Archive for the ‘Multimedia’ Category

Stop Motion on the Beach

November 12th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

Gulp. The world’s largest stop-motion animation shot on a Nokia N8. from Nokia HD on Vimeo.

This is a lot of fun. According to the Vimeo blurb: “‘Gulp’ is a short film created by Sumo Science at Aardman, depicting a fisherman going about his daily catch. Shot on location at Pendine Beach in South Wales, every frame of this stop-motion animation was shot using a Nokia N8, with its 12 megapixel camera and Carl Zeiss optics. The film has broken a world record for the ‘largest stop-motion animation set’, with the largest scene stretching over 11,000 square feet.:

Education innovation

November 12th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

OK – it is a year and a half old ….but the ideas in this ‘curated conversation’ still seem relevant to me.

The future of digital games and learning

October 19th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

I like this video of a presentation by Nic Whitton on “What is the Future of Digital Games and Learning?”. Instead of showing her slides or a video of her presentation, the video gives the perspective of the participants on what she is saying. OK – it is a little whimsical. But it opens up all kinds of possibilities on how we might present multiple perspectives on a subject. I wonder if the points that were twittered are the same points she felt most important about her ideas?

Tweet archive from @mhawksey: http://bit.ly/Rq4iuE. Audio: ‘Kaleidoscope’ from Andries available on http://www.dance-industries.com/Andreis/

Made in Wales

October 15th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

We are always happy to feature local talent on the Pontydysgu website. This film was made by the pupils of Tredegar Comprehensive School i9n South Wales. The group wrote, directed, filmed, edited and starred in the film. It focuses on what it might have been like for a Jewish family during the Jewish Riots of 1911 in Tredegar.

The film co0mes from our friends from Like an Egg Productions who say on their website: “Egg Productions makes films.We do it for businesses and communities. We do it so well we even make films for ourselves. And we enjoy it so much we also show other people how to make films.”

The purpose of education

October 8th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

Another neat presentation from Steve Wheeler looking at the future of education. I particularly like the slides illustrating creativity and thinking outside the box. There is probably nothing particularly new here, but Steve maintains a visual narrative throughout the presentation.

Knowledge is social

September 25th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

I like this presnetation by Harold Jarche. In another post on his website, Harold says: “Innovation is inextricably linked to both networks and learning. We can’t be innovative unless we integrate learning into our work. It sounds easy, but it’s a major cultural change. Why? Because it questions our basic, Taylorist, assumptions about work; assumptions like:

A JOB can be described as a series of competencies that can be “filled” by the best qualified person.

Somebody in a classroom, separate from the work environment, can “teach” you all you need to know.

The higher you are on the “org chart”, the more you know (one of the underlying premises of job competency models).

PKM is a framework that enables the re-integration of learning and work and can help to increase our potential for innovation. It’s time to design workplaces for individuals, and their Personal KM, instead of getting everyone to conform to a sub-optimal structure that maximizes capital but not labour.”

Conference season

September 17th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

Its conference season again. Last week was AltC2012. This week is both the European Conference on educational Research in Cadiz and the ECTEL conference in Germany. Most conferences have some level of online access. We are working with EERA to stream the keynote sessions and to broadcast three live radio programmes from the ECER conference (details here). It seems there will also be chances to interact online with this interesting looking workshop run by Ilona Buchem at ECTEL.

The elusive technological future

September 17th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

I was looking for videos from last weeks AltC2012 conference to feature in this space.Nothing up yet – I suspect they are still doing the post editing but I did stumble on this video from AltC 2011 which I had not seen before. It comes highly recommended by Cory Doctorow who says: “”[This talk] is a no-holds-barred, kick-ass talk about the systems, blindspots and biases that keep us from understanding where tech has been and where it’s going. John’s the Professor of the Public Understanding of Technology at the Open University, and he’s the author of the excellent From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg, What You Really Need to Know About the Internet.”

Whats all the hype about MOOCs?

September 7th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

The nine steps are useful. But possibly more interesting in this presentation by George Siemens is his analysis of the difference between so called c-MOOCs and X-MOOCS.

More on MOOCs

September 4th, 2012 by Graham Attwell

I like the video cartoon programmes increasingly available as web applications. And this is a neat film by Sylvia Mössinger about opco12 – a German language MOOC discussing the outcomes of the latest Horizon report on the future adoption and development of technology in education. the course attracted some 1400 enrolments although it is not clear how many of these were active participants.

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