Tuesday 22 January 2008

w/c 14th Jan


This week was a week of phoning, e-mailing, Skyping, and generally arranging. In our Skype conversation on Wednesday, Paul and I also used the Skype ‘Unyte’ screen-sharing application which was quite successful.

On Friday afternoon, I listened –and looked!- in to an Instant Presenter session hosted by RSC Scotland N-E on the Scottish RSCs’ Newsfeed. This is an RSS feed from their news blog (on Wordpress – hosted locally): http://www.scottish-rscs.org.uk/newsfeed , and is their new way of distributing news to their community. The use of a blog gives some key advantages – a variety of media can be embedded; the information ‘persists’ and is taggable and searchable; and feedback/comments can be added by readers. The blog’s content will obviously have Scottish content, and JISC content, and is FE-focussed (they use Google Reader to get some of their local info).They try to add a ‘personal touch’ with an editorial and a ‘guest spot’. Not many pictures on the blog until you follow some of the links - I found a nice one of a horned owl (from Flickr used under Creative Commons) with some useful information about the RSPB's learn Birds online course.

Wednesday 16 January 2008

blogging and BETTing!



A new year and a new blog!



I'm starting this blog with an account of my visit to BETT - this was my first visit to BETT, and I could have done with a guide! The exhibition is huge, and packed full of people and gizmos; it’s hard to find your way around despite maps & signs, and the queues for food and for the cloakroom are off-putting. They could do with more seating, too! (proper old moaner, aren’t I?!)



Overall impressions of BETT: it’s a highly commercial event with a salesperson at every corner. The focus was very much on schools rather than any other educational sector, probably because there are a lot more of them hence a lot more money to be made from them (proper old cynic, aren’t I?!). Possible because of this, there was no JISC presence, though Becta was out in force.
Amongst the many stands I particularly noticed: lots of content/course providers (especially for science and art); lots of learning platform/VLE providers; providers of management information systems, classroom sound systems (to remove the need to shout!). There were hardware suppliers, though personally I saw nothing that looked especially interesting – possibly because there were so many people around the best stuff (but Chris Hall from Swansea University found some interesting things:
http://swansea-learninglab.blogspot.com/2008/01/bett-2008-worlds-largest-educational.html ). There were a couple of small stands selling ‘immersive’ learning packages, but this sort of learning figured a lot less prominently than I might have expected.

What was good?


Other info that I picked up included: OS provide free maps for 11-yr-olds; Channel 4 have a ‘clip-bank’ (which is not free, though maybe there’s some other stuff that is)

http://www.channel4learning.com

; and the BBC interesting oranges!

Next year: I think BETT is best visited by those with a bit more liking and know-how of gadgetry than I have! Whoever goes - I would advise getting the Guardian's ‘Link’ supplement (out mid-Dec) to get background & to help plan, and also study the BETT website beforehand. And - take water and carry as little as possible (maybe deckchair!)