The Saints of British Rock tells the
tale of a mythical rock band that rise to stardom during the sixties. Using the
format of a celebrity chat show, supplemented by slides, movies and animation,
they relate stories of their success before disappearing into a time warp that
is connected with Camelot and King Arthur. Somehow they are converted into
eco-rock warriors and re-emerge as musical campaigners for the natural
environment. So far so good. The dialogue from the two main characters however
just seems childish and pointless. The intent presumably is to satirise the
phenomenon of vacuous rock stars being thrust into the limelight and forced to
be spokespersons about things they know little about, but the writing is
tedious and lacks punch. Musically the show holds together and has some nice
moments. It would work better if they just told the story with music and multimedia
and drastically prune the dialogue.
Monday, March 11, 2013
4 Voice - Review
4 Voice are four local lads who promote
themselves as Adelaide's premiere acapella group - good on 'em for aiming high!
Happily we were encouraged to keep our phones and cameras ON - at least someone
understands new media. We were then treated to a high energy, humorous, lively
and engaging show of original arrangements of mostly golden oldies, complete
with dance routines, and a couple of excellent originals thrown into the mix.
(Big tick!) Their infectious stage presence easily gets the audience involved
on several numbers. Highlights: the song they use to pick up girls, a zany
impromptu restaurant scene, and the vocals of their bass man Tom. A fun show.
Monday, March 04, 2013
Again Amazing - Nicholas Tweedy
There's
magic and there's mentalism - Nicholas Tweedy's preference is mentalism but he
offers both in this extraordinary show. Lots of card tricks and non-threatening
audience participation in an informal and relaxed presentation. It almost feels
like you're at home with friends. With each 'trick' the stakes are raised and
it becomes harder to believe what you're seeing, but every time Tweedy manages
to prove he knows what we're thinking. It's the second time I've seen this kind
of mentalism in action and despite my cynicism (apparently Australian audiences
are among the most sceptical) I'm now a convert - I believe that mentalists can
control what we think! There is no other rational explanation for some of the things
that happen in Again Amazing. Presentation
could be slicker but my guess is 'Nick' wants to keep it down home and cosy.
Treat yourself and go test out your own cynicism.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Inside- Frank Woodley and Simon Yates
This
is theatre rather than comedy; art rather than entertainment. Comedy and
tragedy are different sides of the same coin, and Inside clearly demonstrates this paradox. Brothers Vasili and
Viktor are confined in a dark place, and have been for a very long time. Their
symbiotic relationship is endearing and sometimes uncomfortable for the
audience. It goes way beyond the fraternal as they struggle to maintain their sanity.
A five minute window of sunlight each day allows them to dream, and entertain hopes
of escape. There are funny moments and they come as welcome comic relief. Often
people laughed at what I found sad - I was searching for the symbolism - while
others needed to laugh. Plenty of physical comedy and clever musical moments,
but clearly Frank Woodley is trying something new, and it worked for me. But it
was much more than just a laugh.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Tim Fitzhigham - The Gambler
Some
would argue that betting is in the Australian blood. An hour with wide-eyed Tim
Fitzhigham makes it quite clear that our obsession with betting has ancient
roots in the mother country. Tim has
done some very strange things in his time, all in the name of a good bet.
Pushing wheelbarrows across London, challenging the world's best in chess, rowing
a bathtub across the English channel, long distance Morris dancing - and he re-enacts
these crazy adventures with the skills of an engaging storyteller. And if his
stories seem a bit far-fetched he has photographs to back them up. The appeal
of this show is the weirdness of the tales and the humour and infectious energy
of the storyteller as we relive his oddball adventures and take our own bets on
their outcome. Like a bet? Take a chance and go and see this funny, enjoyable,
and instructive show.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Undignified Social Media
(apologies for weird formatting)
Alex Hayes wrote:
Alex Hayes wrote:
I'm noting a substantial shift in what I have decided is aggressive marketing on LinkedIns behalf. Ignore privately? Repeatedly send me reminders that someone has friended me? Despite numerous attempts to quell this unending stream it is the faceless communication that causes me to imagine deleting the application out of my life altogether. Your experiences similar?
