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Showing posts from April, 2012

Curriculum Online

Curriculum and online - I cannot think of two terms more purposefully vague. What does curriculum include? Better question - what does it not include? Tests, unit plans, texts, videos, assignments, and lessons. But doesn't it also include the outcomes, declared or hidden. Could not the classroom event or the online chat be a learning activity that would fall under far reaching tendrils of the massive curriculum umbrella? How does one manage curriculum? I am not wholly sure, at given moments. (If you have an idea, please let me know.) Do you choose a model or does it choose you? Oh, yes, there are models. In fact, there are categories of models, and as many books and online articles as there are models. In the end, does it manage itself, like some unwieldy beast, with the students and teacher locked arm-in-arm, armed only with their curiosity and fool-hardiness. And then, there is online - the second half of my job. I coordinate an online learning program, even though I...

mLearnCon 2012: Part 2

Greetings from beautiful San Diego. Yes, it is possible to learn and have fun, just as it is possible to learn from fun and have fun while learning. I know it's hard to believe. I count myself among the long-time doubters. However, I have experienced it here at the mLearnCon conference here in San Diego. San Diego is beautiful, clean, warm and friendly. Maria, my wife and best friend, came down with me and we had a romantic night, visiting Sea World, listening to a reggae band (yes mon, we were on island time, mon), and drinking strawberry daiquiries by the hotel outdoor pool under the palm trees. Sadly, she has gone home but we had one of the most splendid nights together. In short, San Diego is surreal. Certainly, it has been a week for firsts. This is the first time I have ever been abroad, and the first that I have ever been at a conference on this scale. But the biggest first would have to be the earthquake tremor. I can scratch that one of my bucket list. Oh...

mLearnCon 2012: Part 1

The sessions are intensive. The ground they cover is formidable. The people I have met come from all kinds of backgrounds: from Canadian Military to CIA to publisher reps to LMS vendors. For the afternoon sessions, I am so tired I go back to my room for a 10 minute power nap during breaks so that I don't fall apart. Of course, to remedy the situation, I eat some seafood, float in the pool, and bake in the sauna. In the end all is well. At the end of all this hard work, some things about mobile learning and how it would apply to us back at Bow Valley College has become clear. There are so many devices out there that building native apps for each of these devices would be exhaustive, even using cross-platform kits: secy but exhaustive. If we are to build apps, they should be web apps. These web apps can be created using current web technologies, such as dreamweaver which comes with spry and html 5 extensions. Google has tapped into this idea and has moved all of its mobi...

Excellence and Innovation

Yesterday was the College-Wide Meeting day and finished with presentations on Excellence and Innovation, with the effective use of technology at the centre.  Andy Benoit, from the Teaching and Learning Centre, came to talk with me about all of the free and simple technologies, like gmail and google sites, that the Upgrading Online program uses.  Our shared enthusiasm for how these products promote learning and teaching moments left me inspired about the college moving forward.  Equally, the Upgrading Online team was asked to present about the program's innovative use of such free and open tech and about last year's virtual conference using Adobe Connect we hosted.  I felt proud to hear the interest and was moved by the conversations that went on with college colleagues about these technologies.   As I write this blog, I have just returned from the Teaching and Learning Centre's Annual Luncheon for coordinators and I remain amazed by the various initiatives a...