illiterate of the future

“the illiterate of the future will not be those who cannot
read and write
but those who can not
learn, unlearn and relearn”

Alvin Toffler

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Copyright & Online Classes in Higher Education

I am constantly bombarded with questions of ownership when professors put material on our Learning Management Systems. Since I didn’t know the issues of ownership or authorship, I decided to do my last media project on copyright issues pertaining to educators in higher education. I hope this helps get conversations started.

Created for my MET master course, Curriculum Issues in Cultural and New Media Studies – Summer 2010

To see a larger presentation, please visit my course e-folio site

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Education and Intellectual Property in a Digital World

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Elizabeth Gilbert on nurturing creativity

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Creative Commons: What every Educator needs to know

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Simple five step plan for just about everyone and everything

  1. Go, make something happen.
  2. Do work you’re proud of.
  3. Treat people with respect.
  4. Make big promises and keep them.
  5. Ship it out the door.

When in doubt, see #1.

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Teaching Technology Presentation – hands on

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Women are Angels

I received this on an email so I don’t know who the author is but I loved it so I thought I ought to post it.

Women are Angels.

And when someone breaks our wings, our spirit, or our hearts, we simply continue to fly………on a broomstick.

We are flexible like that ….

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To Email or Not to Email students

On a recent class survey, a professor received feedback that the students prefer to have documents emailed to them  rather than posted on the school Learning Management System (LMS)

The professor asked me if I could  comment and/or  offer any suggestions/arguments  where the LMS would be better than email.

Here is my response.

Emails can be easily lost or worst, accidentally deleted by the students. When documents are uploaded into content on the LMS, they stay on the LMS and the students have access anytime and anyplace.

Emails can easily get disorganized. On the LMS, students can find documents whenever they want them and don’t have to go searching through a pile of emails.

From a IT systems point of view, emails slow down the system and cost money. The original attached document becomes 2 documents. One for the student inbox and one for your sent box. That is, if you only have 1 student. If you have 50 students then the one document becomes 51 documents. This is all saved on the school email servers. The more files on the server, the harder the server has to work and the  longer it takes to do things on the LMS or any of the college’s network systems. To speed things up the school has to spend money for upgrades to the servers and purchase more servers.

You have the right pedagogical approach. We are entering the knowledge-economy, or so the experts call it. Employers are looking for employees to be digital literate so they can compete in the new knowledge-economy. That means, we, at the college, have a responsibility to facilitate the students to become digitally literate. Part of being digital literate is knowing where to find and access information.  By posting things on the LMS, you are teaching the students digital literacy skills. The students have to go get/find the information they need to complete a task. It is a real world experience… not all information is delivered to us, we have to go find it.

SUMMARY: By storing documents on the LMS:

  1. You have the documents available 24/7
  2. You save the school money $$
  3. You are teaching digitally literacy skills for the new knowledge economy.

How is that for an answer?

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Password joke

During a recent company password audit, it was found that a secretary was using the following password:

“MickeyMinniePlutoHueyLouieDeweyDonaldGoofyOttawa”

When asked why he had such a long password, he said he was told his password had to be at least 8 characters long and include at least one capital. . .

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