seckerj

About Jane Secker

Digital Literacy and Copyright Advisor at LSE's Centre for Learning Technology

Developing digital and information literacy at Cardiff University: next NetworkED seminar

I’m pleased to announce that the next NetworkED seminar will be held on Wednesday 6th February at 2.30pm. The presenters are Cathie Jackson, Joe Nicholls and Janet Finlay who will be talking about the development and implementation of a digital and information literacy strategy at Cardiff University. The work is part of the Digidol Project, which was funded by Jisc under their Developing Digital Literacies programme. You can find out more about the seminar from our NetworkED website. The event is open to all. LSE staff and students should book via the online booking system.

External visitors wishing to attend should email j.secker@lse.ac.uk to book a place. As ever we hope to be live streaming the event and if you wish to watch the seminar online you simply need to visit the event webpage at 2.30 on Wednesday 6th February and do NOT need to book a place. You can follow the event in Twitter using #LSENetEd

January 16th, 2013|Events & Workshops (LTI), NetworkED, Research Skills|Comments Off on Developing digital and information literacy at Cardiff University: next NetworkED seminar|

The literacy challenge of the digital age – December’s NetworkED seminar

Next Wednesday, 5th December we have Carl Miller from Demos coming to LSE to speak to us about a report that came out last year about young people’s ‘digital fluency’. The report, Truth, Lies and the Internet considered the ability of young people to navgiate an increasingly complex online environment, how they judge and develop critical skills when reviewing content online and the role of teachers in supporting them. The Internet is now the greatest source of information and misinformation for people living in the UK. At our fingertips lies both trustworthy journalism and selective half-truths, both niche expertise and general nonsense. This is asphyxiating as well as liberating. Too many people are unable to find the information they need, or trust the first thing they do. In this talk, Carl Miller, the Research Director for the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media at Demos proposes the skill of ‘digital fluency’ as the key to how we all must react. if you could like to come along to the session LSE staff should book via the Online Booking System.

We hope to live stream the event, but will make a recording on our website shortly after the event. We also use the Twitter hashtag #LSENetEd so you can follow the event live. Visitors who are interested in attending the event should contact j.secker@lse.ac.uk to book a place.

Information Literacy support for LSE PhD research students

  • Need help researching academic resources for your major review?
  • Want to pick up new tips on using a range of academic databases and online resources?
  • Need advice on citing materials and structuring your bibliography?
  • Looking for statistical data for your research.

Why not book a place on MY592: Workshop on Information Literacy
This six week programme (part of the Methodology Institute’s Workshop series) is taught by the Library and Centre for Learning Technology. There are six 2 hour ‘hands on’ workshops which enable you to build up your research skills as we cover:

  • Literature searching, citation searching and finding materials using such databases as IBSS, Scopus, Web of Science, Econlit, etc.
  • Getting the most out of the internet for research
  • Managing information – citing references and using software to manage your information, e.g. EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley
  • Dealing with data – resources for data and how to use them
  • Finding newspaper, conference, theses, research and specialist publications
  • Next steps, keeping up to date, sharing your research and building a network.

MY592 is supported by a course in Moodle and all participants receive feedback on resources for their individual research topics. The course is ideal for first and second year PhD students.

This term the programme will start on Tuesday 6 November 10-12 in STC.S018 for 6 weeks. Further information is available at http://www2.lse.ac.uk/library/services/training/MY592.aspx and places can be booked on the LSE Training System.

Please email Library.Enquiries@lse.ac.uk if you have any queries about the course. It will run again in Lent and Summer term.

October 16th, 2012|Events & Workshops (LTI), Research Skills|Comments Off on Information Literacy support for LSE PhD research students|

Diana Laurillard comes to speak at NetworkED

I’m delighted to announce that Professor Diana Laurillard, from the Institute of Education has agreed to give our first NetworkED seminar of 2012/13. Diana is world renowned in the educational technology field and the author of the book ‘Rethinking University Education‘. She also developed what is known as the ‘conversational framework’ which provides a model for embedding educational technologies into teaching. Those of you who have studied on LSE’s Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching in Higher Education will no doubt be familiar with her work.

Professor Laurillard will be speaking on the topic of ‘Teaching as a design science: developing reliable knowledge of learning technology’ to tie in with her book on this topic published earlier this year. The event is being held on Wednesday 10th October at 3pm. LSE staff and students should book if they wish to attend using the Training System. The event will be live streamed so open to anyone throughout the word to watch from their own computer. A recording will also be made of the session which will be available from our website a few days after the event. Further details are available from the NetworkED site.

