2,071 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2021
    1. d’étudier la possibilité de mettre en place un cadre international concernant les exceptions et limitations au droit d’auteur à des fins pédagogiques et de recherche afin de faciliter les échanges et la coopération transfrontaliers en matière de REL ;

      Parfois bien utile de ne pas être trop puristes au sujet des licences. Il y a une grande diversité dans les usages «libres» de ressources qui ne le sont pas toujours.

    2. Se référant également à la Recommandation de l’UNESCO concernant la condition du personnel enseignant de l’enseignement supérieur (2007),

      Belles initiatives pour convaincre le personnel enseignant et, surtout, leurs gestionnaires du bien-fondé de la culture ouverte et libre. https://bccampus.ca/event/making-oer-count-incorporating-oer-into-the-tenure-and-promotion-process/?instance_id=3396 Avec une matrice à utiliser comme outil: https://www.doers3.org/uploads/1/3/2/2/132273765/the_oer_contributions_matrix.pdf

    3. Se référant également à la Recommandation de l’UNESCO concernant la condition du personnel enseignant de l’enseignement supérieur (2007)
    4. redistribution gratuites par d’autres.

      Programmes sans frais de scolarité, un peu partout dans la Francophonie, réseau des cégeps au Québec, réseau universitaire français... https://www.one-tab.com/page/EJUYkCxxQQSdn76RLD4BQw

    5. créer des REL dans les langues locales, en particulier dans les langues autochtones,

      Selon @Nateangell , il y aurait des liens à faire avec des liens à faire avec du travail en Colombie-Britannique au sujet des langues autochtones là-bas. Des francophones pourraient contribuer.

      Made me think of the Indigenization Project at BCCampus, that works "to co-create open educational resources that support faculty and staff with the incorporation of Indigenous epistemologies into professional practice, enabling post-secondary institutions to continue to build the structures and processes by which Indigenous students experience their post-secondary education in resonance with their own lives, worldviews, and ambitions."

      Are there other examples of projects focused on OER in indigenous languages? Love to hear about them in replies to this annotation.

      https://hyp.is/8af1rEiwEeyj05eXljnfqA/oer.pressbooks.pub/oeg2021/chapter/english/

    6. favoriser la mise en place de REL inclusives et équitables de qualité

      Y a-t-il des langues autochtones qui sont représentées dans le monde des REL?

    7. Diversité linguistique et langues autochtones

    8. Cartographie des projets et parties prenantes?

    1. Also affirming the 2007 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which recognizes the rights of indigenous peoples in formulating national legislation and implementing national policy,
    2. Also referring to the 1997 UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Higher-Education Teaching Personnel as well as the 1966 ILO/UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers, which stresses that as part of academic and professional freedom teachers “should be given the essential role in the choice and the adaptation of teaching material, the selection of textbooks and the application of teaching methods”,

      Status of Higher-Education Teaching Personnel

    1. Recommandation de l’UNESCO concernant la condition du personnel enseignant de l’enseignement supérieur (2007)

      En 1997, en fait.

  2. Nov 2021
    1. disponible par le biais des dieux est un faux et sinon plus tarder je vais demander à isabelle la plante du cdc de nous parler de l'historique de ce projet

      disponible par le biais d'ÉDUQ.info

      devient:

      disponible par le biais des dieux est un faux

  3. Oct 2021
    1. Audio graph makes charts accessible to people with vision impairments by playing an audio tone that changes pitch to represent different vallues. Requires iOS 15 and iPadOS 15

      Just like that, making a foray into data sonification.

  4. Sep 2021
    1. Hors des heures de cours, les étudiants peuvent intervenir sur des forums écrits ou vidéos. Ils peuvent également utiliser un outil d'annotation collaborative comme Hypothesis pour partager leurs notes de lecture.

      Rough translation: Outside of class time, students can contribute to written forums or videos. They can also use a collaborative annotation tool such as Hypothesis to share their reading notes.

