Archive for the 'learning space design' Category
rutgers announces writers house
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpq1yZOrtYA
Update 10/24: An uncut, extended version has been leaked:
Posted by
Bill on
October 21st, 2007 .
Filed under:
academia, instructional technology, learning space design, pedagogy, spaces, teaching |
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1 of 1 million on facebook
Last weekend, after reflecting on the fact that I talk about it all the time with students regardless of what class I am teaching, I decided to take the plunge and get a Facebook account. According to the fascinating Wired article, “How Mark Zuckerberg Turned Facebook Into the Web’s Hottest Platform,” I was 1 of 1 million new users in the last week, and among the fastest growing user population:
As for those concerns that Facebook’s membership had peaked? Well, now
it’s signing up nearly 1 million new users a week. By the end of August
there were 36 million of them. And these aren’t just the tweens or
college kids you might suspect; the fastest-growing segment of Facebook
users is over 35, a group that represents 11 percent of all site users.
Total registrations have more than quadrupled over the previous year.
The number of employees has tripled, as has revenue. And venture
capitalists say that if Facebook were to go public today, investors
would value it at more than $5 billion — five times what Yahoo had been
prepared to pay.
To say that I have found Facebook intoxicating would be an understatement. I am addicted.
Posted by
Bill on
October 14th, 2007 .
Filed under:
classification, instructional technology, learning space design, mapping, spaces |
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mapping routes on campus
The August 17, 2007, issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education has a story by Scott Carlson called “An Anthropologist in the Library” which details a study conducted by Nancy Fried Foster at the University of Rochester. Foster specializes in work-practice theory and the anthropology of work. The study was designed to learn more about how students spent their time on campus: where they write papers and do homework, what tools they use to help them complete tasks, what else they are doing while doing their work, and so forth. Study results have “helped guide a library renovation, influenced a Web-site redesign, led to changes in the way the library markets itself to students, and, in some cases, completely changed the image of undergraduates in the eyes of Rochester librarians.”
One important portion of the study asked students to map their routes on campus on a typical campus, noting the order of the routes, the time they arrived at a particular location, and the time they left:

They also asked students to collaborate on the design of new library spaces:

This study is an exemplar of what can be achieved in learning space designs when students are (administrators allow them to be) the driving force of change.
On a related note . . . a recent post by Jim Brown on the CWRL’s Blogging Pedagogy, describes an assignment-in-the-works where students will map the borders in their lives using Flickr and Google MyMaps. Jim provides a link to his own mapped borders. My Maps Plus now offers the ability to embed Google MyMaps into any web page.
Posted by
Bill on
August 24th, 2007 .
Filed under:
learning space design, mapping |
No Comments »
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