Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
"Palavatar" - More than intelligent answering machine
Friday, November 17, 2006
Student & Faculty Views of Tech. - Final 2 Questions - [Almost 3 minutes audio]
Student Leader's Views on Technology, Options, ...[About 1 hour audio]
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Recovering Anupholsteraphobics Join Here!
A new kind of AA: "Anupholsteraphobics Anonymous?"
Anupholsteraphobia:
"... Like most of the teachers I ever encounter, I suffered from a common malady--what Stan Brimberg at the Bank Street School calls "Anupholsteraphobia": "the fear of not covering the material."
Anupholsteraphobia cannot be cured, but it can be controlled."
- From "Discipline and Publish: Faculty Work, Technology, and Accountability," Randy Bass, Georgetown University, Plenary address delivered at the AAHE Forum on Faculty Roles and Rewards, San Diego CA, January 22, 1999.
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/disc&pub.html
Where shall we hold the first meeting of Anupholsteraphobics Anonymous? Who has time to set the agenda? Decide what we will cover together?
Steve Gilbert
Ubiquitous/Wireless Computing on Campus
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Cell Phones Friends or Foes?
- Student (mother of 3; part-time worker; full-time student; student govt president): “I’ve only known one other undergraduate in the last 3 years who didn’t have a cell phone.” But I almost never see a faculty member using a cell phone.
- Faculty member – who does instant messaging, blogging, etc. herself: “I can’t get some of the students in my class to listen to me instead of their iPods, phones, etc…. They’re always doing text messaging in my class. I don’t know how to stop them.”
- <Insert/imagine picture of a classroom with a bedraggled, frustrated teacher at the front and many students obviously doing things with their VARIED kinds of cell phones or iPods while not exactly paying attention to the teacher and not exactly ignoring him either.>
- How can someone send the same text or voice recording to several cell phones at the same time? From a cell phone? From a computer?
- <Insert/imagine picture of a teacher sending a preparatory message the day before a class to all the enrolled students via cell phone or similar devices. Show the students receiving the message in a variety of situations all at the same time. Show some of them quite intrigued with the message, some irritated, some not really paying attention to it.>
- How can someone send the same text or voice recording to a few cell phones at the same time? With confidence that each recipient will in turn send the same message to a pre-determined few cell phones?
- From a cell phone? From a computer?
- <Insert/imagine picture of a teacher sending a preparatory message the day before a class to all the enrolled students via a “telephone tree”-like arrangement. Show the students receiving the message in a variety of situations all at almost the same time. Show some of them quite intrigued with the message, some irritated, some not really paying attention to it.>
- How can someone send a text or voice recording to a single cell phone with confidence that the recipient will in turn send the same message to the next pre-assigned cell phones? And that the 2nd recipient fill send the message along to the next designated person in the chain. And so on.
- From cell phone only to cell phones? Beginning with and then passing along the message to any of several kinds of devices – ranging from cell phones to computers?
- <Insert/imagine picture of a teacher sending a preparatory message the day before a class to one enrolled student – and that student forwarding the message to another, and so on, one-by-one. Show the students receiving the message in a variety of situations all at almost the same time. Show some of them quite intrigued with the message, some irritated, some not really paying attention to it.>
- [Like “PRS” – Clickers – Personal Response Systems]
- How can someone send a multiple-choice or short answer question to many cell phones at the same time? With confidence that each recipient will in turn be able to respond by “voting” for one of the multiple choices? Or submitting a short answer? And that the results can be automatically compiled and displayed for all participants to see? With or without protecting the anonymity of each response?
- From a cell phone? From a computer?
- <Insert/imagine picture of a teacher sending a “problem” or “question” within a classroom. All students respond simultaneously via their cell phones or similar handheld devices. The results are being displayed via computer-driven projector. >
Labels: cell phones
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Why Google Docs & Spreadsheets?
Gödel's Truth: Stalking Gödel?
Monday, November 13, 2006
Good at Running Meetings with 2 Factions? [Or more?]
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Web 2.0 Meets SOTL - 3+ Big Questions
Labels: Hybrid
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Advice to Bloggers - Always Use Ping-o-Matic
Labels: Hybrid
Monday, November 06, 2006
Resolving No Trump Arguments?
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Cell Phone as Sanctuary?
Labels: cell phones
Friday, November 03, 2006
Engaging Freshmen with Technology
Advice to Bloggers - Always Use Feed Validator
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Reading vs. Lectures vs. ....?
Are faculty members inept or irresponsible when they assign reading as part of a course?
Many people argue that lectures, especially lectures given to large audiences, are bad for learning - mostly because of the lack of opportunity for the learner to engage with the "material" actively and the lack of opportunity for interaction with the lecturer - for all but a few who may be able to take advantage of a brief question perior. Would these same people apply the same reasoning to reading?
“She had liked to read when she was a kid. But reading took so much time, all of it spent inside someone else’s head. Movies and TV, you could watch them with other people. That’s what it boiled down to: how much time you wanted to be all alone by yourself, with just a book for company.”
- Eileen Gunn, “Coming to Terms,” Nebula Awards Showcase 2006, p. 216, edited by Gardner Dozois, New American Library, 2006.