    1. Context for my listening/reading... Been working through some material from the Horizon Reports, as part of our prospective work. Not quite a followup to Audrey Watters's #OpenData work on the same reports. Still, it puts me back in the context of what Higher Education in the US like to describe about changes to their "industry".

    2. the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation—which just changed its name to the Institute for Citizens & Scholars.

      That explains it!

    1. These larger questions will continue on loop industry-wide for the coming years, it seems.
    2. beginners or casual users who may ultimately decide they would rather do something else
    3. will music tech be able to compete as lockdowns gradually end
    4. about all music tech companies seeking venture funding for growth using subscriptions
    5. a subscription to Reason, to Lumi, to iZotope stuff, to Adobe Creative Suite… these are not all created equal
    6. There’s a gap between “we want SaaS to work because that’d be good for us as investors” and “SaaS is proving to be a solid investment with real consumers.”
    7. if you give me a choice between a Lumi and an Xbox, I’d take the Xbox
    8. learn to play music with whatever time they have left
    9. how music in general stacks up to competition from all the other things you can do with your time and money
    10. speaking as a lifelong keyboardist and pianist here and former contributing editor to Keyboard mag who did cover stories with pretty famous people – I’m told guitarists are cooler and sexier to most people
    11. Gibson also has an app and learning system
    12. the piano, as always, has to compete with the guitar
    13. these “legacy” brands also have massive distribution and marketing efforts
    14. Casio makes light-up keyboards, for example. So does Yamaha
    15. the app works with the light-up keyboard to teach you to play
    16. whether you want to have keys light up to tell you which notes to play in the first place.
    17. assume there are more beginners out there than there are advanced users and hope they want to pay the $299 + $79/year to learn to play music
    18. It goes without saying that venture finance at the moment absolutely adores subscription models.
    19. Peleton for music
    20. intended to help you learn to play music
    21. focusing on their light-up keyboard Lumi

      [shivers]

    22. powerful software from FXpansion and on iOS
    23. without a financial filing since 2019
    24. common misconception that the pandemic was universally good for the music instruments industry
    25. ROLI assembles products in London
    26. the flagship Seaboard controller will become available again soon
    27. PACE is not exactly beloved by the developer community even as it is widely used
    28. pre-pack (pre-packaged) insolvency
    29. Luminary is talking about pushing its subscription-based software business.
    30. headcount at ROLI was at some point up to 250 people
    31. Business Insider, who got the exclusive on the story (it seems directly from ROLI)
    32. if advanced users get that, will beginners – enough to support growth of the rebooted company?
    33. ROLI has filed for administration and will reboot as beginner-focused Luminary as the company struggles with losses. A portion of employees remain, and even the Seaboard is apparently coming back in stock – but this could be a cautionary tale for “hypergrowth” in music making. The UK-based startup had always been something of a puzzle to the instruments industry. On one hand, they had innovative products – those famous squishy keyboards – plus loads of celebrity endorsements (like Pharell and Grimes). They also have been able to hire an incredible amount of talent, including acquisitions of the FXpansion software development team and (at one point) the widely used JUCE framework and its star developer. But on the other hand, it was clear ROLI was burning investment money in pursuit of a growth strategy that seemed potentially unrealistic to an outside observer. And at the moment, I’m not really going out on a limb saying that, because I can just quote CEO Roland Lamb talking to Business Insider about the decision to file for administration: “Ultimately, what happened was the pro-focused products we initially developed, although successful within their marketplace, the marketplace wasn’t big enough given our venture trajectory,” Lamb told Insider on Wednesday. “We had our eyes set on hypergrowth, and that proved to be difficult.” “Hypergrowth” is an interesting term, as most enduring names in the music tech business in fact have pursued very conservative, gradual growth. Household names like Ableton or Roland or Avid have been almost like blue-chips for musicians. And the losses ROLI accrued were real – the most recent filing is back to 2019, with pretax losses of £34.1 million on revenues of £11.4 million. Lamb describes the process of the reboot as involving “dark nights of the soul.” So let’s get to what this means. Let me also say – I sincerely hope former ROLI employees are all landing on their feet, whether at Luminary or (for most, realistically) post-ROLI. The tech itself remains innovative, expressive, and presented in an appealing and futuristic product.