September 26th, 2012|Events & Workshops (LTI), Teaching & Learning, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Diana Laurillard comes to speak at NetworkED|

Find out about the new Moodle before term starts

If you haven’t yet had a chance to attend the ‘Moving to Moodle 2’ training sessions then why not pop along to the Centre for Learning Technology from 12.15-13.45 on 26th September (the week before term starts) to find out what the latest version of the software has to offer. We’re having an open house event, with refreshments and members of staff from CLT on hand to answer your questions. If you would like to see the latest features or find out what’s improved in the new Moodle (which went live at the end of June) then why not book a place. We hope to see you there! Meanwhile enjoy the rest of the summer, while the good weather lasts!

August 20th, 2012|Announcements, Events & Workshops (LTI)|Comments Off on Find out about the new Moodle before term starts|

Supporting LSE Undergraduate Skills

CLT and LSE Library are leading a project to review the support for undergraduate students in terms of digital and information literacy skills. Recognising the importance of developing a wide range of literacies in undergraduate education, the project seeks to build on existing good practice across the School, for example in the LSE100 course.  Find out more about the project from our website – it builds on research that was completed last year between Jane Secker from LSE and Emma Coonan from the University of Cambridge. 

How can you help?

We are looking for LSE staff and graduate teaching assistants who are involved in undergraduate education to take part in this research. If you are willing to take part in a short interview then please email us. Alternatively you can complete the online questionnaire which is available until 29th June.

Email: Maria Bell, m.bell@lse.ac.uk; Jane Secker, j.secker@lse.ac.uk;

June 1st, 2012|Announcements, Research Skills|Comments Off on Supporting LSE Undergraduate Skills|

Celebrating Open Education Week 2012: LSE Learning Resources Online

NataliaOur guest post this week comes from Natalia Madjarevic, Academic Support Librarian (Economics) and LSE Research Online Manager

This week is the first Open Education Week (5-10 March 2012), raising awareness of open education and how it is used in teaching and learning around the world. Open education, as defined by the Open Courseware Consortium, ‘seeks to create a world in which the desire to learn is fully met by the opportunity to do so’.  A significant component of increasing access to education around the world is sharing open educational resources (OERs). This could be materials such as course materials, lecture slides, workbooks, video lectures on an open access platform.

There are a number of significant global OER initiatives including MIT’s OpenCourse Ware initiative and the Open University’s OpenLearn. You can also find OERs from around the world on the OER Commons website. UNESCO also recognise the value of OERs, arguing that they ‘provide a strategic opportunity to improve the quality of education as well as facilitate policy dialogue, knowledge sharing and capacity building.’ It can be particularly helpful for new teachers to see examples of how others teach a specific topic or theory in their discipline. Open educational resources can also be used by students to support their learning.

LSE Library recently launched LSE Learning Resources Online, for open sharing of teaching and learning materials. The service complements LSE Research Online where staff can deposit research publications in open access format. Where possible, OERs will be released under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareLike licence, which means the original author will get credit and anyone reusing their materials will also need to share them under an open licence.

March 8th, 2012|Open Education, Teaching & Learning, Tools & Technologies|Comments Off on Celebrating Open Education Week 2012: LSE Learning Resources Online|

Moving to Moodle 2: coming to LSE in Summer 2012

In Summer 2012 LSE will be upgrading the current version of Moodle to an improved platform Moodle2 that will be up and ready for the coming academic year 2012/13. The Centre for Learning Technology are planning a range of activities to smooth the transition. We have also been carrying out a pilot with a selection of courses during the Lent Term and will be collecting feedback from staff and students who were involved in the next few weeks. CLT staff are happy to speak to LSE colleagues at departmental meetings to answer any questions about the Move to Moodle2 and how it might impact on your work.

The upgrade should be a relatively straightforward process, providing LSE with an improved version of the Moodle software. Any disruption to staff and students will be minor and all courses on the current version of Moodle will be migrated with their content in place. Moodle2 will look different, but using it will not be a case of having to learn entirely new ways of working. Most functions will be familiar to current users, with some added features, such as drag and drop, a new easier file upload process and conditional release of resources. We have put together a web page with all the information you need to know: Moving to Moodle 2.