I replied:
Yeh I get this rubbish from LinkedIn as well. As well as notifications that person X has verified that I have skills in Y that I didn't even include in my LinkedIn profile. They are doing as Google does, as noted by Eli Pariser in The Filter Bubble - trying to turn us into the person they think we want to be.
Of course Facebook does it par excellence. Podomatic does it, YouTube does it, Twitter doesit. It's all so undignified. All these social media sites clamouring over each other trying to get usto divulge more and more of who we are and what we do and believe so they can on-sell the aggregated data to third parties for profit and suck in more advertisers. It used to be so excitingbeing part of social media out there on the cutting edge but it's become well and truly mainstream and is now just an irritating pain. But that's now what we've got. Business models that capitalise on the bits and bytes of our activity.Interesting to note that some social media sites DO NOT do this - Flickr, Delicious, Blogger to name a few.What do I do about these annoying pestering exhortations to check out what my network is up to? Ignore them and delete and sigh.
Monday, December 10, 2012
IDEA12 Conference Notes
Keynote Speaker: Erik Duval (Catholic University, Leuven, Belgium)
Erik was clearly invited to provoke and stir things up. His talk had 3 foci:
1) Open Learning
2) the end of the LMS
3) Learning Analytics
Open Learning
He is a member of the Ariadne Foundation, and GLOBE - a one-stop-shop for learning resource broker organizations, each of them managing and/or federating one or more learning object repositories.
His Engineering classes are completely open.
- tries to prepare his students to solve problems that don't exist yet with technology that doesn't exist yet.
Q: "what does training for an unknowable future mean? what does it look like?
The LMS
Panel: Challenges and opportunities for digital learning
Matt Farmer (Dept of Ed and Early Childhood Development - Victoria)
"Challenges can't be solved in the old ways."
" The new challenge is disruptive change."
We need to stop presenting information about the new world operating around the world of education as a cautionary tale about some future time because it is here now. Things are already, chaotic. messy and challenging. In the New Game
DAY 2
Erik was clearly invited to provoke and stir things up. His talk had 3 foci:
1) Open Learning
2) the end of the LMS
3) Learning Analytics
Open Learning
He is a member of the Ariadne Foundation, and GLOBE - a one-stop-shop for learning resource broker organizations, each of them managing and/or federating one or more learning object repositories.
His Engineering classes are completely open.
- tries to prepare his students to solve problems that don't exist yet with technology that doesn't exist yet.
Q: "what does training for an unknowable future mean? what does it look like?
The LMS
- In short they should die! They block innovation and are closed to the rest of the web. Discourage collaboration between organisations and across geographical borders.
- In Erik's classes the learning platform is the open web.
- data that students leave behind that can be tracked to improve their learning
- can be used to track all manner of web activity: blogs, Twitter, ie including non-LMS activity.
- uses Engagor: a commercial tool that offers social media analysis, including sentiment analysis - a description of the mood of blogs, Tweets based on language used! (Engagor have free 14 day trial).
- Recommended Resource: Public Parts by Jeff Jarvis
Panel: Challenges and opportunities for digital learning
Matt Farmer (Dept of Ed and Early Childhood Development - Victoria)
"Challenges can't be solved in the old ways."
" The new challenge is disruptive change."
We need to stop presenting information about the new world operating around the world of education as a cautionary tale about some future time because it is here now. Things are already, chaotic. messy and challenging. In the New Game
- disruption is normal
- one needs to harness the wisdom and power of the crowd
- we need to explore new business models
DAY 2
Ramona
Pierson - How predictive decision support is changing the face of schooling OR
Big
Data: Powering the Change we need
- investing in education has pronounced effect on GDP
- Africa is world's #1 user/developer of 5G wireless
- "the world is exploding with content"
- technology is changing children cognitively; re plasticity of brain
- there's the 'transformative' word again...
- 70% of US prison population have LL an N problems
- degrees are a buffer against poverty (of course there are other factors at play here)
- we continue trying to maintain a book based system..."system change is a necessity" "we have to change our teaching practices" - become guides; facilitators more often
- govts and corps need people with 21st century skills
What's
next? How do we move forward?
- help teachers become more effective mentors/guides - HOW DO YOU DO THIS???