      The promise.

    34. hope former ROLI employees are all landing on their feet, whether at Luminary or (for most, realistically) post-ROLI
    35. pretax losses of £34.1 million on revenues of £11.4 million
    36. most enduring names in the music tech business in fact have pursued very conservative, gradual growth
    37. the marketplace wasn’t big enough given our venture trajectory
    38. But on the other hand, it was clear ROLI was burning investment money in pursuit of a growth strategy that seemed potentially unrealistic to an outside observer.
    39. The UK-based startup had always been something of a puzzle to the instruments industry. On one hand, they had innovative products – those famous squishy keyboards – plus loads of celebrity endorsements (like Pharell and Grimes). They also have been able to hire an incredible amount of talent, including acquisitions of the FXpansion software development team and (at one point) the widely used JUCE framework and its star developer.

      Success hides problems.

    40. this could be a cautionary tale for “hypergrowth” in music making
    1. What was ROLI Ltd.?ROLI Ltd. was known as a leading innovator in electronic musical instruments for professionals such as the Seaboard, Seaboard RISE, and BLOCKS — and a pioneer of MIDI Polyphonic Expression (MPE). As part of the 2021 restructure, Luminary will continue to manufacture ROLI’s professional and hobbyist instruments, with a relaunch of the iconic Seaboard, slated for 2022.

      Sad day for MPE advocates. Sure, we knew this was coming. And we have plenty of support from other vendors. Yet those efforts by then-ROLI are erased by this #pianocentric pivot.

  5. Aug 2021
    1. usability has multiple components: Learnability — how easily a beginner can use the system, and how easily they can become an expert. Efficiency — how quickly people can achieve what they want. Memorability — how easily people can remember how to use the system or feature, after not using it for a while. Safety — how rarely people experience errors, and how easy it is to fix any errors. Satisfaction — how pleased people are with the overall experience.
    1. “The model should talk about customer service, centering basic needs, and the basic needs help students meet their academic needs,”
    2. There’s a stigma to applying for help, she says, and many students who need aid feel there are others who could more urgently use the assistance.
    3. “They have to decide whether to eat or pay for the book, whether to pay rent or pay for the book. It’s a one-time cost, but it has multiple implications of students sacrificing utilities, for example, and then putting their housing at risk.”
    4. “The real economics of college have shifted so much during the last 70 years, and we have not made adjustments to all those changes. Students are in an equation that has not adapted to the circumstances.”
    5. “Students do not always meet the stereotype of 18 to 21 [years old]. We have parenting students, returning students, real college students,”
    1. two notes that are five pitches away from each other, one, two, three, four, five

      Out of context, this sounds like an OBOE (off by one error). You typically wouldn’t count the origin: the two notes are four (semitones) away from one another. That becomes quite useful when you think about all of this as sets and, perhaps, start doing some computation with these. In context, it might simplify things for the moment. It’s just a bit strange to keep all of these in mind. The major third (so, the third note in the scale) is “five pitches” away from the root. The perfect fourth would be “six pitches” away. The perfect fifth “eight pitches away”. Major sixth “10 pitches away”. And the major seventh “12 pitches away”. Which means the octave is “13 pitches away”. Could lead to interesting confusion.

    2. Our ears have been conditioned to only accept this chromatic stepping between pitches.

      This part is defensible. Without getting into the details, it addresses an actual phenomenon (with the assumption that listeners are part of the “our” in this statement).

    3. happy vibe. Happy tonality.

      Soooo much has been said about the problems with happy/sad referring to major/minor. Bright/dark? Not quite as problematic. In this case, bright=happy. Darker is “almost sadder”. There are ways to make this all more obvious.

    4. Tonality refers to how our harmony affects our song's mood and vibe.

      Hmm? Again, it makes some sense in context. Yet it could lead to quite a bit of confusion. I honestly thought it was going to be about actual tonality. Yet it’s about mode, calling it tonality. Disconnecting mode and mood. It’s nice to use simple language. This isn’t that. It’s using jargon and shifting it. The technical term for that might be… obfuscation. Strange

    5. these go up chromatic order. Which basically means, no pitches exist between these.

