sakai-in-5-minutes.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/sakai-in-5-minutes.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">CMS</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">sakai</category>
            
            <pubDate>Wed, 21 Oct 2009 16:26:16 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Using Web 2.0 Tools and an Open Philosophy to Plan Projects and Events</title>
            <description><![CDATA[Jeff and I made this presentation at the CIC CIO TechForum yesterday.&nbsp; In it, we talk about the Hot Team process, the TLT Symposium, the Learning Design Summer Camp, and other projects and events that we (meaning all of us in the learning design space) have collectively designed in the open.<br /><br />By the way, this was done by <a href="http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/voice-annotation-using-keynote.html">recording directly in Keynote as I described in my previous post</a>.<br /><br /><object height="385" width="480"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/aYGKwI0xRm4&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0" /><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/aYGKwI0xRm4&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="385" width="480"></object><br />
This is strongly connected to this morning's theme of "Shared Leadership" in the IT realm.  ]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/using-web-20-tools-and-an-open.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/using-web-20-tools-and-an-open.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">cictechforum2009</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">collaboration</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">culture</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">leadership</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">presentation</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">psutlttraveltraining</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">unconference</category>
            
            <pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 09:04:58 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>Moodle at University of Minnesota</title>
            <description><![CDATA[It's after lunch.&nbsp; I'm at a session about Moodle by Chris Ament and Elena Ivanova.&nbsp; Based on my pre-session discussion with them, they feel strongly about the tools in Moodle and its ability to scale.&nbsp; They are running Moodle centrally in parallel with WebCT Vista.&nbsp; Since bringing up Moodle and with no advertising, Moodle has grown to 2000 course shells and 30,000 users per semester while WebCT Vista hasn't grown.&nbsp; About 250 concurrent users (typical, not peak use).&nbsp; Some of their users in WebCT would switch if there were tools that helped them migrate their content out of WebCT.&nbsp;  Most of the users are in the College of Liberal Arts. <br /><br />Moodle has a lot of options for user roles within a course, which cal also be set at specific item levels (e.g. one particular assignment).&nbsp; Version 2.0 of Moodle will be released in mid-2010.&nbsp; It will include a file repository for sharing across courses, a portfolio tool for pushing content to an external repository, conditional activities, and improvements to many existing tools.&nbsp; Faculty who favor active learning and social constructivist ideas prefer Moodle to WebCT.<br /> <br />Minnesota has done several integrations including: iTunesU, Wimba, Respondus, MyU (portal), and enrollment integration (Peoplesoft).&nbsp; Instructors link their Moodle sites with their rosters.&nbsp; The sync happens every 5 minutes.&nbsp; You can have one Moodle site with enrollments from multiple sections or enroll the same sections into multiple Moodle sites.&nbsp; <a href="http://docs.moodle.org/en/Metacourses">Moodle Metacourses</a> help with merges and splits.&nbsp; They currently don't create Moodle sites for every course on the books.<br /><br />Server environment:<br /><ul><li>Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5</li><li>Apache 2</li><li>MySQL 5 (with InnoDB to make it act like Oracle)</li><li>PHP 5</li><li>GIT (for version control)</li></ul>To control growth, they dump everything off the server after each semester and put it on their archive server, where it can be accessed live for another two years.&nbsp; This also helps because they aren't applying upgrades to old content.<br /><br />A lot of their information about Moodle can be found at: <a href="http://www.oit.umn.edu/cms-search/supporting-documents/index.htm">http://www.oit.umn.edu/cms-search/supporting-documents/index.htm</a><br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/moodle-at-university-of-minnes.html</link>
            <guid>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/moodle-at-university-of-minnes.html</guid>
            
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">cictechforum2009</category>
            
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                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">moodle</category>
            
                <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#tag">psutlttraveltraining</category>
            
            <pubDate>Tue, 06 Oct 2009 13:16:12 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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            <title>CIC CIO Ongoing Thoughts</title>
            <description><![CDATA[Some of this was already posted in the Stuff blog, I thought I'd replicate the complete set here.&nbsp; I'll keep editing this page as the conference goes on.<br /><br /><hr><br />Chuck Severance is giving the kickoff talk at the CIC CIO Techforum.&nbsp; I
don't spend most of my day thinking about high performance computing,
but Chuck has.&nbsp; He has some interesting insight into how Google manages
to scale (massive global replication on cheap hardware) and choosing
between local supercomputing resources and remote data centers.<br /><br />He
is also talking about using tools like Google Apps to integrate with
course management tools, which should enable course management systems
to include the best-of-breed applications.&nbsp; Cloudsocial adds a learning
management bar on enabled pages that ties back into your course
management system.&nbsp; He thinks that this is the future of open
educational resources.&nbsp; Idea for baby cloud computing - give each
student their own cPanel-based Web space to take control of their
learning.&nbsp; A lot of this is reminding me of <a href="http://www.colecamplese.com/2009/08/opened-2009-recap/">Cole's post after his trip to the OpenEd conference</a> with more of an emphasis on the intersection of IT Infrastructure than purely teaching and learning.<br /><br /><hr><br />I'm in a session about Northwestern University is using social computing.&nbsp; They are using it mostly for external push communication to students.&nbsp; Not too much different than what ETS doing to get messages out to faculty and the learning design community, but I don't think we have an ITS-wide strategy to get information to students.&nbsp; Maybe Marcus is working on something?&nbsp; The speaker, Sherry Minton, said that they implemented a weekly blog, but turned off the commenting so they could control the message.&nbsp; Part of our presentation today is going to cover what happens when you let go of the control when working with groups like IDs, technologists, and faculty. [Maybe students as well, but I don't work directly with groups of students.]<br /><br />Indiana University has mainly been focusing on using Facebook to communicate with students about things like alerts, reminders, events, etc...&nbsp; Charles Rondot said that they have their wall open so anyone can post.&nbsp; There was some initial fear about this, but after a year, there hasn't been a problem.&nbsp; They have 1600 fans on Facebook. Using social networking to communicate with an audience is much like being the host of a party; until things get going, you have to go around to engage people and keep things fresh.&nbsp; He's also very realistic about this being only part of a communication strategy and that technologies like Facebook are transient.<br /><br />Paul Baepler is talking about their digital idea stream, which is a lot like the Lightning Talk presentations (5 minute presentation with 2 minute Q&amp;A). He agrees that this adds a game-show-like atmosphere to the presentation.&nbsp; He recommends <a href="http://www.presentationzen.com/">Presentation Zen</a> by Garr Reynolds.&nbsp; <br /><br />Paul is switching to Pecha Kucha (sounds like pechachka) - PowerPoint on adrenaline, Presentation Haiku.&nbsp; 20 slides, 20 seconds each = 6:40 presentation.&nbsp; Spend an evening seeing a bunch of these.&nbsp; Lawrence Lessig's presentation was mentioned as a variation of this (even less time per slide).&nbsp; Ignite format = 20 slides x 15 seconds each = five minutes.&nbsp; WAM Chatter: presented the question "What is News Now?" and had three people present their Pecha Kuchas on that question.&nbsp; Speed Geeking - timed rotations around tables with different topics.&nbsp; Good times.<br /><br />]]></description>
            <link>http://www.personal.psu.edu/asg102/blogs/portfolio/2009/10/cic-cio-ongoing-thoughts.html</link>
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            <pubDate>Tue, 06 Oct 2009 10:15:29 -0500</pubDate>
			
			



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