Archive for April, 2009

Faculty workshops focus on teaching and new technologies

April 30th, 2009 by Amy Campbell

CIT is offering our annual series of workshops for faculty and GSIs, May 6-12, 2009. These are shifted a little later than usual, to allow us to include some workshops on the new Blackboard 8 system, after it’s upgraded on May 10.

Themes of our 20 workshops this year include:

  • teaching and learning with visuals (PowerPoint, digital storytelling, VoiceThread),
  • classroom techniques (using student groups, lecturing effectively, teaching in flexible classrooms),
  • digital media projects (using Flip video cameras, intro to digital video and iMovie),
  • library resources for research and teaching (in Public Policy, Political Science, Women’s Studies, and using images in academic work),
  • Blackboard 8 and its tools (intro sessions for new users, Wimba Voice Tools, Bb 8 new features).

A lunch “technology buffet” will allow registrants to choose two of three short show-n-tell sessions focused on Web 2.0 tools, designed to give you a taste of what these tools are about (Twitter, flickr, blogs, online bookmark tools, YouTube….and more!)

There are still spaces available, so register now!
Registration and more information at http://cit.duke.edu/events/may2009.html.

CIT Showcase: Continue the conversation!

April 30th, 2009 by Andrea Novicki

Want to catch up with sessions you missed?  The 2009 Center for Instructional Technology Showcase site is still available, and some of the presenters have shared their materials, which we’ve linked to the the session descriptions.  Find out what people were tweeting about during the Showcase, and continue the conversation.   Got some new ideas for your course?  Call us to talk about them!

Student view of Blackboard upgrade

April 29th, 2009 by Andrea Novicki

At Duke,  Blackboard will be upgraded from version 6.3 to version 8, to ensure support from Blackboard Inc. for our system.  While this upgrade is taking place, Blackboard will be unavailable for three days, from May 7, 2009 at 6 p.m. through May 10, 2009 at 6 p.m.

How will this upgrade affect students?  Depending on how an instructor uses Blackboard, students may not notice a difference. The major changes are in the grade center, which has been completely redesigned from the instructor view.  Other changes include additional features in the discussion board.

Students who tested the new version of Blackboard were unconcerned about the upgrade.  Here’s what they said:

The new display isn’t very different from the original user interface.  Other than the comments, everything else looks basically the same, so I didn’t have any trouble adjusting.

It’s not that complicated. Anyone who is familiar with version 6 will be fine with the new version.

I find the interface pretty intuitive to use.

(more…)

CIT Showcase: The Twitter backchannel

April 27th, 2009 by Shawn Miller

No doubt, many attendees noted the increased use of iPhones, iPod Touches, netbooks and laptops during this year’s CIT Instructional Technology Showcase. Chances are, many of those using mobile devices (even during presentations) were participating in the discussion going on in the micro-blogging tool Twitter. We used Twitter to provide an additional layer to the conference conversation. Didn’t get to attend that session? No problem – someone on Twitter wrote several tweets detailing it. Didn’t get to ask that question? Post it on the Twitter feed, and others just might respond.

Conference attendees who wanted to add to the Twitter discussion simply had to add a “hash tag” to the end of their tweets. For the Showcase, the designated hash tag was “#cit09″. Any time this tag was added to a tweet, other conference attendees would be able to see the tweet in the Twitter stream. To watch the Twitter stream, attendees visited http://search.twitter.com and searched for #cit09. Here’s a direct link you can use to visit the feed, and click back through the pages of results to read all of the comments and conversation(s).

If you started using Twitter at the Showcase, or already use it, follow DukeCIT for our most recent updates and info. Also keep your eye on the Showcase website, which we’ll be updating very soon with more video, images, and other content from the Showcase.

Presentation on ‘Wired’ course

April 23rd, 2009 by Randy Riddle

Caroline Bruzelius, Sheila Dillon, Mark Olson, Rachael Brady, and Raquel Salvatella will discuss their experiences from this spring in teaching the course “Wired: New Representation Technologies for Historical Materials” and how the course model can be extended for future courses or programs.

The presentation will be held at 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 29 at the Smith Warehouse, 2nd floor Bay 11, (enter through Bay 12).

You can find more information about their course at their website.  The course also received funding from the CIT as part of our 2009 Strategic Initiative Grant program and was profiled on the CIT’s Project Examples blog.

Blackboard upgrade is imminent!

April 17th, 2009 by Andrea Novicki

Duke University will upgrade Blackboard from version 6.3 to version 8.0.  During the conversion, from Thursday, May 7 at 6 pm through Sunday, May 10 at 6 pm, Blackboard will not be available.  After that, say hello to Blackboard 8.0!  All of your materials stored on Blackboard will be transferred to the new version and will be available after the upgrade.  Course sites for Fall 2009 will be created after the upgrade, in the last week of May.  However, an instructor may request a course site (requires Duke net id) at any time.

Overall, the new version of Blackboard looks and acts similarly to our previous version, and some people may not notice any change at all.  Those who use the gradebook (renamed Grade Center to reflect changes) and the Discussion Board will notice the biggest changes.

This upgrade is to ensure that Blackboard, Inc. will continue to provide support for our system.

