Chantelle's E-learning and Digital Cultures site » twitter http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem part of the MSc in E-learning at the University of Edinburgh Wed, 15 May 2013 13:32:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.4.1 Digital Artefact: The process http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/02/12/week-4-summary/ http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/02/12/week-4-summary/#comments Tue, 12 Feb 2013 08:11:52 +0000 cmeckenstock http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/?p=341 When given the task of making a summary of the edcMooc, I was in a little panic mode because it all seemed too ominous. I have to present a multimodal digital artefact along with it.  Both of these are skills which have gone a little rusty.

So I started by browsing through the discussion forum, and then stumbled on the edcMooc news which contained the blogs from participants.  I soon realised how much talent and skills already being exhibited by the edcMooc community.  I was reflecting on the films they have to watch and comment and the gargantious task of  the Mooc organisers to cater to so many.

Sol Le Witt’s work came to mind.  It was the perfect one to use to display some of the best work that I have seen from the participants.  Then the question of the tool.  There were too many to choose from and I was tempted to use the Prezi but was unsure about the zooming in and out effect.  I clicked on a few and I thought I would give Thinglink a go and see if it does the job for me.

It was easy enough to use and quite perfect for what I need.  I was hoping I could stream in some sound but first it did not permit embedding of sound, but secondly, there was no need for this particular artefact.  I think silence could be more effective, as there was already so much data to see and investigate.

I spent the rest of the week monitoring the various discussion groups, twitter and watching some of the films on edcMooc, while dipping in and out of my own reading on Digital and Design Culture.  I will discuss the reading on another post.  Suffice to note here, that I had not expected to read so much on design on the course!  It seems like my inner desire and childhood dreams of studying design is being realised in EDEC!

 

 

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What is ancient? http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/01/31/what-is-ancient/ http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/01/31/what-is-ancient/#comments Thu, 31 Jan 2013 15:56:43 +0000 cmeckenstock http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/?p=213

Facebook vs Twitter

In keeping with my previous post, and after reading Kress (2005), this has to be highlighted!

Facebook is seen as ancient, and Twitter is now more appealing to the younger generation.  Soon perhaps social media will be dominated by lesser words, and perhaps more images?

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The evolution of communication http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/01/30/the-evolution-of-communication/ http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/2013/01/30/the-evolution-of-communication/#comments Wed, 30 Jan 2013 04:10:29 +0000 cmeckenstock http://edc13.education.ed.ac.uk/chantellem/?p=206

This is a great visual from an article written on the Neuroanthropology site entitled the Fear of Twitter.

This is my response to Amy Woodgate’s post who happened to have this image on her site on 10th February 2013

Hi Amy, I have this image up on my blog too but I did not comment very much on it then.  I thought it was an interesting perception of how people view communication, and you are right -  from the yardstick of snobbery of the written word!

I can’t help but think of my 17 month old toddler who is learning to gesture, sign, name objects at the moment, and the lovely sounds she is making.  She is also creating some lovely marks and scribbles on different surfaces and loves the tapping of the keyboard!  She will be going through the cycle but at a much faster rate and will be ever so proficient in the coded language of twittering and perhaps the appreciation of sound, image or a combination of these at an earlier age.  I am constantly amazed at the way she listens to a piece of music, and she tries to figure out the rhythm, and then try to shake and move accordingly!   I do like the way you have looked communication as cyclical.

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