      Hmm… Strongly stated, with a bit of backtracking later on. Without getting into microtonality (or even just intonation), it’d be quite useful to start with that conditioning mentioned later.

    6. Chords, what are they? Simply put, they're two or more different pitches played at the same time.

      That’s an unusual way to put it. While it makes sense in context, it can create some confusion.

    1. We can use the itertools.combinations function to find all possible subsets of a chord for a given cardinality.

      Ha! Found a Ruby method to do the same thing in Sonic Pi. https://in-thread.sonic-pi.net/t/exploring-modes-of-pitch-class-sets-using-chord-invert/5874/10?u=enkerli

      Glad this is explicitly mentioned here as it was my initial goal as I got into musical applications of Set Theory!

    1. As Seen In The Guide to Making Open Textbooks With Students has been seen in:

      Kinda think this might come from "As seen on tv". Surely, there's something on TV tropes about this. Liking the framing. Wish we could track all those references, as was common practice on blogs, a while back.

    1. A permissive license that comes in two variants, the BSD 2-Clause and BSD 3-Clause. Both have very minute differences to the MIT license.

      As often happens, someone was asking "Is Hypothesis Open Source?" Useful to go back to the specifics. Especially among those of us who use [h] in the context of Open Education.

    1. relationships

      Including about different educational worlds (primary education, continuous education, lifelong learning, secondary education, community-based education, homeschooling, kindergarten, post-secondary education...). Acknowledge these relationships, embrace them, foster improved relationships.

    2. guided by

      Using those shared values to define a position. Including, in a live comment, these values help define who belongs to this community.

    3. annual conference

      Given changes in both the OpenEd Conference specifically and the "conference circuit" more generally, a different descriptor than "annual" might help clarify the mission. Is it really about the yearly frequency or is it about the type of event that it is?

    4. Our

      Link to the partnership? Or if it's about "handing off to the community", can there be something about legal status? Will it be based in the US, for instance?

    5. Our Vision

      Award: Clear Changes: clearer on attainable

    6. the Open Education community

      Missing theme: scope/reach. We might say/assume/wish the OE community to be one thing. Certainly, the movement/phenomenon is global and can have a glocal impact. Some clarifications would be useful as to, say, linguistic diversity or relationships between this group and other parts of the movement.

    7. a sustainable, innovative, and empowered Open Education community

      Using the logic of "SMART objectives", it could be interesting to link to something about "what the OE community might feel like if it's empowered, innovative, and sustainable".

    8. between the community and the conference organizers

      As conference organizers are (allegedly) part of the community, it might make sense to phrase it as "between conference organizers and the rest of the community". Or maybe something with even less differentiation. In some ways, "dialogue" implies a form of othering. Sure, it's a two-way path. And this can be an improvement over the typical "we hear you". Still, the sentence as a whole sounds like a comment about relationships between a board and a community it's meant to serve.

    9. Open Education professionals

      Interesting that it'd be specifically about OE pros. (Other statements are more general.) Not saying it's wrong. It might be accurate that enabling learners, admins, and OE beginners to share experiences isn't part of the diligent work. It's simply surprising in context.

    10. shared values.

      These values are indeed shared by an OE community. To the extent that readers can "hear the 'we'" in these statements. For instance, acknowledging power dynamics works really well among likeminded people... and may still sustain those same dynamics.

    11. accessible

      There's an opportunity for clarification... and edification. Maybe using a slightly different wording to convey the idea that it's a broad value, not a narrow one?

      For community members with adequate knowledge of what is done, it's obvious that this value of accessibility has a broad range. However, the term has taken more specific meanings in the broad world of education. Some people think of it as "take a class despite class membership".

    12. Open Education

      As others have said, defining OE is essential for clarity. A brief definition with a link to a broader "position statement" would help.

    13. change, and transformation

      Doesn't transformation imply change? If so, reducing that phrase to two items might help in concision.

