RSS

Testing Syndicated Posts

I’m experimenting with syndication and if it is working then this post, originally written on Reluctant Technologist, will also be published on CLT@LSE.  The syndication feature is an add-on called FeedWordPress.  It’s available in the version of WordPress that we are running at the LSE but doesn’t appear to be included on wordpress.com blogs.

It works using an RSS Feed.  I simply add my blog feed to the CLT@LSE blog and my posts are published there too.  Rather than publishing all the posts I write here I’ve set-up a category called Syndicated and added the feed for that category to the CLT Blog.  That’s how it works, in theory…

Finger-crossed it does as I’ve been neglecting this blog recently but writing over on CLT so hopefully this will help get me back here/there too!

March 22nd, 2010|Syndicated|Comments Off on Testing Syndicated Posts|

Symposium at York University: lecture capture, content production & Second Life

York Minster by chez_worldwideJane and I participated in a one day in-house symposium at the University of York this week. The audience were made up of both academic and support staff interested in learning from other universities about lecture capture, audio and video content production and Second Life. We were asked to talk about audio and video content production and so showcased some of the video & audio that’s produced here. We focused on lecture capture momentarily as although it is the most prolific output of media at the LSE, with 909 lectures having been captured in just one term this year, two other universities: Birmingham and Newcastle had already given extensive presentations on this subject. Instead, we wanted to highlight the idea of audio and video as a part of teaching, not just as a means to capture the teaching that’s already going on. We played examples of interviews & discussions, role playing scenes, groupwork, screencasts, video and audio podcasts as well as highlighting some of the Wimba tools and audio feedback. We also talked about the issue of scaling up to meet increased interest in media, professionally produced video vs the DIY approach and touched on the copyright issues involved.

It was an interesting day with good discussions both formally and over coffee/lunch and it was really nice to meet people in similar roles. The most lively debate came from the lecture capture sessions. It seems that across the board, the majority of students really value lecture capture (no real surprises) and staff are cautious about the educational benefits and fears about attendance. There were certainly many parallels between the student and staff surveys at both Birmingham Medical School and Newcastle university and the LSE. Rob Jones’ findings from Birmingham were particularly interesting because they compared the relationship between usage stats and grades. The findings look promising where the mean rose from 51% to 55% and the failure rate dropped to 2/69. The quality of answers also improved with students indicating a greater breadth of knowledge and looking at a wider set of resources.

The Second Life talks in the afternoon reminded me that Second Life is good for simulation and specifically designed educational activities but that perhaps we should be looking at other virtual worlds for better communication, movement, role play etc. Sheila Webber from Sheffield and Steve Warburton from King’s College agreed that Second life is probably not sophisticated enough for a young gaming audience; the average age of SL users is apparently 33. Steve flagged up MetaPlace, OpenSim (open source) and Blue Mars as potential Virtual World’s to explore, so perhaps another pilot project is due. Read Jane’s Social Software, Libraries and E-learning blog for more information on the lecture capture and Second Life presentations.

July 10th, 2009|Conferences, Images, Audio & Video|Comments Off on Symposium at York University: lecture capture, content production & Second Life|

LSE shortlisted for the Institute of IT Training 2008 Awards

LSE’s training website, which aggregates RSS feeds from multiple training providers across the school, has been nominated for an award. Luis Martinez in the Library, Jeni Brown in IT Training, and Jane Secker and I in CLT developed the system, which has subsequently been extended to include the Teaching and Learning Centre, the Language Centre, and the Staff Development Unit. We extended RSS by referencing additional namespaces — the RSS Events and Dublin Core Terms namespaces. This allowed us to include additional metadata such as the date, time and location of the event, and its intended audience.

Each training provider generates an RSS feed from their events database, which is collected using Magpie RSS. All the feeds are rolled up into one, with events sorted chronologically. Here, RSS is acting as database abstraction layer: the aggregator doesn’t need to know details of each database implementation to obtain the information.

If you’re interested in the details, have a look at the technical documentation.

December 6th, 2007|Announcements, Tools & Technologies|Comments Off on LSE shortlisted for the Institute of IT Training 2008 Awards|

Careers Service Social Software Projects

I’m just back from the Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services (AGCAS) Biennial conference, where I presented a session with Kezia Richmond, the LSE Careers Information Manager, titled “Blog it, tag it, share it: learn the language of the Google generation”. It seemed to be very well received judging from the immediate feedback we were given.

We covered RSS, blogs, podcasting & social bookmarking and showcased the Careers Service’s social software projects:

*Strictly speaking audio recordings rather than podcasts! You can download our handout and see a list of sites we highlighted in our talk.