Where instructors can get help:

Virtual Worlds: Libraries, Education and Museums Conference

April 17th, 2009 by Randy Riddle

The Alliance Library System, a consortium of libraries in Illinois, is sponsoring the second annual online “Virtual Worlds: Libraries, Education and Museums Conference” on April 24-25, 2009.

The conference aims to be a gathering place for librarians, educators and others to explore new opportunities for education and outreach in virtual worlds.  Some of the topics at this year’s conference include:

  • The Immersive Virtual Natural History Experience
  • Virtual Heritage Preservation, An Unfulfilled American Necessity
  • Visual Representation of Chemical Data in Virtual Worlds
  • Planning an Event in Second Life
  • History-Related Sites and Museums in Second Life: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Keynote speakers are Jeremy Kemp, San Jose State University, discussing his project connecting Moodle and Second Life and Bryan Carter from the University of Central Missouri who developed Virtual Harlem, Virtual Montmarte and other islands in Second Life.  Anders Gronstedt, a consultant who works will Dell, Sun and other companies and who has written for the Harvard Business Review, will discuss how businesses use virtual worlds to improve workplace performance.

Registration is $49 and you can find out more information on the event at their website, http://www.alliancelibraries.info/virtualworlds .

Twitter, blogs and wikis in a film course

April 16th, 2009 by Randy Riddle

Digital Paper Cuts features an interview with Duke faculty member Negar Mottahedeh discussing how she uses social media in her classes.  An assistant professor in the Program in Literature, Motthedeh teaches and introductory film class and has students post papers each week on blogs for peer review and comment and use tools such as wikis to assemble basic research material for the course.

As an end of the semester group project, her class held a Twitter Film Festival, screening clips from films on a course blog and using the microblogging tool Twitter to comment on the films as they were shown throughout the day.  The students were also encouraged to use Twitter during the course to discuss the lectures.

In the video, Mottahedeh discusses her philosophy behind using Twitter and social media tools in the course and her experiences getting used to the technology.  The shared Twitter account used for the festival can be found at http://twitter.com/twitfilm and the hashtag #twitfilm.  The Twitter Film Festival was also highlighted in a Duke News story.


Twitter Film Festival in Duke Film Studies Class from Jeff Cohen on Vimeo.

Course wiki facilitates student participation and course design

April 8th, 2009 by Andrea Novicki

At 4:05, when ENV 186S/PubPol 187 is scheduled to end, students enthusiastically continue their discussion, not noticing the time.  Students all contribute, and learn from each other’s experience.

Dr. Rafe Sagarin enthusiastically described how he designed his first undergraduate course at Duke, “From Water to Washington: Marine Science and Policy.” This capstone course serves students with a diversity of backgrounds and majors; this diversity has been transformed from a challenge to a benefit. Dr. Sagarin adapted a method used for professional meetings with diverse participants, called Open Space Technology, in which the participants direct the agenda.

How?  On the first day of class, he gave the students large sticky notes to answer the following three questions: 1) what are you excited about in this course?  2) what do you want to learn about? and 3) what can you teach the class about?  He organized the notes into themes on the board, and his course outline emerged.  The general plan is that students teach other students what they want to know.  In places where the answers to questions 2 and 3 did not overlap, he filled in gaps with lectures.

The course is organized on the wiki within Blackboard.  Each person in the class facilitates a class period.  This student creates a new wiki page, with a description and a link to a selected article.  All of the students are required to read the article, and to contribute a paper, website or YouTube video with a brief explanation that relates to the topic on the wiki page.  Then, for each class meeting, almost every student has something to say. Although students are only required to read the assigned article, they often read each other’s contributions and make connections in class.

Dr. Sagarin says the technology has allowed him to get all of the students involved in the course in a way that was not possible previously.  The wiki offers accountability – he can tell instantly who has contributed.  He finds there are not many technical difficulties; only one student can edit at a time, and sometimes the student-contributed links do not work as they should.

In this course, both students and the instructor are learning enthusiastically.  Dr. Sagarin observed that students are much better presenters than when he was a student.  His students are poised, clear, polished and skilled at leading discussions and soliciting contributions, and he has learned from them.  He points out that the student contributions bring a much wider scope of work into the discussion than he would ever be able to.  It’s a great example of successful use of “the wisdom of crowds,” also famously leveraged by Michael Wesch, who points out that collectively, students bring a tremendous amount of knowledge to the classroom and that it should be used.  Dr. Sagarin is proud of what his students bring to his classroom and what he has learned from them.

Resources

Using the wiki in Blackboard

Using blogs and wikis in the classroom

How to organize your course with a wiki

Grading student contributions (parts 1 and 2)

OIT to hold media services focus groups

April 6th, 2009 by Amy Campbell

OIT’s Academic Services group will hold a series of four faculty and student focus groups to obtain feedback on current OIT digital media services. All sessions are in Perkins 217:

  • Friday, April 10th 2009: 2:00PM – 4:00PM (light refreshments will be served)
  • Wednesday, April 15th, 2009: 2:00PM – 4:00PM (light refreshments will be served)
  • Thursday, April 16th, 2009: 12:00PM – 2:00PM (light lunch will be served)
  • Friday, April 17th, 2009: 7:00PM – 9:00PM (pizza will be served)

We encourage faculty to register, and to pass this on to their students!

Sign up for these sessions here: http://oit.duke.edu/dms/rsvp.html.