EUROCALL 2010

EUROCALL 2010 Conference -- September 8-11, 2010 in France

The theme of EUROCALL 2010 will therefore be Networked Structures and Virtual Communities in CALL. The emphasis will be placed on relationships – structures and communities connected by languages and cultures and functioning on a cooperative basis.

The sub-themes of the conference, underpinning the current topics of interest and concern in this area, will be the following:

– Learner communities, the web and corpora
– Distance learning, collaborative learning and mobile learning
– Managing multimedia environments
– Assessment, feedback and guidance in schools and universities
– Corpora: compilating, sorting and studying corpora that integrate online communication
– Intercultural competence and language learning
– Online multimodal communication and language learning
– Research methodologies and action research
– Virtual worlds
– Formal and informal language learning
– Networked language learning in in adult education
– Building international/regional partnerships for networked language learning
– New language learning communities
– Pedagogical changes brought about by ICT integration
– Innovative e-learning solutions for languages

We look forward to welcoming you to the University of Bordeaux!

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Recording of symposium re: the 2010 Horizon Report

In early April NITLE, the Boston Library Consortium (BLC), and the Northeast Regional Computing Program (NERCOMP) co-sponsored a symposium on the 2010 Horizon Report. Bryan Alexander, NITLE’s Director of Research, led more than 50 people through the 2010 Horizon Report (produced by the New Media Consortium, cosponsored by Educause, ELI). Participants reflected on and responded to trends and issues highlighted by the report as the most critical technologies currently emerging for the academy. We are pleased to share content from the Symposium on the NITLE website (www.nitle.org), and invite you to listen to the audio recording.

Managing Higher Education Technology: An Interview with Dr. Tony Bates — from the Higher Education Management Group

However, how that mission is delivered must and will change, if universities and colleges are to survive (or rather, if independent, publicly funded educational institutions are to survive). In particular, we have to move away from the idea of the classroom as the default model for teaching and learning, to looking it as just one of many tools we have for teaching and learning. If over half the population needs not only post-secondary education, but also ongoing lifelong learning, and the main means of communication are technological, we cannot effectively provide higher education in a factory-like structure organized like a factory, with everyone at the same place at the same time. So it is in the delivery and organization of teaching and learning where fundamental change is needed.

Managing Higher Education Technology: An Interview with Dr. Tony Bates

Some resourses for those interested in language instruction & technology — my thanks to David Smith — Director, Kuyers Institute for Christian Teaching and Learning as well as Associate Professor, Department of Germanic and Asian Languages at Calvin College for these resources:

Online-based, free journal: Language Learning & Technology

  

ReCALL -- journal

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MUST READ – Insights into technology and education — resource from Paul Simbeck-Hampson

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The changing role of instructors — moving from facilitation to constructive partnerships — from The Journal by Ruth Reynard

However, as we transition from Web 2.0 to Web 3.0 (and, more specifically, the modifications and new technology features and functions made possible by HTML5), it seems that we will be experiencing yet another change in our instructional role. The challenge is now to retain certain aspects of facilitation but move actively into the learning process itself and become partners in the process. As the “field” levels even further, we must understand and embrace the meaning and the implications of being constructive partners in the learning process.

Learning as a Process–not a Product
As I have written in several articles, we are already being stretched as educators to focus more on the process of learning rather than the product. This will increasingly become the focus as real-time networks and learning communities will be constantly engaged in process. The product or the result of those collaborations will be different each time, although still within the knowledge area of a course, but based on those who have participated in the process and how ideas have been used. Therefore, the true evaluation of learning will be how knowledge has been expanded and applied rather than preset information bites. This is a challenge to the mindset of the instructor and to the overall structures of courses and programs of study. The potential of the Internet for user customization will increase with emerging technology and will have a large impact on how education is both organized and delivered. Instructors will also become more aware of their own learning process and integrate that more intentionally in the collaborative learning process of a community of learners.

Once again, then, the role of instructors is being challenged and redefined. It is important to emphasize that this is not a passive experience for instructors in the sense that we should simply wait and see what happens and where we will be in terms of student expectations. It is, actually, a highly active experience and a call for educators to begin now to engage with changes in technology and explore the implications for teaching methods as we move forward.

As never before, educators must be front and center of the emergence of newer technology and already explore the capabilities to improve the learning experience for students and instructors alike. We must truly engage with the process at every level.

Learning TRENDS by Elliott Masie – April 20, 2010.
#619 – Updates on Learning, Business & Technology.
54,939 Readers – http://www.masie.com – The MASIE Center.
Host: Learning & Government Briefing – Washington, DC – May 3!

1. Netflix Founder Invests in Online Learning Venture.
2. Video Conferencing Surge after Volcano Impacts.
3. Instructor Agility with Synchronous Delivery Blends.

1. Netflix Founder Invests in Online Learning Venture:
I am intrigued by this clip from The New York Times: “Reed Hastings, the founder and chief executive of Netflix, used the Web to make it easier for us to rent movies. Now Mr. Hastings, who is also a former high school math teacher, is using the Web for a less entertaining, more educational cause — teaching math to kids.  On Tuesday, Mr. Hastings will announce that he has financed the acquisition of DreamBox Learning, a start-up that uses online games to teach math, by Charter School Growth Fund, a non-profit investment fund for charter schools.

Mr. Hastings said that he thinks netbooks will be ubiquitous in schools in a few years, creating huge opportunities for online learning software. “I think we’re on the edge of a real inflection point where the hardware becomes so cheap that Web learning is really throughout the schools,” he said. “But what I noticed is there’s really not that many people working on the software.” DreamBox was started last year and creates personalized lesson plans, hidden in games, based on which concepts children understand or need to work on.”

