Events & Workshops (LTI)

Details of forthcoming workshops and links to LTI workshop resources and presentations.

Blogging & Twitter Workshops

Due to popular demand we have scheduled two additional workshops next week. A handful of spaces remain for each.

  • Introduction to Twitter – Wednesday 22nd June @ 12:00 – Uses of Twitter in education, including a hands-on session to get you up-and-running or develop your existing use. Details & Booking
  • Introduction to Blogging – Thursday 23rd June @ 12:00 – Covers blogging for researchers as well as other uses in education such as newsletters & teaching. Includes the opportunity to create your own blog. Details & Booking
June 13th, 2011|Announcements, Blogging, Events & Workshops (LTI), Research Skills, Social Media|Comments Off on Blogging & Twitter Workshops|

Watch Teaching Day 2011 online

Tuesday 24th May, 2011 is LSE Teaching Day. You will be able to participate online as follows.

Niall FergussonKeynote – this year’s keynote is by Professor Niall Ferguson: ‘History Teaching & the History of Teaching’. All LSE staff are welcome to attend in the Sheik Zayed Thetare from 09:45-10:45.  You can also watch it live online:

Watch Niall Ferguson Keynote
(From 09:45, Tues, 24/5/11)

Twitter & Social Media – you can join in online via Twitter. You should include #lsetd11 when tweeting.  You can see what others are saying at Teaching Day via this #lsetd11 Twitter search (no twitter account required!).  If you are using other social media & social networking tool make sure you use the lsetd11 tag!

May 23rd, 2011|Announcements, Events & Workshops (LTI), Teaching & Learning|Comments Off on Watch Teaching Day 2011 online|

Register for LSE Teaching Day 2011 – Places are going fast!

LSE Teaching Day 2011

Register now – Places are going fast!
Tuesday 24 May 2010

Registration is now open for LSE Teaching Day 2011.

This year academic staff, students and support staff will lead an exciting programme focused on:

  • Feedback and assessment
  • Innovation in teaching
  • Research led teaching
  • Student skills development in HE

Book your place and view the full programme and abstracts on www.lse.ac.uk/teachingday/

Registration closes on Monday 2 May 2011

April 4th, 2011|Announcements, Events & Workshops (LTI), Teaching & Learning|Comments Off on Register for LSE Teaching Day 2011 – Places are going fast!|

Twitter at LSE Teaching Day

Google Generation Panel Discussion

For LSE Teaching Day 2010 we heavily promoted the use of Twitter as a backchannel communication tool and were very pleased with the results.  Twitter updates relating to Teaching Day were identifiable by the event tag: #lsetd10

Participation

The 249 updates* were made by 29 people, 16 LSE staff & students and 13 non-LSE showing how backchannel communication can extend beyond the walls of a face-to-face event. The event had 180 delegates.

A large majority of tweets came from a small number people:

  • Only 7 people reached double figures
  • One person, @tweeduizendzes was responsible for almost 1/3 of the updates
  • Top 5 tweeters accounted for 77% of the updates

Types of Updates

Tweets can be standard updates, replies (directed at someone in response to an update), mentions (an update referencing somone else) or retweets (one person re-posting another’s earlier update).

  • Updates 63%
  • Retweets 26%
  • Replies 6%
  • Mentions 5%

I have attempted to classify the 249 tweets based on their purpose with the following results:

  • Reporting 43%
  • Commenting 29%
  • Enhancing 16%
  • Assisting 7%
  • Asking 6%

Below are some examples of updates from a wide variety of people (so the top tweeters are heavily under-represented!)

Reporting

The largest group of tweets (43%) were ‘reporting’ what was being said, what people were doing & so on.

@Puplett: #lsetd10 Leape: challenge is to share good teaching practice

@jsecker: LSE Teaching day Nicola Lacey says skills should embedded in a course #lsetd10

About a quarter of the reporting updates were retweets.  So in the following example my original update was retweeted by @Dcotton11 (non-LSE) amplifying the message by forwarding it to a wider audience.

@DCotton11: RT @mattlingard: ‘Digital refugees’ have been thrown into the mix by student panelist those who don’t engage or see a benefit #lsetd10

Commenting

Almost a third could be classified as commenting.  This may be a comment on what is being said or being done at the event as well as comments on other online comments.

@jenibrown: Definitely agree that there is too much PowerPoint in teaching talks conferences etc. #lsetd10

@jobadge: @mattlingard I see your point another of out staff @jon_scott does 6 mins audio summaries of key points much better for revision #lsetd10

@amber_miro: #lsetd10 really enjoyed the lecture capture debate

Enhancing

There were 39 updates that I have classified as ‘enhancing’ because they add some further information such as an example, a link or a photo .