    1. Review this chart that details which CC licenses work well for education resources and which do not.

      As @ThatPsychProf put it, it's pretty clear that BY-NC resources can work as OER. Some people disagree, which is fine. There are contexts in which the NC restriction is an important "crutch".

    1. (I have to credit Oliver Tacke for listening here and submitting a few H5P improvements we’ve grumbled about)

      Yes?

    2. This means when you search in the Pressbooks Directory for content with H5P, soon the icon in the search results will link to the H5P Listing page.
    1. Vol. 29, No. 1, Winter/Spring 2018 (includes ΓÇ£Conferences,ΓÇ¥ ΓÇ£Symposium,ΓÇ¥ ΓÇ£Publishing items,ΓÇ¥ ΓÇ£Citations received;ΓÇ¥ memoriam for William Ittelson, written by John Hollander; book note of ΓÇ£An Anthropology of Landscape: The Ex-traordinary in the Ordinar;ΓÇ¥ book review by Thomas Barrie; essays by Barbara Erwine, Edward Relph, and Dennis Pohl; poems by Sheryl L. Nelms.)

      Encoding issues?

  6. Jul 2021
    1. Under Privacy – Share launcher’s name with tool you must select “Always”. This enables the Hypothesis LMS app to create an account with a recognizable username for the user.

      Creating usernames

    2. H. Save and display You will see two options for selecting a document: Enter the URL of web page or PDF (see 2A) and Select PDF from Google Drive (See 2B). The screen will look like this: 2. Select a Text A. Enter the URL of web page or PDF Click the button that says Enter the URL of web page or PDF. On the Enter URL dialog, enter a link to a public web page or PDF. Please note that the content at the link must be publicly viewable (i.e., not behind a login or paywall).
    3. NOTE: For more on hosting PDFs on WordPress, see this blog-tutorial. Elba Serrano, New Mexico State University Neuroscience grad students annotating PDFs of journal articles hosted at scholarly databases:
    1. Be prepared for text-size changes. People expect most apps to respond when they choose a different text size in Settings. To accommodate some text-size changes, you might need to adjust the layout. For more information about text usage in your app, see Typography.

      … then Apple didn’t follow its own advice when it created Safari 15.

    1. Just because a self-proclaimed qualitative researcher conducts a semi-structured interview with a customer at home does not automatically make it “ethnographic.”

      Hear, hear!

    1. Schaeffer P., 1966, Traité des objets musicaux : essai interdisciplines. Paris, Éditions du Seuil.Google Scholar

      Codifier

    1. Provide options for micro-credentials, badges, programs, and certificates as interest is rising among American students.
    2. Germany, Austria, and Switzerland have long seen vocational education as a pathway to the middle class, and an effective system to provide students with the skills they’ll need to further their career

      Rather important point to make, especially from a US perspective. Having Swiss friends going to vocational training (in an "apprenticeship" model) has taught me quite a bit about the difference it can make. That system is far from perfect. Friends and relatives have complained that the choice of a path was too early (12yo, if memory serves). And there have been times when Swiss unemployment levels have gone up quickly. Still, it's a useful reminder that a hyperindustrialized economy can give vocational training its due. There's also a connection to craftsmanship. Germany is really wellknown for it and I've heard FabLab experts associate this with hisorical events such as WWII. Yet it doesn't sound like Switzerland's neutral status has differentiated it from Germany in this respect since some Swiss industries have very similar features.

    3. A recent Cengage survey (publication forthcoming)
    4. Michael Hansen is the Chief Executive Officer of Cengage, an education technology company serving millions of learners worldwide.
    1. The fact that students think their own degrees are still valuable but believe higher education is generally "not worth the cost" suggests a pricing problem -- that even if the degrees are valuable, students think they're paying too much for it.
    2. when presented with a more general statement -- "higher education is not worth the cost to students anymore" -- nearly two-thirds agreed, up from just under half in the first such survey last August.
    3. Perhaps the most distressing (or at least confounding) data of all for college officials, though, were in students' responses about the value of college.
    1. EnglishArabic I live أسكُن

      During a webinar on Dynamic Language Teaching through Pressbooks, Arabic teachers pointed out some issues with the alignment of RTL content. Wonder if it's a broad PB issue, if it's a specific module used (say, Tablepress?), or if it's a textbook design issue. H5P activities from another book were deemed better.