- part of it is customizing the delivery
- use data to show learning needs of kids/students??? - think she's advocating Learning Analytics and/or via APIs that track/monitor/advocate data; and algorithms - v much a tech solution to better/more effective learning
- capture interests by taking students to places they cannot easily go - (harder to do the less proficient students are proficient with technology)
[what
are 21st c skills?? (again!)] See below...
PANEL SESSION: Authentic
Assessment and Learning Analytics (Duval et al)
why
does everyone want to talk about assessment all the time???? my first task is
to teach - help students learn!!!! (Duval); assessment comes later (couldn't agree more.)
Group Discussion:
- what are the drivers for the assessment driven model? are they still appropriate? (Gary Putland) - accountability/risk aversion/efficiency/bang for buck
- observation from group member: until 21c skills are assessed lecturers will ignore them
- q from audience: will assessment become something based on observation, against student created criteria? (rather than externally imposed standards)
Patrick Griffin (Executive Director of the Assessment and Teaching of 21st Century Skills project)
PANEL SESSION: Engaging learners in a digital world: Identity, Devices and other matters
Ruth Wallace (CDU) - Engaging Learners in a Digital World
- In indigenous north the new season is thought to have arrived when the weather changes! Not because it's March!
- technology represents a linear version of knowledge - not true IMO; networked learning is quite rhizomic
- co-author of the BYOT - Bring it on blog and book - Bring Your Own Technology
DAY 3
New
Models of Content Delivery - VijayKumar (MIT) beamed in via vc link; describes
himself as an educational futurist (!)
- Opportunities for change
- educational costs are increasing
- new forms of knowledge and information
- increasing numbers of non-trad students
- we are witnessing the intersection of Technology (networks, software, data, devices, community) and Open (tools, resources, content)
Open
resources does not mean they are of inferior quality. Some examples:
- StarBiochem, Star***
- ilabs - pitches these as 'first hand experiences'...
Point: MIT have a great deal quality software that adds depth to their open materials
- Network and open > new ways of configuring the learning experience (cf Weller)
- David Wiley's 4 Rs of open: remix, revise, reuse, redistribute
- Access, cost and quality - this combo has been disrupted by MOOCS (John Daniels)
- NOTE: what do we keep from the old model of education???
Q: Why is
Open Content NOT a threat to traditional education?
A: Because an industry can be built around it???? offers opportunities; not a threat if you
can figure how to change!
Carl
Ruppin (in place of Delia Browne) - Copyright Law Reform and OER; Slides
- are existing copyright laws now irrelevant? blocking use of OER resources? yes, and they are too complex
- content in digital environment is promiscuous
- in Australia the compulsory fees to Copyright Ausralia (CAL) means nothing is free in the educational world (unlike other countries); students can do 'reasonable' things for free; teachers cannot
- "current copyright laws are broken"; reform needed, and OER plays a part in this
- Australian law Reform Commission is currently conducting a review of copyright law
- we need to future proof the copright act for the digital economy
Nigel
Ward (Uni of Melbourne)
- nectar.org.au (national eresearch on collab, tools and resources)
- building several virtual labs
- this is about big data and big science (Astronomy), but also Humanities Network Project - will allow new forms of research across disciplines {check HUNIdatasets}
- building a research cloud (which is now live)
NBN Education Trials
Debra
Panizzon (Monash), and Nathan Bailey (nvsesedu.au) - Virtual Science
(the
better the connection/video - the closer you feel to the action ie more
connected, less peripheral, not just an observer)
- class connecting kids around Australia but taught from Melbourne - mvp! - uses Webex, and video conferencing
- they want to produce science creators
- [occurs to me that science can benefit from NBN more than humanities ? (except see Music below!)]
OHSGame - White Card - Mark O'Rourke (Victoria Uni)
- suitable for VET learners who are more visual than verbal
- games are good for education because they present challenges in the 'zone of proximal development' that are achievable; and you get immediate response
Dror
Ben-Naim (Smart Sparrow) BEST
Network - Biomedical Education Skills and Training Network
- product is an example of adaptive tech - adapts to needs of ind students
- allows educators to create highly interactive 'multimedia' content, data rich; uses national medical image bank
Colin
Cornish - Australian Youth Orchestra
- they run short residential courses where people can play together ie music can be a collaborative process
- NBN will allow people in regional areas - esp those with large instruments! - to audition locally rather than have to travel to capital city - mostly for teaching purposes
- access to master classes; could hone into rehearsal of orchestras, with conductor comments, etc
Saturday, December 08, 2012
Inspiring Event
Went to an Adelaide Netsquared event recently to listen to speakers in four separate locations in a Google Hangout hookup between Adelaide, Melbourne, Auckland and Wellington. Tom Hawkins intro'd the session and made reference to co-working spaces.
