You are currently browsing the Aydin Design weblog archives for May, 2008.
21/05/2008 by nicola.
From Viddler created by UQ_Thomp, this video was great to go back and revisit some of the phones we have owned in the past, I think the first one we had was a Siemens one in 1998, saw it in the video.
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20/05/2008 by nicola.
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16/05/2008 by nicola.
Probably worth reiterating that the views on this post and elsewhere on this site are entirely my own (’cept any unintentional plagiarism) and do not reflect those of my employer. Have also spent limited time putting this post together.
Background - have been following some of the Blackboard commercial practices - from the sidelines over the last year - mostly via Stephen Downes OL Daily.Was asked if wanted to attend Manchester Blackboard conference this week, due to having joined a uni which has a VLE from a company that was acquired by Blackboard, was thought that it would be educational event for me re finding out other unis practices with these etc. I did and it was useful. See also Niall Sclater’s post about this conference.
Still wrestling with concept of Blackboard operating as a commercial entity in the public sector. When asked by BB employees about reaction to the keynotes - attempted to explain this (albeit these were 1-2 min conversations en route to sessions). Response to this was generally along lines of corporate sector operating differently in terms of level of compliance and regulation. In some senses can’t believe that am recommending more regulation but I think its essential.
Why? Blackboard are in a unique position in education. They are operating in over 70 countries and ‘large’ (?) amounts of institutions using them at HE or FE. They were presenting research at the conference (useful research actually, due to being in this highly unique position) having spent time talking to governments and international education bodies. So, it would appear that they can obtain new businesses in new countries because they have a model from a variety of places which can be adopted and especially where countries have an entangled education system, this is very attractive.
Don’t have a problem with the model in principle. Information on their website indicates that they are healthily financially with increased revenue. Are corporate entities in education a bad thing - not necessarily but should have enhanced, independent scrutiny.
If a public sector institution is investing in a corporate solution there are a number of stakeholders who are affected financially - government public spending and linked to this, the tax paying public; students as fee payers etc
Blackboard’s vision on their website is
“Our role is to improve the educational experience with Internet-enabled technology that connects students, faculty, researchers and the community in a growing network of education environments dedicated to better communication, commerce, collaboration and content.
Blackboard’s large and diverse community of practice supports, enhances and extends our offerings every day, all over the world. The Internet offers great potential for education and the educational experience. While our role as the platform is important, communities of practice make the best solutions. The value of the network is connectedness. Each Blackboard client makes every other Blackboard client’s solution more valuable as a result of that connection.”
So to the black hole:
I think they are underselling their influence as a ‘platform’ provider in an institution. A VLE is a strategic technology partner which can directly impact on student achievement and satisfaction. Blackboard are not a blackboard - there was not a huge learning curve for either staff or students to pick up a piece of chalk and scrawl across or read a blackboard and a range of financial and technical backgrounds will not affect learning in the same way.
One might argue that companies such as Microsoft who are also a major corporation in education have similar influence ? i.e. recent cases in Europe regarding anti-competitive, antitrust practices. I disagree that Microsoft have the same direct impact - i.e. as a member of staff or student it is now possible to incorporate technologies into your learning without using a Microsoft product. I would also suggest that direct competition in terms of VLE provision is smaller (at the moment).
I believe that there is a certain amount of ‘chaos’ in education which is why scrutiny / technology governance is fragmented, inconsistent so who becomes accountable ? Does a technology contract and SLA cover this ? I don’t think it goes far enough. To outline further:
When an institution selects a VLE, eLearning / learning technology / Information technology teams spend a large amount of time on training and support (e.g. I’m delivering a day’s training today) and adoption of the VLE may spread across the institution. Staff are roughly in 3 categories
Students also use a VLE with mixed levels of technology experience/proficiency, devices and usability, accessibility issues too.
Some common themes - some of this from spending time talking to colleagues in other institutions at the conference (some of this is similar to corporate use of LMSs too)
So who is held responsible for managing these issues and if students don’t achieve what they hoped and/or levels of student satisfaction with use of technology. Staff and students. A platform provider ? Not really. Are VLE’s evil ? Not really. What about other quality assurance bodies ?
This situation in education is unprecedented, dealing with accountability is not.If a business has issues in terms of operation which are affecting its success, accountability can be scrutinised, suggestions made, reported and monitored. When businesses get into trouble, soulsearching - looking at the heart of the issues - rather than glib, general reporting will hopefully result in common sense discussions and actions to improve the situation. Which I guess is why there are four very successful multinational corporations providing these professional services.
Can education scrutinise and report on the actual impact of VLE use - difficult to find evidence of this at the moment - who, how and in what countries ? In the UK there are bodies such as QAA responsible for ‘enforcing’ quality assurance in higher education. For example the Code of Practice - no use of technologies categories - looked at the programme design document and did not find any specific references. There is evidence of international discussion e.g. the recent OECD forumsAlso the report where themes of governance, regulation, impact of technology on performance etc
Looked at four big audit companies websites for further information - there is some about technology governance and public sector governance, but needs further digging to get education specific stuff. There is a recent report from PricewaterhouseCoopers, which is about bigger issues than this, however I think there are parallels in terms of how business and education can work together be regulated in order to achieve successful, public-private partner relationships.
This may seem over the top but as everyone that cares, knows, we don’t have time and money to waste in education, it is too important, too special for individuals and the future workforce in every single nation.
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02/05/2008 by nicola.
This post is about links to some great stuff I’ve been looking at and now not got time to write about in more detail:
1. George Siemens has provided a fantastic overview of not just open education resources, open source and open content but also questioning motivation for promoting use of open content. He mentions about the need to be able to develop (and publish) their own content, then how to make this available - taking into account the ‘localness’ (apologies if that’s not a word) of their content. Curriki? but again, publishing to a wiki when you don’t have much access to a pc is challenging, there are a couple of mobile wiki projects around, one in SA looking at searchable audio wikis in a school, using phones - but phones are not the only part of an overall solution to improve access to education using technology (I think - we’ve tried downsizing laptops, how about upsizing phones which are already out there - to some degree).
2. More brilliance from Jan Chipchase about how people are using mobile phones to improve their circumstances in developing countries - Open Studios where people who would not normally have an opportunity, can pitch / show their design ideas, explaining the context and reasons for the design. Local context being so important, ok so it doesn’t do Nokia any harm either but its SO helpful in understanding how people want to innovate locally.
Also a great presentation of research in Uganda about shared phone practices
3. A report, found via Mobile Active on Wireless Trends for Social Change - a great read.
We are so lucky to be able to access all of this information and that these brilliant thinkers (George, Stephen, Jan, Katrin and many others) are willing to share their ideas and presentations with the world !
4. Also on open content, from Kairosnews, a guide to research writing available as open content.
5. Stop Wildlife poisoning campaign in Kenya, the photos and videos spell out clearly the appalling effect on wildlife. Baraza blog has been documenting the build up and outcome of a multi-agency meeting held in Kenya last week , they have now launched a separate blog on this issue about trying to ban a poison called Carbofuran. Its great that they can bring all parties involved (including manufacturers and government agencies) together to discuss and agree actions for moving forward in a positive way.
6. More on how to stop faffing and get on with stuff, from Afrigadget too - an interview with Simon Mwacharo who is talking about his renewable energy business creating affordable, sustainable energy solutions - talking with his customers about what they need locally and providing solutions - this is up there with any great lesson in business.
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