    1. The pandemic has called into question many of higher education’s core pillars, such as college athletics, the residential campus model, the role of online education and sage-on-the-stage pedagogy.

      The first two really sound US-centric while the other two are common and longstanding. College athletics as one of "Higher Education's core pillars"? It sounds like American exceptionalism. Granted, athletics might become more important to Higher Education in other parts of the World. If so, that's very likely to come from US influence. The residential campus model is an interesting one. It's common and diverse. In my experience, it's not much of a consideration outside of the US.

      Even tenure tends to vary quite a bit. In our context (Quebec's Cegep system), it doesn't really exist. A prof gets a permanent position after a while, as in a "regular job".

      Which does make me think, yet again, about the specificity of Quebec's Higher Education. Universities in Quebec are rather typical among Canadian universities and differences with US universities & colleges can be quite subtle. Colleges in the Cegep system are very specific. They're a bit like two-year colleges in the US or like community colleges in both the US & other parts of Canada (NBCC, for instance). Yet our system remains hard to explain.

      (This tate comes in the context of my reminiscing over my time in the US after monitoring posts from a number of US-based publications including IHE. Guess I should diversify my feeds.)

    1. Learning engineering is an emerging discipline at the intersection of learning science and computer science that seeks to design learning systems with the instrumentation, data, and partnerships with the research community, to drive tight feedback loops and continuous improvements in how that learning is delivered in online and blended settings.
    1. A word of caution first. Anyone considering a Ph.D. might not want to listen to advice from anyone with a Ph.D., us included. People with doctorates are notoriously bad at this kind of advice, often exaggerating their history into a singular universal experience.
    1. Did you simply practice the same type of A/B testing that’s common throughout the tech sphere? Or rope unwitting students into being the guinea pigs of your experiment without consent?
    1. featured educator Hollie Benson, (Reading/College Success, Muskegon Community College)

      My highlight from the whole week.

    1. One reason universities may be well situated to be stewards of this program? They are versed in retention strategies, regularly deployed to make sure students stay on track to graduation, Twilley said
    1. Figure 2: Life expectancy in the USA, males and females, 1900-98. RAW DATA or PDF

      Used in piece on musicians' life expectancy… Now deadlink.

    1. the move by many OPM vendors into the broader OPE space. Call it digital transformation, call it OPE, call it OPX – it goes beyond purely online programs, beyond masters and professional programs, and it gets much more at the core of what colleges and universities are facing this year and beyond. We don’t have common definitions of this broader space yet – and for now I’ll keep the OPM naming for simplicity’s sake – but it is important to note.
    2. Online Program Enablement (OPE)
    3. Online Program Management (OPM)
    1. Allow content created on your site to be shared on a global H5P Hub Done - June 2021 release
    1. OER come in many shapes and forms. For instance, they might come as a full course with lesson plans, lecture notes, readings, assignments, videos, and tests, or they might be a single module, textbook, or syllabus
  7. Jun 2021
    1. J’ai été initié à la diffusion numérique du savoir par Jean-Marie Tremblay, le fondateur de la bibliothèque numérique Les Classiques des sciences sociales. Cette bibliothèque avait été créée afin de soutenir l’apprentissage des concepts de la sociologie auprès des étudiants en sciences sociales.
    1. Eric Mazur is Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics and Dean of Applied Physics at Harvard. He is also inventor of Peer Instruction, and pioneer of the flipped classroom.

      His involvement probably carries a lot of weight... and puts his peer instruction work in a strange context.

    1. Engage students at scale

      Reminds me that a strength of annotation practices have to do with keeping things at human scale.