Will from Melbourne was the next speaker talking about the Global Poverty Project. Aiming to "gangify resistance to global poverty." Referred to an app now available from Global Citizen.
John in Wellington followed talking about Loomio (an open source tool for collaborative decision making), and Enspiral - a platform to increase the numbers of people working on 'big problems'.
Another Will from Melbourne spoke about Squareweave and the quest to redirect more money to charity. He predicted that the next fast growing industry on the Net will be harnessing big data. Quote: "anonymous giving to charity doesn't fly with the young generation!" They want us and their friends to know about it!
Evan in Adelaide then spoke about Our World Today, an alternative media outlet that focuses on positive stories. (In contrast to mainstream media which has conflict as a core value.)
Other site mentioned: dosomethinggood.com.au
Just inspiring to sit and listen to a bunch of people using the web for good And all of them were under 35.
Will from Melbourne was the next speaker talking about the Global Poverty Project. Aiming to "gangify resistance to global poverty." Referred to an app now available from Global Citizen.
John in Wellington followed talking about Loomio (an open source tool for collaborative decision making), and Enspiral - a platform to increase the numbers of people working on 'big problems'.
Another Will from Melbourne spoke about Squareweave and the quest to redirect more money to charity. He predicted that the next fast growing industry on the Net will be harnessing big data. Quote: "anonymous giving to charity doesn't fly with the young generation!" They want us and their friends to know about it!
Evan in Adelaide then spoke about Our World Today, an alternative media outlet that focuses on positive stories. (In contrast to mainstream media which has conflict as a core value.)
Other site mentioned: dosomethinggood.com.au
Just inspiring to sit and listen to a bunch of people using the web for good And all of them were under 35.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
ConVerge12
Given the
bleak outlook for the VET sector in Victoria - for the TAFE sector anyway - it
was encouraging that ConVerge went ahead this year, and was well attended with
about 300 delegates participating.
On the flight
home I was reading about blogging in Howard Rheingold's NetSmart . Rheingold says
that when people criticise bloggers for writing about things they might
consider trivial they are missing the point. The point is that whenever people
commit thoughts to writing it is a valuable exercise in clarifying your thinking
and disciplining the mind. Writing is of itself, ipso facto, a good thing to do. And so my thoughts on the sessions
I attended at ConVerge12.
Tim Longhurst
The
opening keynote was from Tim Longhurst, 'futurist', and CEO of consultancy firm,
Key Message An engaging and entertaining speaker he based his talk around three themes:
1.
Wisdom is
in the group
2.
Barriers
are collapsing
3. the power of
small
Personally it provided a great segue for my own presentation
on Global Trends affecting education later in the morning.
He quoted Chris Anderson ( from Wired) saying that the
world is getting better in many ways, but then showed a rather trite example of
Lil Demon, the break dancer. As good a break dancer as this kid may be it's a
stretch to think this has improved the world! Perhaps the point
was better made by citing examples of people who have never met f2f collaborating
with others across geographical and temporal boundaries - this is significant progress.
An
exercise followed where it was revealed that 80% of the ConVerge audience have
used their smart phone for banking - apparently a good indicator of the extent
of 'digital-ness' of people. (I haven't!)
Best bits of the future
1 We will all become cyborgs
He cited
the example of people who took the Turing test, and who were unable to tell if they were talking to a person or robot. In some cases they were wrong. When
they thought they were talking with a robot it was a person and vice versa. So
machine intelligence is improving.
2. Live on the edge
·
Innovation
is really about asking is there a better
way of doing this?
·
Find and
foster the edge in your organisation
·
Make a
point of listening to an 'edger' for 20 mins a month. (I like this idea -
simple to implement.)