If you are interested in finding out more about social software then look out for the social software sessions on the LSE upcoming training courses page. The CLT are particularly interested in further exploring how social software might be used in teaching and learning, so if this is something that interests you too then please get in touch: clt-support@lse.ac.uk

September 5th, 2007|Conferences, Social Media|Comments Off on Careers Service Social Software Projects|

Universes & Pagecasts

I’m not sure who dreams up these names

CrimsonConnect was developed by two students at Harvard as an alternative to the institutional student portal: “my.harvard.edu”. The Chronicle of Higher Education reports that they were asked to remove the course material they had been included as it wasn’t password protected. It was developed with the relatively new Netvibes Universe.

I’ve had a Netvibes account for a while but I don’t yet have the ability to create a public universe (invitation-only it seems!), so for now Netvibes remains like iGoogle & MyYahoo, a private personalised page.

Pageflakes, have been offering publicly sharable portal-type pages for a while, which they recently seem to have started calling Pagecasts…ugh. Here are a couple of examples:

June 1st, 2007|Social Media|Comments Off on Universes & Pagecasts|

Explaining RSS

This is something I’ve been thinking about for a while as it seems to be a topic that workshop participants don’t always get straight away.

A ‘blog trail’ just took me from Open as to… to We Ignore RSS at OUr Peril to OpenLearn_daily to RSS in Plain English
Tony Hirst – we ignore RSS at OUr peril – uses this analogy to explain RSS:

One way of thinking about content delivered by RSS, compared to delivering via a website, is to consider the world of film. Visiting a website to consume content is like going to the cinema. You have to physically visit a multiplex, for example, and locate the screen that is showing the film you want to see. Subscribing to an RSS feed is like subscribing to a satellite TV channel. Your Skybox, or digibox, which you keep at home, of course, aggregates the channels you have subscribed to, each playing films on a particular theme. Each channel is like an RSS feed. You can choose which you subscribe to, and when. You can channel hop at your leisure. In the same way, users consume the RSS feeds they are subscribed to via a single application – either online (using a service such as Bloglines or Google Reader) or via a desktop client. Sky Movies sells convenience, pushes content to me. RSS is another push medium.

I can’t decide whether it’s over complicating it. Won’t most people get it with news website examples? RSS in Plain English from the Common Craft Show is an excellent low budget video that I’m certainly going to try and incorporate into my upcoming careers social software workshop but it might be something we can use in the e-literacy social software workshops too.

Alternative Version: Windows Media

Collaborative Software and Web 2.0

The University of Edinburgh Information Systems working group has recently produced a report with the above title.

Quoting from its conclusion

Collaborative technology such as IM, Wikis and blogs are fast becoming ubiquitous, and it is quite clear that the University, through Information Services and its partners, needs to act to ensure that it makes best use of such tools.

The report is well worth reading. It can be found here

Following on from the report is the University of Edinburgh’s Web 2.0 action plan. It is here

Eduspaces

The external hosted version of elgg has been relaunched as eduspaces.  And I think elgg is defintely worth revisiting… I’ll certainly be having a more detailed look soon.  Just need a project  / interested academic…  Since I last looked at it, with a group of PhDs about a year ago, and decided it wasn’t quite there, the following things have changed:

  • Look and feel
  • Much improved navigation – links to your own profile, blog, files, resources (RSS feeds) are always visible
  • Your profile is more configurable
  • Community blogs can be viewed as a Forum as well as a blog
  • Messaging system introduced
  • Browse users / communities as well as search & tag cloud
  • WYSIWYG editor for blog posts and messages

All in all, much improved…

Update: In today’s seminar Terry Anderson reminded me of one of key features of elgg which we identified when looking at it previously and that’s the permissions side of things.  When posting to an elgg blog, adding a file or completing your profile you have complete control over who can see it – your content can be public, only seen by logged in users, completely private or restricted to an elgg community or a group of elgg contacts that you specify.

March 21st, 2007|Blogging, Social Media|Comments Off on Eduspaces|

Yahoo Pipes

Has anyone come across Pipes yet? According to their overview:

Pipes is a free online service that lets you remix popular feed types and create data mashups using a visual editor

What does that actually mean… well the first pipe I came across and have now cloned allows you to search all links found on a particular page so if you find a list of useful sites you can use this search tool to restrict your search to them.

My cloned copy of Tony Hirst‘s original linkedsearch pipe is set to search everything linked to from the CLT blog but you can change the URL to whatever you want. I’ve no way of knowing how well it works but it seems to pick up everything.
At the time of writing the most popular pipe is New York Times thru Flickr which finds photos (on Flickr) based on the current content of the NYT homepage.

Each pipe has an RSS feed too.  If you want to browse existing pipes, clone and tweak them or create your own from scratch head over to Yahoo Pipes

February 22nd, 2007|Social Media|Comments Off on Yahoo Pipes|

PageFlakes

Pageflakes is another personalised portal-type page. Read more on Webblogg-ed about it. The Darfur Resources Page that’s highlighted is a good example for our workshops.

Update: One thing I like about PageFlakes compared to say Netvibes (which I use as a reader) is that you can make pages public and share editing rights (via email addresses).

November 23rd, 2006|Social Media|Comments Off on PageFlakes|