@mattlingard: ASKe website that Liz just highlighted in the Feedback session http://www.brookes.ac.uk/aske/ #lsetd10

@dave_lew: #lsetd10 in the final session before the wine reception http://twitpic.com/1ow3sp

Assisting

‘Assisting’ tweets include announcements & answers to questions.  They mainly originated from the conference organisers.

@tweeduizendzes: RT @mattlingard: LSE staff – watch Nicola Lacey’s Teaching Day keynote online from 10am http://ow.ly/1Moo6 (LSE login required) #lsetd10

@lseclt: First session is the keynote by Nicola Lacey Teaching Skills through Substance starting soon in Sheikh Zayed #lsetd10

Asking

15% of the updates were questions:

@NanaChatzi: #lsetd10 how do we assess effectiveness of P-S?

@authenticdasein: most imp question of the day – what shall I wear for #lsetd10?

Promotion of the Backchannel

The use of twitter for backchannel communication at #lsetd10 was promoted by running two pre-conference workshops (slides) and a flyer in the delegate pack as well as making sure the tag was included in emails, on the website & mentioned in the welcome speech.  During the event we also used visibletweets.com to display updates on various plasma screens at the venue.

* The statistics in this post are based solely on the 249 updates that were tweeted during the event.

Photo © Chris Fryer 2010

June 25th, 2010|Events & Workshops (LTI), Social Media, Syndicated, Teaching & Learning|Comments Off on Twitter at LSE Teaching Day|

LSE Teaching Day

LSE Teaching Day 2010Last week was LSE Teaching Day, which was the second time we ran an event focusing on good practice in teaching for LSE staff. The day was opened by Dr Jonathan Leape who is the Course Director for LSE100, the new core course for undergraduates, which teaches them to ‘think like a social scientist’. Jonathan gave us an overview of lessons learnt from the pilot this year and spoke of the challenges of running a core course. These include the heterogeneity of the students, coming from different disciplines in the school, but also the diverse nature of the teachers on the course. He talked about the extensive teacher training that has been undertaken for the course tutors, the need to promote active learning and raise student engagement and the importance of feedback and evaluation from staff and students involved in the course. The course has used a variety of new technologies, including audio feedback, lecture capture, PRS and texting of ‘muddy points’ from lectures. In addition Moodle is used to provide support and resources.

Our keynote was given by Professor Nicola Lacey, from the Department of Law, who told us she was going to be controversial. She talked about the skills agenda and asked whether teaching skills was at cross purposes with research led teaching at LSE. She asked why there was a pressure to teach skills now, and gave us four reasons for this, which she emphasised were her beliefs and not based on research. Her reason included changes in schools and education, the expansion of higher education, the emphasis on research (which has led to less emphasis on teaching) in universities and the reaction of universities to student surveys. Interestingly she didn’t mention technology, which I would have seen as underpinning all these factors. Nicola believed that teaching quality is actually far higher now than ever before, but felt students have heightened expectations of what university education can give them. She also questioned the value of lecture capture, believing it can make lecturers more cautious, and students more inclined to see the lecture as being a definitive tool for revision – rather than reading books and journal articles. She also worried about hyperlinking every reading in Moodle, seeing this as spoonfeeding . She finished by illustrating how they are dealing with this in the Law department, by developing a skills module for students embedded into the core course for undergraduates. Resources are available in Moodle and there are lectures about study skills and surgeries for students who need help with essay writing.

We then went into parallel sessions and I was involved in a debate with colleagues Dr Claire Gordon, Dr Ernestina Coast and two students, where we debated whether we were teaching the Google Generation. We started by playing the Michael Wesch video: A vision of Students Today. Claire then introduced the session and talked about what the Google Generation might be, and what are the characteristics of this generation. I spoke about my experience of teaching information skills at LSE, including the areas where students seem to struggle – with citing and referencing, with good searching, with knowing how to find scholarly sources. Each of the panel talked for a few minutes and we then took questions from the floor. It was a fascinating session which Claire and I hoped would start a debate over the support and training that students at LSE might need, and what assumptions teachers might make about them in terms of what they know (often incorrectly).

Other sessions I attended during the day included, ‘Using social software tools for teaching Geography’ by Dr Hyun Shin. He had used an amazing range of tools to engage his students, from making his own You Tube videos, to using Facebook and Google groups. His research on cities and urban processes in south east Asia could be shared beyond LSE using many of the tools, and he felt Moodle could be quite restrictive. He was a keen advocate of open access.

The final session I attended was the Lecture Capture debate, where an academic and student took opposing sides to discuss the motion ‘This House Deplores Lecture Capture’. Dr Michael Cox from International Relations, argued that lecture capture was a bad thing while Dr Tim Leunig from Economic History argued it was a good thing. It was a light hearted look at what has been vexing many staff at LSE and is the subject of some research that CLT are currently undertaking. Students generally like lecture capture, but for a range of reasons some staff are opposed to it.