3. Abundance
Jamie
Oliver gives his recipes away to generate a million dollar business. Copyright
is a product of a time of scarcity of resources. This philosophy of abundance ties in nicely
with the work of Martin Weller who includes a chapter title The Pedagogy of Abundance in his book, the Digital Scholar.
Abundance:
- gives power to the small
- individuals can use services like Kickstarter.com to crowdsource funds for creative projects. (Similar to kiva.org for micro-financing of development projects.)
- Barriers to traditional education are collapsing - eg the Khan academy
Tim Morrissey - Big Blue Button
An
informative session (such a lame word!) detailing
the results of a project using Big Blue Button - the tool that many hope will become the Open
Source alternative to proprietary virtual classroom products like Adobe and Blackboard Collaborate.
Alas,
while some were impressed with the audio
quality of this tool it is still a long way short of being a viable alternative
to the major players.
·
Poor mark
up tools? seems better in presenter view.
·
Browser
based > easy loading
·
Presenter
can enlarge screen; no app share but has webtour
·
Won't work
with inbuilt mics
As an
aside Tim told us that he didn't think Blackboard were supporting Moodle
integration any longer.
The obligatory session on MOODLE 2.3 by the
inimitable Julian Ridden revealed:
· new text
editor is much improved; you can now paste from Word and junk code is removed
automatically
·
using tables
is MUCH easier
·
Cleaner
interface
·
Navigation
options - eg show one topic per page
·
Plugin
resources now standard (but not sure what this means)
·
Eg a new
and better feedback tool replaces the clunky questions and surveys of older
versions
·
Book
module now core
Gilly Salmon was the keynote speaker late on day 1 but apparently did not have the
version of the presentation she wanted
to deliver. Slides were too small to see easily.
Offered
just this:
55% of
Australians have a Facebook account
Learning Analytics and EPortfolios @ Box Hill
(Julieanne Seaman and Pauline Farrell)
While
there was an element of the speakers clearly believing their own publicity, Box
Hill TAFE are a good example of an organisation that has gone for the long term
view of implementing systemic change from the top down. That is, management is
behind the change, and a whole of institute approach is employed.
They have done extensive profiling of their student body:
·
78% of
students prefer workplace learning; text based is least preferred mode of
learning
·
97% have
mobile phones ; 63% have smart phones;
78% own a laptop
Also:
·
they have
developed a script that allows them to track amount of blended, interactive nature
of Moodle sites. This data is fed to managers - they call them traffic light reports. These results are published throughout
the organisation and encourage section managers to come forward and ask how
they can improve their section's standing - wonderful!
ePortfolios
(Mahara) are used in conjunction with a Personal Learning Plan unit for students
·
some students
like to use epfs collaboratively
·
Blockers:
staff and student skills/system usability - limited customisation options
· Box Hill distinguishes
between learnER and learnING analytics; learning analytics is more about whole
of organisation
·
more PD
needed for staff to include assessment tasks suited to epfs
·
they sit
with staff at Training Package stage and redesign content for e-delivery from
the start
Tuesday, November 06, 2012
A Humbling Experience
I would contend that the abundance of content and connections is as fundamental shift in education as any we are likely to encounter, and there has, to date, been little attempt to really place this at the centre of a model of teaching.
An event called Designing Learning in the Digital Age took place here in Adelaide a week or so ago. After the initial keynote (which was generally very well received) there were a number of break-out sessions that, according to the majority of the feedback, failed badly.
SAMPLES of FEEDBACK FROM EVALUATION
- Will certainly not attend any future events where these presenters are involved.
- The event did not model or address the issue of 'facilitating disruptive and transformative learning experiences' as advertised.
- no leveraging of the knowledge in the room or attempt to understand where the audience was at or, understanding of the technological capacity in the room for participants
- the session on disruptive innovation delivered zero. No content, no strategies
- I was hoping for tangible ideas from other contexts. The flyer made it sound as though it was for people currently working in this space ... The focus on social networking sites as a source of knowledge and content was, for mine, overdone and not reflective of the promotional material.
- little new knowledge or ways of representing it were offered.
Will certainly not attend any future events where these presenters are involved.
