With netbooks being readily available at very affordable prices even here in Australia do Universities need to continue to provide on campus computer facilities?
One of the cheapest netbooks in Australia the ASUS EEE PC 900 8.9" LCD 20GB Linux costs $385, little more than a few text books. Now while this may not be a powerful computer it will certainly allow a student to edit an assignment and use the internet for research. Most if not all Universities in Australia now how good wireless coverage, my iphone is always on a WiFi connection pretty much wherever I go at the University of Sydney.
The University of Virginia is set to to close most of its student computer labs by 2011 to save money but their chief information officer Mick McPherson says a U.Va report showed that 99 percent of students brought their own laptop to school. - (Ars Technica, 27 March 2009) For those students that can't afford a laptop perhaps Universities could have an equity program or allow laptops to be borrowed like books, a similar scheme is already in existence at Victoria University in Melbourne.
Disadvantages of not having computer labs?
Social interaction, many students learn from each other leaning over to the person next to them to ask for help but then maybe we're not talking about doing away with the computer rooms but redesigning them to be more social spaces with printing facilities, coffee machines, comfortable seating where students can bring their laptop and interact with each other in a comfortable space?
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Thursday, March 26, 2009
YouTube EDU
Discovered today that YouTube has a new section call YouTube EDU devoted to entirely to
educational video's from the likes of MIT, Standford University, Harvard, UCLS and the University of New South Wales here in Sydney. This has the potential to be a great resource for both students and academics alike.
Right on the front page were posted some really interesting topical videos that your students might actually be interested in watching while learning. The University of Minnesota has a video looking at the science behind the popular recent movie Watchmen, I actually ended up watching the whole thing because it was so well presented.
There is a search box on the page enabling the searching of videos in the edu section only, so you don't have to sift through the dancing cats and singing dogs.
During my quick ten minute review of the site I found many useful videos that I will undoubtedly use so go check it out.
educational video's from the likes of MIT, Standford University, Harvard, UCLS and the University of New South Wales here in Sydney. This has the potential to be a great resource for both students and academics alike.
Right on the front page were posted some really interesting topical videos that your students might actually be interested in watching while learning. The University of Minnesota has a video looking at the science behind the popular recent movie Watchmen, I actually ended up watching the whole thing because it was so well presented.
There is a search box on the page enabling the searching of videos in the edu section only, so you don't have to sift through the dancing cats and singing dogs.
During my quick ten minute review of the site I found many useful videos that I will undoubtedly use so go check it out.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Alternative Chat Applications
Currently looking at alternatives to the WebCT chat tool since it decided to stop working and the usual time for these things to get fixed can be measured in months rather than weeks :-(
I'm looking at chat options that must be very simple to use and have password protection.
Currently looking at the following:
Chatz - http://www.chatzy.com/
This service can be used free with an inoffensive advertisement at the top.
I like this service because you can password protect the room, good for private classroom chats.
The interface could be a little clearer, perhaps too many options but a worthwhile temporary replacement for WebCT chat. It has no whiteboard tool though, does anyone use that function?
If you pay for the service, just $9 you get 500KB of chat, no adverts, save your rooms and your chats are logged. Since this is a text only service 500KB is actually a lot of chat.
Tinychat - http://tinychat.com/
A friend on twitter suggested this service, it's really simple and works well.
Interface is as simple as you can get and you can get your posts to the chat room onto twitter I believe, not tried this feature yet. My only problem with this tool is that there is no password protection so you could run a class and have strangers turn up but there is no directory of chat rooms so I guess somebody would have to work out the URL to get into your room. Once you all leave the room it is deleted, there is no archiving of the chat.
drop.io - http://drop.io/
Another twitter recommendation, this tool is very good although not as simple as Tinychat.
This tool enables password protection and full collaboration tools such as sharing images, edit documents together etc. I'm not interested in any of the advanced collaboration tools but the basic chat seems fine.
You can watch a short demo video of the system here - http://drop.io/file/streaming
Do you have any recommendations of web based chat services?
I'm looking at chat options that must be very simple to use and have password protection.
Currently looking at the following:
Chatz - http://www.chatzy.com/
This service can be used free with an inoffensive advertisement at the top.
I like this service because you can password protect the room, good for private classroom chats.
The interface could be a little clearer, perhaps too many options but a worthwhile temporary replacement for WebCT chat. It has no whiteboard tool though, does anyone use that function?
If you pay for the service, just $9 you get 500KB of chat, no adverts, save your rooms and your chats are logged. Since this is a text only service 500KB is actually a lot of chat.
Tinychat - http://tinychat.com/
A friend on twitter suggested this service, it's really simple and works well.
Interface is as simple as you can get and you can get your posts to the chat room onto twitter I believe, not tried this feature yet. My only problem with this tool is that there is no password protection so you could run a class and have strangers turn up but there is no directory of chat rooms so I guess somebody would have to work out the URL to get into your room. Once you all leave the room it is deleted, there is no archiving of the chat.
drop.io - http://drop.io/
Another twitter recommendation, this tool is very good although not as simple as Tinychat.
This tool enables password protection and full collaboration tools such as sharing images, edit documents together etc. I'm not interested in any of the advanced collaboration tools but the basic chat seems fine.
You can watch a short demo video of the system here - http://drop.io/file/streaming
Do you have any recommendations of web based chat services?
Monday, March 23, 2009
eLearning Experience
Having been involved with elearning now for 10+ years I think I might have something to offer the to the elearning community.
A quick run-down of my experience
A quick run-down of my experience
- Been involved with the selection, rollout and management of every version of WebCT, versions 1 - 8 and soon to be Blackboard 9.
- Ten years of training staff in using WebCT and curriculum design.
- Experience with many LMS including Moodle, Blackboard and Sakai.
- A member of the Australia Council on Open, Distance and eLearning.
- Currently Operations Manager for the University of Sydney eLearning unit.
- Assessed, implemented and used many elearning technologies such as Lectopia, Wimba voice tools, Respondus, Questionmark Perception, various Wiki tools, etc.
- Lecturer in information technology
- Online teacher
- Online student
Welcome
Well finally I get a blog and a twitter account all in the same month.
Since my job focuses on elearning and emerging technologies that can facilitate learning I thought it might be useful to share my knowledge, links, experience etc with you.
I'll try and focus on the Australian scene but since elearning offers the ability to largely ignore physical distance my postings will cover any elearning technology with a relevance to the Australian scene.
For regular news updates follow my twitter account - http://twitter.com/elearningupdate
Thanks for stopping by
Colin Lowe
Since my job focuses on elearning and emerging technologies that can facilitate learning I thought it might be useful to share my knowledge, links, experience etc with you.
I'll try and focus on the Australian scene but since elearning offers the ability to largely ignore physical distance my postings will cover any elearning technology with a relevance to the Australian scene.
For regular news updates follow my twitter account - http://twitter.com/elearningupdate
Thanks for stopping by
Colin Lowe
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