Interesting blog post: how VLEs impact teaching – Lisa M Lane

Abstract
Course management systems, like any other technology, have an inherent purpose implied in their design, and therefore a built–in pedagogy. Although these pedagogies are based on instructivist principles, today’s large CMSs have many features suitable for applying more constructivist pedagogies. Yet few faculty use these features, or even adapt their CMS very much, despite the several customization options. This is because most college instructors do not work or play much on the Web, and thus utilize Web–based systems primarily at their basic level. The defaults of the CMS therefore tend to determine the way Web–novice faculty teach online, encouraging methods based on posting of material and engendering usage that focuses on administrative tasks. A solution to this underutilization of the CMS is to focus on pedagogy for Web–novice faculty and allow a choice of CMS.

See: http://firstmonday.org/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/viewArticle/2530/2303

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Podcast of Michael Korcuska’s Sakai 3 presentation now available

Michael Korcuska is the Executive Director of The Sakai Foundation. He visited the WebLearn team in OUCS earlier this month and gave an informal presentation about Sakai 3. Here is a recording of his talk.

http://media.podcasts.ox.ac.uk/oucs/sakai-07102009-medium-audio.mp3

Sakai 3

The Sakai community is working on a major new version of Sakai. Among its many improvements, Sakai 3 will provide:

  • A revamped user experience
  • A powerful and easy to use content authoring capability
  • Social networking features
  • Improved teaching and learning workflows
  • Increased scalability
  • Ease of use for software developers

You can find out more by downloading the Sakai 3 Whitepaper or find out the latest information about Sakai 3 by visiting the wiki page.

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SoftChalk announces Sakai integration

SoftChalk v5 will contain Sakai (WebLearn) integration.

Let Ed Garay from University of Illinois at Chicago explain:

SoftChalk is essentially an easy-to-use yet powerful authoring tool (Windows and Mac) for instructors to create simple, intermediate and even advanced (and interactive) class materials for Web delivery.  Each SoftChalk lesson can have simple hypermedia or one embedding Flash Video,

MP3 Podcasts and/or simple to complex interactive student activities or embedded quizzing.

For each lesson, SoftChalk produces a folder, which can be easily zip up and uploaded to Blackboard (UIC’s LMS at this time), or Sakai, Desire2Learn, Moodle or uploaded to anywhere.  Why, you can put burn it to CDs, if you wish.  At UIC, we recommend that faculty drag-and-drop their SoftChalk-generated lessons to their class WebDisks (WebDAV mount points) which we have seamlessly integrated with the rest of the Blackboard LMS.

Now, when/if the instructors want to capture/record the student activities embedded inside a SoftChalk lesson, only then it is really necessary to have SoftChalk package the lesson as a SCORM package that must be uploaded to Blackboard for proper integration with the Blackboard Grade Center.  The same would be true to feed the SoftChalk student interactions to the Sakai Gradebook.

 

With SoftChalk Release 5, SoftChalk has made available an additional LMS-specific integration simplifying the two-step process of packaging the lesson to Zip or SCORM and then uploading it to the LMS, into a single operation where the instructors or course builders publish their lessons directly from SoftChalk to Blackboard, Sakai, Moodle, etc. — a nice (free) feature appreciated mostly by mere mortals (i.e. nontech-savvy faculty).

At UIC and many other universities, SoftChalk is very well liked, just like Wimba Classroom and Wimba Voice Tools, Pronto, and a plethora of other peripheral Teaching & Learning Technology.

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How do I display Journal Alerts on a site?

Informaworld.com provides an RSS alerting service for a vast number of academic journals. Visit http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/browse~db=all~thing=title~by=title and locate the journal you want alerts for. Once you have found it, click on the [RSS] icon (Top right) and use the URL shown in the address bar as the target of a News tool. As an example, the URL for alerts from the ALT Journal (ALT-J) is http://www.informaworld.com/ampp/rss~content=t713605628

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Back to basics: the web, academic values, and Sakai

There’s a great article about Sakai 3 by Sakai’s own Clay Fenlason in the latest ALT newsletter. (Remember Oxford is an institutional member so there’s no excuse not to make the most of ALT resources.)

The latest version of the Sakai collaboration and learning environment, Sakai 3 has been developed from a deep reflection on the VLE’s mixed record of support for the academic mission.

See: http://newsletter.alt.ac.uk/1756uhxvs6d1ws2uv6qhbv

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Plagiarism Conference

This fourth biennial conference, hosted by plagiarismadvice.org, and sponsored by Ofqual draws together delegates from the international educational community. In 2008 250 delegates from schools, colleges, universities, awarding and regulatory bodies along with commercial organisations from around the world met to share their experiences and expertise in this key area.

Keynote speakers:

  • Jude Carroll, Deputy Director of the ASKe CETL at Oxford Brookes University, UK.
  • Dr Teddi Fishman, Director of the Center for Academic Integrity, US.
  • Adrian Slater, Head of Legal Services at the University of Leeds, UK.

See: http://www.plagiarismadvice.org/conference.html

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Displaying a Twitter feed using the News tool?

The following are tips to provide as the feed URL:

(Note: where the tweets are coming from multiple users, append &show_user=true onto the feed URL, as this will prefix the tweet with the user name it is coming from).
For complete information on displaying Twitter feeds, look at http://search.twitter.com/api.

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Displaying Twitter feeds in a WebLearn page

This page was updated on 20 October 2012

To display Tweets within an HTML page do the following. At the place where you want the Tweets to appear, switch to the Source view of the HTML page (using the button on the top row of the WYSIWYG) and paste in the following:

 <ul id="twitter_update_list">
    <li>&nbsp;</li>
 </ul>

Once this is done, one must add some JavaScript to the page – this code will fetch the Tweets from Twitter and will embed them dynamically onto the page. Paste the following JavaScript onto your page and then change twit_u to reflect your actual Twitter username.

<script
  type="text/javascript"
  src="https://twitter.com/javascripts/blogger.js">
</script>
<script
  type="text/javascript"
  src="https://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline/twit_u.json?callback=twitterCallback2&count=5">
</script>

You can also (optionally) place a link directly to your feed on Twitter itself:

<a href="http://twitter.com/twit_u" target="_blank">follow me on Twitter</a>
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WebLearn success story

As one of the new WebLearn early adopters, the MSc in Evidence-Based Health Care (EBHC) course has had a very successful year – winning two teaching
awards: the OxTALENT Award and the Oxford University Teaching Award.

Amanda Bulrs, the course director said: “we believe the active engagement in the course is due to three factors: deep interest in the subject, engaging teaching methods, and the new WebLearn – the Oxford Virtual Learning Environment”.

More information about the MSc in EBHC course and the other WebLearn case studies can be found on-line at https://weblearn.ox.ac.uk/portal/hierarchy/info/showcase

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WebLearn now has its very own QR Code

weblearn-qrcode

Has your phone got a QR Code reader? If so, point it at this image and see where you end up!

QR Code stands for “Quick Response Code” and is a form of bar code optimised for quick decoding by. As ever, Wikipedia knows more about this sort of thing than me: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_Code

To generate your own QR Code, visit http://qrcode.kaywa.com/

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