The day ended with a presentation of teaching excellence awards and a wine reception on the eighth floor of our New Academic Building. Well done to my colleague Athina and everyone who made the day interesting and good fun.

May 25th, 2010|Events & Workshops (LTI), Research Skills, Teaching & Learning|Comments Off on LSE Teaching Day|

Second Life exhibition: Déja vu?

Next week  CLT are supporting the LSE’s first Exhibition in Second Life.  The Déja vu? exhibition is being organised by the students & teachers of  the  French Language & Society course (LN330) as part of the 10th  anniversary celebrations of the LSE Language Centre.

The exhibition will be held on Thursday 25th February from 4pm onwards on the LSE CLT island Castor’s Retreat.  It will  feature work by Michel Herreria, a Bordeaux-based French visual artist with whom the French language team have been collaborating since 2003.

Attending the Exhibition

Déja vu? is open to everyone.  If you would like to attend you will need to create an avatar and arrange access to the Second Life in advance of the exhibition.  Full instructions & support

If you already have an avatar & access to second life you can visit the exhibition here:
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Castors%20Retreat/198/68/25

What is Second Life?

Second Life is a 3-D virtual world. It is created and inhabited by avatars, 3-D representations which can walk, talk, fly and interact with each other. Second Life replicates many activities of the real world, there are shops (and a currency!), museums, conference centres and much more. The vast majority of UK Higher Education institutions now have a presence in Second Life, for some this is purely a marketing exercise but for many it is a location for teaching & learning.

Second Life allows students to immerse themselves into a character, via their avatar and is an ideal platform for simulations and role-playing activities. It also provides an opportunity to explore virtual locations around the world including museums, art galleries, historic buildings & events.  As with next week’s exhibition it can be used to host events that involve participants from outside the LSE community.

February 22nd, 2010|Announcements, Events & Workshops (LTI), Teaching & Learning, Tools & Technologies|Comments Off on Second Life exhibition: Déja vu?|

Presenting Prezi

I was reminded on Friday by the ever-innovative LSE Careers Service that I never shared my attempt at using Prezi, so here it is.  I’d seen it used at a couple of events earlier in the year so when I was preparing for this year’s new academics induction I thought I’d give it a go for my Social Software in Teaching slot.

While it’s nice to sit in a presentation where PowerPoint doesn’t feature I’m not wholly convinced by Prezi.  My main gripe is that I found it incredibly fiddly to use.  It took me a long time to put this together, OK it was my first attempt, but I’m not sure it was worth it.  The main advantage it seems,  putting the occasionally sea-sickness inducing animation aside for now, is that it doesn’t need to be a linear presentation.  It’s very easy to jump around and as most of my presentation could have been in any order I let the audience decide!

The LSE Careers Service Prezi I saw on Friday is below.

CLT has moved to S169

At the end of last week CLT left its home of 9 years and moved all the way across the corridor to S169. The main office is a tiny bit bigger and more open plan (and a bit noisier), but we now have a dedicated demonstration/training/meeting room. Watch this space for news of an informal ‘housewarming’ sometime in the near future.

October 5th, 2009|Events & Workshops (LTI)|Comments Off on CLT has moved to S169|

LSE Teaching Day – book your place

LSE teaching day logoAs you may have heard, the first LSE Teaching Day will take place on Tuesday 9 June. School director Howard Davies will open the proceedings, which will include a programme of workshops, seminars and panel discussions including innovative approaches to teaching and the latest technologies and resources for staff.

The main speech of the day will be given by Dr Jonathan Leape, senior lecturer in Economics, on ‘Thinking Like A Social Scientist’. Professor Janet Hartley, LSE pro-director, will close the event with a presentation of the Teaching Excellence Awards at a wine reception.

Response has been good and there are a limited number of places left. To book your place and view the full programme, visit www.lse.ac.uk/teachingday. Registration closes on Thursday 28 May.

May 15th, 2009|Events & Workshops (LTI), Teaching & Learning|Comments Off on LSE Teaching Day – book your place|

Blogging Course Re-arranged

The “Blogging for beginners” course that was postponed due to the inclement weather has been re-arranged for Tuesday 24th February.  See Workshops & Courses for further details and online booking.  There are also a few spaces left on:

  • Friday 13th Feb – Introduction to Twitter and micro-blogging
  • Weds 25th Feb – Introduction to e-resources and e-journals for staff
  • Monday 2nd March – Collaborative writing with wikis and Google docs
February 11th, 2009|Events & Workshops (LTI)|Comments Off on Blogging Course Re-arranged|