    1. Section 182.B seems to cover it. These materials are human beings. Buying and selling humans interferes -at the very least!- with human dignity. I’m no lawyer, and I don’t think this has ever been tested in court. But: If a platform profits from a user’s breaking of the platform’s very own policies on human remains, if a platform turns a blind eye, is the platform not condoning the trade? Is this not a nudge-nudge wink-wink tacit approval of the trade? Who should want to invest in a platform that makes money from selling human beings? Should we not hold such a platform accountable?

      Potential link to educational dignity discussed during #IAnno21? Law scholars involved.

      https://www.educational-dignity.org/our-work/

    1. “Anthropologists of our own culture.”

      Is it anthro's best-kept secret that we always work on our own cultural contexts?

    1. The Machine is Us/ing us | Web 2.0

      Random thought during #IAnno21... Did @MWesch participate in #IAnnoNN?

    1. The OCSA project, a Vanier initiative, aims to integrate online curation (OC) and social annotation (SA) into the classroom.

      Noticed that Patti Kingsmill was participating in #IAnno21. Maybe she could enable something with featured educators at #IAnno22?

    2. Online Curation and Social Annotation

      Useful project, expanding in interesting ways.

    1. A python tool that imports annotations made in Hypothesis (https://hypothes.is) to Zotero (https://www.zotero.org).

      In fact... maybe time to go back to some Jupyter Notebooks. What if my Zotero library and [h] annotations could become dataframes in the same code that I would document enough to guide someone for "computer-assisted" #OCSA (online curation and social annotation)...

    1. Chromebooks for Class: Zotero & Hypothesis

      Hadn't thought so much about the #Chromebooks connection.

    1. The Garden and the Stream: A Technopastoral

      Sounds like we're all Caulfield fans at #IAnno21... Or maybe it's just the @ChrisAldrich Effect. (Also known as #CommonplaceBooks without #LieuxCommuns)

    1. “I TEACH MYSELF IN OUTLINE,” NOTES, JOURNALS, SYLLABI & AN EXCERPT FROM DEOTHA

      Maybe relevant for @RemiKalir? Before #IAnno21, stumbled into this because a project @UniLivLibrary/@UniLivPress elected to use @ManifoldApp... instead of @Pressbooks.

    1. Three years ago, I began reading and annotating the work of the philosopher Jacques Derrida

      That's a way to start a project!

    1. carcinogenic

      Cancer is a strong analogy, here.

    2. entirely mistaken trust in its artists, using them as prophets and futurologists

      This song (in Québécois French) claims that we should let poets dream for us. https://hyp.is/kBWfvNKxEeuxsWfL7oV8PA/greatsong.net/PAROLES-DIANE-DUFRESNE,POUR-UN-AMI-CONDAMNE,102736315.html

    3. The artist deals with what cannot be said in words.

      Ineffable

  8. slac-coalition.org slac-coalition.org
    1. Members

      Surprising that the membership is mostly male.

  9. May 2021
    1. some of the weirder of us out there might even start building instruments in Unreal instead of other more conventional modular sound environments like Reaktor or Pd.
    1. 1) Presenting training in a glorified PowerPoint format

      Knew it wasn't "my line". Well, I've been using it since before this was published, especially about some SCORM packages.

  10. Apr 2021
    1. “I decided to look into it because [Proctorio has] claimed to have heard of ‘fewer than five’ instances where there were issues with face recognition due to race,” Akash Satheesan, the researcher, told Motherboard. “I knew that from anecdotes to be unlikely … so I set out to find some more conclusive proof and I think I’m fairly certain I did.” 

      Satheesan applied exactly the type of research-minded approach we strongly encourage college students to develop.

    1. Anchoring an innovation center on a college campus also gives Starbucks access to ground-floor research and insight into Gen Z interests before scaling new products or processes to market
    1. pushback when it comes up in faculty circles

      Quite honestly, I'm getting the impression the pushback isn't as virulent as it once was.

    2. the reminder of how writing and judgment are intertwined has been with most of us from a young age
    1. n Rebecca Elinich

      The content of Elinich’s course on VR through UE and Unity is available on OER Commons.

      What if UE4 and Unity assets were made available as OER?

