2004 Academic Weblog Awards

Bloody Good Idea!

Alex asks for nominations for the 2004 (or should that be “First”) Academic Weblog Awards. Go there and have your say in the comments.

Just a thought, but as we’ve been so comprehensively ignored as a blogging community I’m a bit tempted to say stuff trying to just be a category of these and lets have our own awards with different sub-categories, whaddya reckon Alex? Here are some suggestions:

Best individual academic
Best teaching
Best links & commentary
Best melding of technology and pedagogy
Best design
Best newcomer
Best researcher
Best multi disciplinarian
Best library
Best administration
Best resource
Best activities (i.e. get involved on their site)
Most beautiful
Most interesting
Best Overall

& I think in the vote you should put in comments fields!

UPDATE
: Alex agrees :O) Please comment below or trackback on the categories I’ve suggested… and SPREAD THE WORD!!! Let’s define ourselves a bit, we are an edublogging community!!!

Enterprise Blogging in Drupal

A new post over at the incsub association on blogging in Drupal, basically asking if this is our open source enterprise blogging in education answer, or not.

I’ve incorporated the Drupal subscription module which allows people to get email notification of replies to the post or any comments they might make, however, I haven’t figured out how to do this without requiring registration. But the good news is that ANY Drupal registration will work there :o)

Google Scholar

This has got to be good, just ran a quick search on Clay Shirky, here, and the results are rather fantastic I must say… hope the Firefox search option appears soon, this is going to make my academic life a lot happier I can tell you!

via elearnspace “Google Scholar enables you to search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from all broad areas of research. Use Google Scholar to find articles from a wide variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web.”

New incsub site

Phew, am struggling through this web-design-on-your-own-how-the-hell-do-I-manage-SQL-tables journey bit by bit and here’s the latest effort.

What I’ve tried to do is to move away from the image-based / brochureware-ish side, add in more information & an email form, introduce an element of blogging and face up interaction and back it up with a community site –the incsub association– (which is about as much a shell as you could imagine at the moment but has been a wonderful Drupal learning experience putting it together!)

Am also beginning to realise that I’m developing a prototype for an educational sandpit system (as well as all the rest) … things might be falling into place a bit more :o)

Oh, and as I’ve been putting this together in virtual utter isolation, I’d kill for some critical feedback!!!

(apart from the utter lack of alt tags… will do that over the weekend)

Beyond the LMS

Via Harold this is a gem:

“Given the marketing muscle behind the major LMS developers and their complete dominance of the e-learning space, it’s hardly surprising that many people see an LMS as “the solution” to their future learning needs. But an LMS, as available today, is not a universal solution for a corporation’s e-learning problems. In fact, an LMS is often the albatross around the neck of progress in technology-enhanced learning.

When your concept of learning is LMS-centric, you look for opportunities to implement “a solution” that conforms to that concept, and ignore or marginalize all else.” [Parkin’s Lot]

Corporate universities anyone?

Seriously though, this hits the nail on the head. As Rob Reynolds reminded me a couple of weeks ago, this is such new territory and we’re so far from genuinely knowing how to do online learning, naturally the decision makers are bound to fall prey to the large marketing budgets (I mean, one major LMS has several conferences a year, solely focussed on it, packed full of academics!) and pressure to ‘innovate’ (where technology=innovation).

Couple that with customer service like you’ve never known, lots of free travel opportunities for the exec (us Uni folk aren’t paid enough that we ‘aint susceptible… and we’re too ethical for direct bribery :O) and the fact that ‘everyone else’ (literally!) has one of these two products, and what outcome do you expect?

Now you could also argue that it’s because they meet preconceived ideas about pedagogy (content driven, assessment focussed) and that’s probably true, to an extent (especially with admin) . BUT, for the teachers out there that know this isn’t the way we want to go, who can feel the binds and who want to take hold of their online learning environments in the same way they take hold of their classrooms, who will come out on top?

Parkin continues:

“The e-learning industry evolved in a more or less linear fashion from the classroom concept, with some influence from CBT. No imagination went into our application of web technologies, and there was little in the way of challenges to established learning paradigms. That’s perfectly normal in the adoption of new technologies – it takes a while before true innovation can take hold. …

Learning software vendors still doggedly pursue their vision of reusable learning objects that integrate via a central standards-conformant LMS. Meanwhile, trainers who really want to encourage experience-sharing and dynamic learner-created content are scrambling to understand blogging, RSS, and peer-to-peer networks.”

And in the end I’d like to ask the same question as he does. Are these huge vendors going to keep the fight on ignoring communication and refusing to incorporate anything but the shallowest subversion into their products (different icons anyone?) or are they going to recognise the value of interoperability, decentralisation and these new technologies? I believe the net is made up of individuals and that if these vendors don’t recognise that then their environments are going to look like and become the new towns of 40 years ago.

Global Learning Day VIII

I’d encourage anyone who has a spot of free time this Saturday or Sunday to consider dropping in to Global Learn Day VIII.

I’m on the round table for the South Pacific program, English, Latin, Geek and Seuss – What works for you? and it looks like being an interesting discussion!

Being Global Learn “Day” of course you can drop in whenever suits really, here’s the European session and here’s the US / Canada.

It’s also free :O)