We have two upcoming events aimed at LSE staff, including a briefing about Moving to Moodle 2 on 28th March at 1pm and the CLT Open House on 18th April over lunchtime. We would encourage you to book a place and come along to the sessions and find out about this exciting development, coming to LSE in Summer 2012!

iMeet: a participant shares his thoughts

Alan Bracey from Academic Services in LSE Library recently attended CLT’s Imeet and was kind enough to write a short post about the event which we have posted below.

IMeet was billed as a friendly and informal group discussion on the use of Ipads and tablets in education. I’ve used Ipads before at work, but only briefly, so this session was an excellent introduction to what they have to offer. Here are some brief notes. 

 IPad V smart phone:

Most members of our group agreed that the IPad shares many of the benefits of their Smartphone, seemingly justifying the perception that an iPad is just a big iPhone that you can’t call people on [my opinion not the group’s]. Smartphones are better for:

  •  using maps and location features (phone is more portable, more discreet, less likely to get stolen pulling it out in public).
  • Smartphones can connect online outside wireless areas through phone signal, which only some IPads can do (3G enabled)

 Other general negative Ipad issues:

  • Expense – no real competitors, although the cheaper BlackBerry PlayBook is available and the Kindle Fire is due for release soon
  • Ipads don’t currently display Flash content on web pages. HTML 5 is expected to supersede Flash, however.  
  • Printing – you need a special IPad-compatible printer to print
  • Low memory size
  • No USB port  

 Practical benefits of Ipads:

  • For browsing online: battery life is very good, also speed of access (no wait for it to start up). Build quality is high. Design is more accessible, portable and lighter than most laptops – so useful for following online recipes while cooking…
  • As an e-reader. Jane noted seeing students reading from an IPad while typing up notes on a laptop. The touch screen makes an intuitive reader
  • For customer service situations: a PhD student noted that tablets are becoming ‘the future’ of healthcare. So doctors sitting by patients beds and showing xrays medical diagrams. Hands on, immediate, engaging, promotes a more intimate relationship between customer and service-provider.  
  • Immediacy (for all wifi enabled devices, laptops, tablets, phones). A PhD student noted how useful both prove in lectures – for noting references to papers and academics (see ‘Read it later’ app below). She also mentioned how she went to a lecture and added a reading to her Moodle course before the lecture had finished, which impressed her students.

 IPad benefits / apps

  • Sonja from CLT demonstrated the drawing/painting features, using a stylus, as popularised by David Hockney. But of more relevance for libraries, is the notesplus app which allows you to annotate text by writing on the screen with a stylus or your finger. This was a standout feature for me. You turn a document in into a PDF, and then you can scribble all over it. You can also type back onto the same document. Potentially very useful for note-taking or for brainstorming sessions, formulas, technical drawings, proofreading.
  • The Read it Later app allows you to save a reading list, which is synchronised across your devices. It saves a list of links which takes you back to readings, works in a similar way to bookmarking.
  • A member of staff from the TRIUM MBA programme mentioned they will be trialling the use of IPads for their next term’s class. All class readings will be pre-loaded on IPads, loaned out to students. This is using the XanEdu app. Copyright clearance is included as part of the service. Links to XanEdu readings are put on Moodle. This raises the point that IPads/tablets will only work as a teaching tool if all students have one. A member of our group noted the Indian Ministry of Education’s plans to provide tablets for students [not sure but this looks like the right scheme]. It was also noted that if tablets are becoming an important tool in professional lives, then encouraging their use by students is important.
  • Another use noted is by photographer’s showcasing portfolios [my flatmate does this, and mentioned the amazing depth of detail for photos]

 We looked briefly at IBooks – interactive books, but it was generally agreed that these wouldn’t threaten the existing model of textboots. An example is  Principles of Biology, which retails for $49 dollars per student. The content is licensed to you, not the platform – as long as you use itunes, or an IPad. None of the notesplus annotation features works with iBooks.

February 8th, 2012|Events & Workshops (LTI), Tools & Technologies|Comments Off on iMeet: a participant shares his thoughts|

CLT launch short series for researchers

Later this term CLT will be collaborating with LSE Library and the Legal and Compliance Team to deliver a series of three short workshops for PhD students and researchers focusing on the legal issues you need to consider when undertaking research. The sessions cover:

  • Freedom of Information requests
  • Data Protection
  • Copyright issues

If you wish to book a place on any of the workshops visit the Training and Development System to find out more. Alternatively full course descriptions and links to each course are included below.

January 31st, 2012|Events & Workshops (LTI), Research Skills|Comments Off on CLT launch short series for researchers|