E-learning and Digital Cultures 2011 » Weekly Welcomes http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk part of the MSc in E-learning at the University of Edinburgh Sat, 12 May 2012 10:10:40 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.1.1 week 10: (learning about) what we are (learning about) http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/11/21/week-10-learning-about-what-we-are-learning-about/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/11/21/week-10-learning-about-what-we-are-learning-about/#comments Mon, 21 Nov 2011 10:40:26 +0000 Jen Ross http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2433

Good day to you all! Welcome to week 10, our final structured week of the course. You’ve spent the last couple of weeks grappling with notions of posthumanism and the cyborg, and some very fine blog posts have been written and discussed. This week we do our final set of readings, and our final course activity. By the end of the week you should have developed your thinking about the relationship of posthumanism and pedagogy, and proposed or found an example of something you consider to be a “posthuman pedagogy”. Please comment on the task page once you have something you’d like to share with the group.

This week, if you haven’t already, please get in touch with your tutor to discuss your final assignment topic and form. Weeks 11 and 12 are assignment preparation weeks, so you will want to know going into them what your topic and planned format will be. A reminder that you can (and we encourage you to) nominate up to three of your own assessment criteria, and you should run these past your tutor as well. All the information about the final assignment is here and in your course guide.

You may also want to begin thinking about your lifestream submission – this is due on Sunday 11 December. The last item in the lifestream should be a 500 word summary, posted in your blog. We would like you to submit your lifestream in WebCT for the sake of formality – you just need to provide a text copy of your final summary, and link to the lifestream, in the appropriate assignment space.

As ever, Siân, Jeremy and I wish you a great week!

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Week 9 begins! http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/11/14/week-9-begins/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/11/14/week-9-begins/#comments Mon, 14 Nov 2011 10:10:21 +0000 Jeremy Keith Knox http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2423 During this week we will continue the reading, thinking and discussion on cyborgs, posthumans, and other troubling of established boundaries – building towards next week when we begin applying some of this to the challenge of pedagogy and learning design. There have been some super posts on these themes emerging in the blogs, and it has been great to see the ethnographic discussions continuing. Peer support is a really valuable part of the course, so keep up the excellent commenting folks! It has been fantastic to see a couple of new course participants where friends have been brought to class, and I am looking forward to their involvement in the coming cyborg and posthuman discussions.  Also remember the wallwisher is still active, so keep posting your contributions!

This week might be a good opportunity for thinking ahead to your final assignment. As you know, this has to be in digital form, and the topic and some of the assessment criteria are entirely up to you to define. The deadline isn’t until midnight on Sunday the 8th January, but now is a good time to start getting input from Sian, Jen and I, and from the group if that would help you with your emergent ideas.  Post to your blog, or email Sian, Jen or I if you’d rather have a one to one.

Looking forward to more blogging, tweeting and discussion on cyborgs and posthumans! Let boundaries be thoroughly disrupted!

Cyborg hand
Creative Commons License photo credit: Debs (ò‿ó)♪

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Ethnography Week – welcome to week 7 http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/31/ethnography-week-welcome-to-week-7/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/31/ethnography-week-welcome-to-week-7/#comments Mon, 31 Oct 2011 10:46:25 +0000 Jen Ross http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2401 hi everyone, and a big welcome to week 7! This week we’ll have a chance to admire and discuss the fruits of your efforts over the past few weeks as you’ve developed your ‘micro-ethnography’, exploring the concepts raised in the readings from this block and your own investigations on the web.

The list of ethnographies is here – add a comment with a link to your own when you’re ready to share it.

Try to make sure to leave some time this week for engaging with others’ work, and commenting on it as well.

Have a great week!

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see what you think in week 4 http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/10/see-what-you-think-in-week-4/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/10/see-what-you-think-in-week-4/#comments Mon, 10 Oct 2011 08:14:52 +0000 Jen Ross http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2356 This week the main activity will be creating and discussing visual artefacts which help draw out themes, issues or ideas from across Block 1 of the course.

There are no “rules” as such, but a few suggestions. One is that while you aren’t required to go completely text free, we suggest that you try to push the boundaries of this for yourself. Make us think about issues of text, image and representation as you use your artefact to explore the block’s themes. This week is all about experimentation, so go for it.

