March 2008 Archives

I have often passed by the the Rural Electric Office in Huntingdon on Route 26 on my way to or back from University Park. After a day talking about using technology in education I realized how important a good supply of electricity is to the whole process. I took some pictures of the historical markers and send them to the Historical Marker Database, where you can see a map of the location.

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The 90 mile trip over the mountains to University Park was well worth it to attend the Teaching and Learning with Technology Symposium 2008 yesterday. Because of the concurrent sessions, I had to pick and choose what I wanted to see.

At the session on reference managers I learned about some new options. Zotero is an add-on for the Firefox browser. It sits on the bottom of the screen ready to capture reference information and store it in a folder. It is supposedly good for web resources including images. I plant to install it soon. One issue that came out in the questions is that it has to be installed in a browser, which makes it hard to use in the labs. There is apparently a way to run Firefox  from a USB drive independent of the computer configuration.

Refworks is currently in a trial phase at the Penn State library. You can sign up for it with a Penn State account. It will work in any browser with no add-ins. A decision will be made this summer as to whether or not to keep it, although it sounded positive.

The Cadillac of reference managers is still Endnote. It has the best synchronization with MS Word. However, it is the most expensive, and the publisher upgrades almost every year. So Endnote is pretty well limited to faculty and graduate students.

ANGEL 7.2 will be rolled out this summer. The format won't change much. The biggest change to me was the consolidation of the mail utility. All a user's courses sections and groups can be reached in the same place. Another  point brought up in response to aquestion, is that it's best to think of ANGEL mail as an intra-program utility. It's not really meant for outside users.

Another development is an in-line html or rich text editor everywhere text can be entered. The pop-up editor is going away for good. The editor will also sport a better equation editor and be available for students. In my own classes I have nearly stopped using the ANGEL editor in favor of Google docs or other alternatives. Maybe I will reconsider?

A big theme of the day is the increased use of the Digital Commons by students to create short videos for class. This has really given a voice to students who don't stand out otherwise. The Chancellor of Greater Allegheny campus is even offering a $1,000 scholarship to the student who creates the best video on why they like Penn State Greater Allegheny! Students are also taking advantage of videos for oral history projects and to practice speeches for communications courses.

There was an information table encouraging people to use TWITTER during the conference. TWITTER is a mini-blog or instantaneous blog community where people write one or two lines to update what they are doing throughout the day. I'm not sure that I want to stay that connected!

The keynote speaker, Lawrence Lessig, delivered a fascinating talk. He has been working on the issue of copyrights in the digital age for a long time. He has developed the Creative Commons project as an alternative to the all rights reserved copyright. He said that we are now in the "remix" culture where users want to take existing items (pictures, video, music) and recombine them into something new. This runs right into the large media companies who demand ironclad copyrights. If this situation isn't remedied we will stifle creativity and worse, criminalize a whole generation. There was a lot to think about here.


One way to judge a meeting is how good was the swag. The tote bag and notebook were impressive. For me, the cloth name tag with storage pouches and pen holder was that best I've seen in a long time!

I just finished adding a few pictures to my presentation for tomorrow's Teaching and Learning with Technology Symposium. I also found some glaring spelling mistakes! It never hurts to revise and review.
In Forest Management class two days ago we were discussing an article on the parcelization of forest tracts in New York State. Parcelization, by the way, is the process where larger tracts are subdivided, for multiple reasons, into smaller tracts.

At one point the authors discuss how they had noticed increased parcelization over a period of time and a strong tendency for liquidation cuts before the sale. The owners harvest a large portion of the volume to capture its value before sending.

This was essentially anecdotal evidence; meaning that they had heard of it in stories from other people or seen it themselves. Andecdotal evidence is not scientific evidence, however. That means there wasn't a systematic, scientific study to study the extent and severity of parcelization. Their research project, which included a survey of landowners, a detailed forest inventory of sampled tracts, and a statistical analysis, was designed to give reliable answers. If the scientific studies couldn't give definitive answers, it can tell us what is the missing information.

Anecdotal evidence alerts us to a problem and gives us some indication as to what is going on. The scientific studies are needed to get some rational answers.
I got a little carried at the start of the semester by creating blogs for both the forest management practices and surveying class. I found that I just didn't have that many entries to write. Sometimes postings could fit in more than one class. I decided to just have one blog for my teaching activities. I will use tags to differentiate entries designed for different courses.

I decided to export the data from the blogs and then import it into my main blog on the Penn State Movable Type platform. It seemed easy enough to do when it was time to change from version 3 to 4 of the blogging software. Even when I looked at the documentation it wasn't entire clear. Not all the options seem to have been turned on in this version.

The solution I blundered into was to select Import. That brings up a menu with both import and export options. Everything worked well after that. All my blogs are consolidated. I will just have to eliminate the old blogs. Then I will change the links on my web page and on the ANGEL course pages. Is this busy work or progress?
This is the first draft of my presentation for the Teaching and Learning with Technology Conference next Saturday. I made it with PowerPoint 2007, which I had to convert to 2003 before uploading to SlideShare.com. I realized after I uploaded it that I still need to add a couple of pictures before it is done. But I will have time to edit it for the final draft.

Actually, after reading some of the documentation at Slideshare, all I need to do is reload the presentation. I may try to improve the resolution on the pictures and the screen shots that I included.

Old Cabin

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This is an old cabin, or maybe a shed on the Mont Alto campus near the Bricker Trail by the sawmill. You can almost imagine a campus hermit living there years ago. Today I think it is just used for storage.

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