May
4
(2006)
Kissinger was right
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: meetings, rants, university. | Leave a Comment
I participated in a meeting on campus today that wound up dealing with politics more than anything else. I was having a really hard time trying to figure out why the problem being defined was worth such extreme polarization and strategy worthy of a Pentagon scenario, or at least an episode of Survivor. Actually, I still haven’t figured that part out, but will do my best to contribute to the group as appropriate.
Oy.
May
2
(2006)
iTunes U now has podcasting
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: itunes, podcasting, university. | 1 Comment
I hadn’t visited an iTunes U site for awhile, so this may not be new. I just checked out the Berkeley iTunes U to see what they’re doing with it, and notice the shiny “Subscribe” button when viewing a topic. I don’t remember that being there before, when I was poking around in the Stanford iTunes U. Berkeley’s using it to let folks subscribe to audio on topics like Global Affairs, as well as individual courses. Hey! That’s podcasting! If only I knew of anyone that could use something like this…

Apr
10
(2006)
University 2.0?
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: Noteworthy, ple, thoughts, university. | 6 Comments
I’ve been thinking about what some of the possible implications of this various “2.0″ stuff might be on Universities (or, I guess, on academic institutions in general). Likely nothing too earthshattering here, just some thoughts that were sparked over the weekend while thinking about the upcoming BCEdOnline fireside chat we’re planning.
Disclaimer: This blog entry is written by myself as an individual, not as a representative of the University of Calgary. I’m not advocating for anything here, just thinking out loud about what some of the implications might be if some trends continue for another 5/10/20 years.
If we assume that things like “web 2.0″ tools, and concepts like the “PLE” are going to mature and evolve, and that individuals will be able to effectively manage their own online identities and resources, that has some implications for a University.
If a person is able to manage their own information, outside of the IT-mandated technobubble, they have the ability to negate any monopolistic tendencies of an institution. That is to say, if a student (or faculty member) is able to manage their own online identity and published resources, without the need for direct intervention by an Institution, they will be able to operate outside the boundaries of any single University. Extrapolating this, a student who is able to have relationships with more than one University, and who manages their own PLE, will be able to select what kind of relationship they want to have with each University. Perhaps they take their first-year biology courses from University X, chemistry from University Y, physics from MIT, philosophy from Cambridge, etc… Perhaps a professor is able to teach students who have relationships with any number of institutions (and are located anywhere they’re technically able to access the professor and course materials). In which case, to which University do the student or professor “belong”? Does that even make sense any more?
If individuals are in control of their institutional relationships, what is the role of the institution? Previously, it was (at least partially) to provide services that were not available to individuals without institutional support. Things like email, network access, classrooms, registration systems, scheduling systems, access to researchers, and access to publications were all offered by the University to its faculty, students and staff. If individuals are able to access any of these services as effectively (or moreso) on their own, what is left for the University? Perhaps the primary role becomes as a research institution? It’s still hard for individuals to conduct hard research on their own (chemicals, infrastructure, safety and security, protocols, etc…). Maybe Universities will become hubs of research activities, with teaching and learning under the auspices of the individuals that choose to have a relationship with a University?
So, the Institution becomes a place for individuals to come together to conduct research, and perhaps to facilitate discourse. Teaching and learning activities are perhaps supported by the Institution, but managed by individuals in any number of locations. What happens to curriculum? Degrees? Tenure? How different is this from where we are now?
I’m sure Stephen (one, two, three, four, five, six, seven), David Wiley (eg.), and many others have put much more thought into this than I have.
Mar
20
(2006)
Learning Commons - end of an era
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: learningcommons, tlc, ucalgary, university. | 4 Comments
It’s the end of an era. The Learning Commons is no more. It’d be dramatic, if we weren’t just changing the name to the “Teaching and Learning Centre“. It’s a little less pretentious, and should require less explanation about what we do. It’s a shorter web domain name, too - just “tlc.ucalgary.ca“. Maybe we should have thrown a “2.0″ in there for buzzword compliance ![]()
Feb
23
(2006)
University of Calgary group on Flickr
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: Flickr, ucalgary, university, UofC. | Leave a Comment
I just realized that there was no “University of Calgary” group on Flickr, so I created one.
This should be an interesting way for students, faculty, staff and alumni to share photos about the U of C.
Please feel free to join the group and add any photos you’d like to share.
Oct
22
(2005)
Stanford podcasts via iTunes
Filed under: Uncategorized. Tags: audio, community, downloads, itunes, podcasting, stanford, university. | 5 Comments
via Josie Fraser at EdTechUK - This is one of the cooler things I’ve seen in a while. Stanford University is putting a bunch of audio content online, free, via the iTMS.
Stanford on iTunes will provide alumni—as well as the general public—with a new and versatile way of staying connected to the university through downloads of faculty lectures, campus events, performances, book readings, music recorded by Stanford students and even podcasts of Stanford football games. At launch, the service will contain close to 400 distinct audio programs, and the university will continue to add new content as it becomes available.
They’ve put up a page describing the effort, with a direct link to the Stanford section of the iTMS. I’m downloading a few things now (a session on Stress and Coping - ironically enough - and some live recordings of some concerts).
Very cool. Great to see a Big School “get it” that by sharing resources freely they are not shooting themselves in the foot. Every university should be doing this as part of their contribution back to the community.
ps. Yes, I know it’s not really podcasting, but close enough. The spirit is the same, and they provide some handy hooks to download all content at once. So it’s not fed to you via RSS. Whatever…