The second is that you want your artefact to appear in your lifestream, and for us to have somewhere to discuss it, so if you aren’t using a web-based tool with an RSS feed, you’ll probably want to put your artefact in a post in your blog. That has the advantage of having an inbuilt place for comments as well.

Try to leave yourself time to engage in discussion about your own and other people’s artefacts. In addition to the core readings, some of the secondary readings for weeks 3 and 4 may be helpful as you come to discuss the artefacts – especially Rose and Spalter & van Dam.

Once you’ve posted your artefact, please post a comment here to give us a link to it, and tell us (if it isn’t obvious) where you want comments.

Finally, just a heads up that next week (Week 5), your tutor will be emailing you individually with some mid-point formative feedback on your lifestream. The purpose of this is to let you know how we think your lifestream is so far meeting the assessment criteria for the assignment (which are described in detail in your handbook).

That’s all for now – have fun this week!

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It’s week three – do you read me? http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/03/its-week-three-do-you-read-me/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/10/03/its-week-three-do-you-read-me/#comments Mon, 03 Oct 2011 08:50:45 +0000 Jen Ross http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2338 Hi all, and welcome to week 3!

The lifestreams are really starting to pick up steam now, fed by the excellent tweets and blog posts from the past two weeks and your other content that is either rushing or trickling in. Your tutor will be giving you some mid-way lifestream feedback in week 5, but feel free to get in touch with us before that if you have any questions about how it’s going.

So, on to the activities, readings and themes for the next fortnight. From today, we shift focus from popular cyberculture to one aspect of its emergence in education: multimodality, visuality and other ‘new literacies’. The readings for this week and next will explore some of these themes as the course in general takes a ‘visual turn’. We’ll be looking at the theory and at the same time everyone will have a chance to represent their own ideas visually, through construction of a visual artefact for the end of next week.

Discussion this week is going to be via Skype text chat. This will be held on Wednesday 5th October, 8pm (BST), and will last about an hour. Please make your tutors Skype contacts before the event:

sianbayne1
jross28
j_k_knox

We will focus on the core readings for this chat session: Bayne, Kress and Thomas et al. Looking forward to hearing your thoughts on these!

Please also continue to tweet course-related material to #ededc, which is becoming a really lively stream of course conversation. And remember you can access all the blog postings here if you want to see what others are writing about in longer form.

Have a great week. :-)

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Welcome to Week 2! http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/09/26/welcome-to-week-2/ http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/blog/2011/09/26/welcome-to-week-2/#comments Mon, 26 Sep 2011 07:22:19 +0000 Jeremy Keith Knox http://edc11.education.ed.ac.uk/?p=2317 Week 1 has been very active ,and it is great to see the blogs and lifestreams starting to take shape – congratulations to everyone who’s been able to get their heads round the various course environments! The Synchtube screening was super, and the film festival twittorial has raised some insightful ideas and suggestions. It is fantastic to see people commenting on each others blogs, and it would be great to see this culture of discussion continue and grow as the weeks progress. For those who are still getting started with the course – don’t worry! there’s lots going on, but lots of help on hand as well. Be sure to contact your tutor if you want to discuss any aspect of the course or your participation.

This week we turn to two more film festival themes. From today until Wednesday we are looking at films and clips on the theme of ‘other worlds’.  From Thursday til Sunday, the theme is ‘being human’.  Join us on Thursday night at 8pm UK time for a short Synchtube tutorial if you are free – we will watch and discuss ‘World Builder‘ and ‘The Poetic Holodeck‘ together.

As for your lifestreams, once you’re confident that your initial feeds (posts, comments and twitter) are working as they should, try adding a new feed or two this week – Jen’s fantastic screencast will give some guidance, and you might also visit the pages of other course participants to get some ideas. Also, a reminder that you need to write a short lifestream summary in your blog each week – see page 10 of the course handbook for all the details.

Have a great week, everyone.

Ironman/Twitter update
Creative Commons License photo credit: Undertow851
Creative Commons License photo credit: Undertow851

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