The recognition of the role of online learning assets as viable investments by entrepreneurs like the Netflix founder are intriguing indicators of the growth and expansion of this part of the education marketplace. (emphasis DSC)

From DSC:
In an assignment for a class last week, I ran across a time-saving tool offered via timetoast.com. If you want to put together interactive timelines — without having to know programming languages or scripting languages — you might be interested in kicking the tires on this web-based tool. As an example, I was able to put together the following timeline of instructional media* in an hour or so:

Daniel Christian: Example of a timeline created at timetoast.com

Further reflections on this from DSC:

  • As I was putting this timeline together, I saw how Thomas Edison and others proclaimed that technology X would make _____ obsolete…or that invention Y would change education forever. (I made a note to myself that I didn’t want to make such bold proclamations…and appear so foolish…but I’m probably too late in this area!) 🙂
  • But anyway, I reflected on how school museums were first used, on how radio and instructional television had an impact for a while but then died down in terms of educational use, how the training films of WWII impacted what we know and do today, and the post WWII research in audio-visual-based arenas , and then the advent/rise of the personal computer as well as other educational technologies and the Internet……….and I thought of how disappointed people probably were after the hype ended. But then I reflected upon these technologies as seeds that were planted over time and later produced a harvest. They changed our “wineskins” (see below):

    • Radio didn’t really disappear or disappoint. We still use it today; however, not necessarily for education, but we appreciate the audio it delivers to us (whether that be in music or in talkshows). Some seeds were planted…and the wineskins were changed**.

    • Motion picture films and TV didn’t disappear or disappoint either, really. We still use these technologies today…but again, not necessarily for education (though some programs are definitely educational in nature and intent). We are used to viewing films and consider it second nature to watch video. So, other seeds were planted…and the wineskins were changed again.**

    • Neither did the computer disappear or disappoint. We are still using computers today and they present another piece of the communications juggernaut that’s been created. Again, more seeds were planted…and the wineskins were changed yet again.**

    • The Internet is here and growing as well. A significant ROI is being enjoyed with each passing day — and from educational perspectives no doubt. Again, the fields are starting to grow, and are growing quickly now. The seeds are no longer seeds and the wineskins we have today are not like the wineskins from 100+ years ago. **

So what am I saying here?
I’m saying that we are used to using/hearing/seeing audio, video, interactivity, multi-directional communications because of these technologies. They
cultivated the ground for people using the technologies that we are:

  • Comfortable with
  • Using
  • and innovating with today.

So when we employ highly-powerful, multimedia-based, educationally-beneficial items on the Net today — when we contribute podcasts, vodcasts, lectures, exercises, animations, etc. to the Net — we can thank these technologies for being the technological ancestors in the tech-family tree. They really didn’t disappoint after all. They were the seeds that were planted over time to create a wonderful harvest….a very powerful communications network…the most powerful one the world has ever known. Not bad for 100 years.




*
Based upon article by Robert Reiser:

Reiser, R. (2001). A history of instructional design and technology: Part I: A history of instructional media. ETR&D. Vol. 49(1). pp. 53-64.

**As Jesus once responded when asked about why his disciples didn’t fast, he replied:

16“No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment, for the patch will pull away from the garment, making the tear worse. 17Neither do men pour new wine into old wineskins. If they do, the skins will burst, the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined. No, they pour new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved.”

These technologies created the environment…the proper wineskins…to lay the foundation for the “new wine” to be poured into our worlds without this new wine “running out” and ruining the wineskins. Can you imagine if someone had been able to introduce these technologies within 10-20 years…would they have taken? Given human nature, I doubt it. The wineskins took time to change. The thing is, the pace of change is quickening and is increasingly more difficult to keep up with.

I wonder…will the current wineskins hold? Or are our wineskins now very used to this pace of change?


iPad Apps for Education — from ISTE Connects by Katie Stansberry

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2010 Horizon Report: K-12 Edition

Executive Summary

  • Key Trends
  • Critical Challenges
  • Technologies to Watch
  • The Horizon Project

Time-to-Adoption: One Year or Less

  • Cloud Computing
  • Collaborative Environments

Time-to-Adoption: Two to Three Years

  • Game-Based Learning
  • Mobiles

Time-to-Adoption: Four to Five Years

  • Augmented Reality
  • Flexible Displays

Full Sail's Masters in Education Media and Design

Proceedings now available: ELI 2010 Online Spring Focus Session — from Educause

Review the resources and proceedings of ELI’s best-attended online focus session yet: Mobile Learning 2.0: The Next Phase of Innovation in Mobility, hosted March 3–4, 2010, inside Adobe Connect. More than 200 members of the teaching and learning community convened to re-assess the potential of mobile technologies and identify new ways in which mobility can contribute to the learning experience. You can now access numerous dynamic proceedings from this event, including:

Digital Wish

Digital Wish

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Inside the March 2010 Issue of The Journal:

*DIGITAL VIDEO
Flippin’ Out

With its school-friendly price, user-friendly design, and project-friendly capabilities, the Flip Video camcorder is a must-have addition to your classroom technology arsenal.

*OPEN CONTENT
A Custom Fit
The movement toward open educational resources is gaining steam, empowering teachers to modify existing materials and create content that is a better match for their instructional needs.

*21st CENTURY SKILLS
An ‘A’ in Abstractions
How do you assess students on how well they can communicate, solve problems, and be responsible self-learners?  First step: Toss out your bubble sheets and multiple-choice questions.

Plus:
-Network Security – Identity Scramble
-Here & Now
-Policy & Advocacy – Was I Wrong on Obama?
-Drill Down – Digital Citizenship is Fundamental
-Product Focus
-Upcoming Events & Webinars

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