    2. The facility, which includes a virtual reality lab and 3-D printer, houses the multimedia, data analytics and cybersecurity classes. S

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    1. Nombre maximal de participants 100 participants2 300 participants 300 participants 10 000 participants

      N'ayant pas participé à une réunion Teams avec 299 autres personnes, j'ai de la difficulté à saisir comment ça peut fonctionner.

    1. The four C’s of 21st Century skills are: Critical thinking Creativity Collaboration Communication

      Convenient to have these four share an initial. (My perception is that a tendency to emphasize this type of parallelism has been strengthening over the years. At least, I don't recall this practice being common in French when I grew up.)

    1. Professor Peter Jaszi from American University's Washington College of Law discusses copyright issues in hip hop at a recent Community Cinema event.

      More like sample-based musicmaking than Hip Hop specifically. Still use to think of the Fair Use Muscle.

    1. about the eonxr platform that might work in terms of education so um a little bit of background i've been a faculty member for nearly 35 years and so my main interest here is in the learning
    1. Alias, a very, very digital oscillator based on ignoring extensive research into low aliasing waveform generation methods, which as a result gives lots of 8-bit joy

      Wellplayed!

    1. I haven’t seen a college mission statement with any of these:• Pit students and teachers against one another• Rank students competitively• Reduce the humanity of students to a single low-resolution standardized metric• Frustrate learning with approaches that discourage intrinsic motivation• Reinforce bias against marginalized students• Fail to trust students’ knowledge of their own learning

      Touché!

    1. Grades are a morass education has fallen into that frustrates our ability to focus on student learning.

      Oh, Jesse... Always mincing words... ;-)

    2. The rubrics I find most exciting are ones crafted by students

      ... yet even those never helped Jesse make sense of grading?

    3. Rubrics have never helped me make sense of grading or being graded.

      Wow. "Never" is a strong word.

    4. I'm really not a fan of rubrics.

      You don't say! Mr. "Rubrics are inhumane"... ;-)

    5. Peer-Assessment

      One of my favourite techniques... And one I set up in a simple way.

      I typically have some form of weekly contribution which is posted publicly and assessed by other members of the class. Basically: the output of low-stakes assignments are posts in a forum and students rate one another using a simple scale (eg. satisfactory, excellent, unsatisfactory). The aggregate ratings make up that grade. And there's a grade for those peer-ratings.

      A basic need this technique fulfills is about getting continuous feedback. Though shallow, ratings tend to satisfy some of the most grade-obsessed students, Which makes it easier for me to focus on the learning process.

      What's more interesting, though, is that it gets learners to pay attention to each other's work. Unlike the typical "I need you to comment on five posts", it's more of a nudge. The effect is that there's a lot more reference to what others have said and, in some cases, it really contributes to the community-building aspect of my teaching. Sure, it's just one part of the whole process. But it does help.

      So... For me, peer-assessment is almost a way to placate the grading spirits”.

      Which might be the opposite of ungrading.

      Ah, well...

    6. process letter that addresses their own contributions as well as the functionality and dynamic of the team they're working with

      Sounds fairly heavy. Probably makes a lot of sense in some contexts, for instance when developing an understanding of the collaboration is really central to the course. (In some of my courses, I've had a lighter version of this which ended up not being that useful.)

    7. share their work with potential collaborators, employers, grad. schools, etc.

      Spending time outside the Ivory Tower, I'm often surprised by the distaste people in HigherEd have about the very idea of “their” students catering to potential employers. Potential grad schools? Sure! There's even explicit discussion of the “grooming”(!) process. Potential collaborators? Sure, why not... if you really want to do that sort of thing, there's no harm in building a little page where you can display your work. But potential employers? Pffsh! That's not what Post-Secondary Education is about! Go to a vocational school for that. What we do here is serious work! Don't even try telling me about potential customers. Our students shouldn't sell out!

      Obviously, there's a whole lot of college/university professorship where such a condescending attitude is completely absent. In fact, that ‘tude might be exceedingly rare. Yet it's incredibly vocal in some contexts.

    8. crafting a digital identity