I was one of the presenters involved. In 30 plus years of working as an educator in schools, adult education, professional development, and as an invited or keynote speaker at conferences feedback on my efforts has been largely positive, so to get such a bad wrap for the first time in my professional life hurts. And so I must look at why it happened.
In 2006 I had the great privilege of participating in the inaugural Future of Learning in a Networked World Unconference in NZ. This was the first time I experienced first hand how a group of connected educators could generate vast amounts of significant content in a relatively short time. And I had hoped that participants in this recent event would be able to replicate something like that NZ experience.
Promotional materials for the day said things like:
- Intending participants are those who "want to see change in the way education is delivered, and who see the value of networked learning"
- participants will be actively curating their own learning
- It is expected that participants will already have skills in the use of educational and mobile technologies, and social media
- you'll ... ideally be used to creating and sharing content and/or media on the open web.
- handy...would be an account on one or two (or more) social media sites eg: blog, podcast, wiki, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, LinkedIn or even Facebook
- develop that resource you would like to show your key decision-makers
- locate, generate and tag content to create usable resources
Extracting some key words from the above list we get:
- networked learning
- actively curating
- skills in ...social media
- used to creating and sharing content and/or media on the open web
- develop
- locate, generate, tag
I think it’s clear from the above description that participants would be doing things. The intent was that those who attended this event would come ready to share, learn, collaborate, create and curate content. That is, it would not be an event where facilitators would be instructing, but rather an event where emphasis was squarely on the participants, and the knowledge and expertise they brought to the event would make or break the day.
But that it is not what happened. It is clear from the feedback that some came expecting to be taught and talked at. I had no intention of putting myself in that role for such an event. It would be ludicrous to even try. All my co-facilitator and I wanted to do was provide a time and place for connected educators to extend their personal learning networks, and tap into the collective intelligence of those who attended. To practice what is sometimes touted as a methodology for the digital age - paragogy. The notion of ‘paragogy’ relates to the peer production of learning
I wanted to provide a platform for participants to talk and learn from each other. I assumed that people would quickly self-organise into groups of mutual interest, decide what they were going to do, and do it. We would collect the resulting resources at the end of the sessions. It was also hoped that participants would be happy to complete tasks in the days after the event and share everything via a public Google Doc created for the event.
I have been part of such events before and that is what happened. It did not happen at this event. Why not?
1. the promotional materials and session descriptions obviously did not make what we trying to do explicit enough.
As I think back to previous events where this approach has been successful I realise that the term unconference had been used to describe the methodology employed. My mistake here was not to describe at least the events I was hosting as akin to unconference sessions. People came to learn from me as the facilitator; I was there to host a situation where people could learn from each other. Cross purposes.
2. people needed more time to get to know each other and explore what areas of mutual interest they might work on. I badly misjudged this, and more time should have been allocated to allow this to happen.
3. the technology at the venue failed. While this was really disappointing, many had access to their own network connection anyway. Several participants also had fairly basic levels of ICT literacy and were unable to use their devices to quickly produce content.
While I don't think the failure of the venue's technology was the crucial factor in determining the ultimate success or otherwise of the day, it certainly didn't help, and I imagine this would have got several people offside. For the record I feel cheated by the venue. In the lead-up discussions with Rydges Southpark I was very specific about the nature of the event and said that 60 people would be making intensive use of their in-house wireless and they assured me several times that their Internet could cope with such use. They were wrong, and they should never have accepted our booking for this event. And I should not have believed them. A hard lesson learned.
4. There was not enough space for people to work comfortably in groups. I had envisaged people working alone, in pairs or groups as desired. We have to accept responsibility for this - we misjudged the amount of space needed for people to interact in the way we hoped they would.
So - really quite ironic. We wanted to host an event where people could talk, share, create, and learn from each other to model how designing learning in the digital age needs to take these approaches into account, and we got feedback based on an expectation that we would be running teacher-led sessions that we had no intention of running.
We tried something new. We took a risk. We were trying to place “the abundance of content and connections ...at the centre of a model of teaching.” We failed. Innovation theory is quite clear that taking risks and failing is a necessary prerequsite for eventual success so I guess on that score we can salvage some hard learned lessons from the event, but ultimately we failed, and I have to accept responsibility for that. I'm really sorry that so many were disappointed. And you're only as good as your last gig...
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