Landing : Athabascau University

Activity

  • Jon Dron uploaded the file Athabasca Sign February 6, 2011 - 11:13am
    By Carmen Southgate
  • Jon Dron commented on the file AU Frosting in the group Friends of the Landing February 4, 2011 - 6:46pm
    Thanks Carmen! I rather like the bits of snow on the lens - I think they should stay. There's definitely a future picture opportunity to be had with that speed limit. If only it were also of the sign the Terry snapped the other day with the missing...
  • Jon Dron commented on the file AU Frosting in the group Friends of the Landing February 4, 2011 - 3:34pm
    I'd like to make this the picture for next week (with very minor tweaking and resizing) - would you have any objection to this Carmen? You need to be OK with making it publicly available. If that's fine with you I'll add it to the front page! Do...
  • Jon Dron uploaded the file Analogue Literacies (large PowerPoint file) February 3, 2011 - 3:16pm
    Presentation slides in PowerPoint format for my visit to CODE 2011. A big download of about 12-13MB. This is about how to build technologies that reduce the need for digital literacy, which I suggest to be a fuzzy and not very useful concept in the...
  • Jon Dron uploaded the file Analogue Literacies February 1, 2011 - 4:28pm
    This is my presentation for CODE 2011 in Japan (4MB download, PDF). It's about why digital literacy is a useless concept because of the nature of technology and how it evolves. Basically, digital technologies change too much, too fast and there's...
  • Jon Dron commented on the file blurry picture of Landing users January 31, 2011 - 1:29pm
    Would be good - those are pics that I took on my iPhone so they not great. Terry took a great pic of the Athabasca niversity sign the other day we might use -'the only thing missing is u' as a caption? But I like the idea of cycling images on the...
  • Jon Dron commented on the file blurry picture of Landing users January 31, 2011 - 11:05am
    Or these?
  • Jon Dron uploaded the file Athabasca Glacier (small image) January 31, 2011 - 11:02am
    Snapshot of Athabasca Glacier (photo by Jon Dron)
  • Jon Dron uploaded the file blurry picture of Landing users January 31, 2011 - 10:36am
    Temporary pic for the welcome page
    Comments
    • Jon Dron January 31, 2011 - 11:05am

      Or these?

      image

      image

    • Stuart Berry January 31, 2011 - 11:09am

      Are there picture closer to Athabasca that might be equally impressive?

    • Jon Dron January 31, 2011 - 1:29pm

      Would be good - those are pics that I took on my iPhone so they not great.

      Terry took a great pic of the Athabasca niversity sign the other day we might use -'the only thing missing is u' as a caption?

      But I like the idea of cycling images on the front page and inviting people to submit their own. The only requirement would be that they are relevant to the Landing in some way and people wouldn't mind them being public. Maybe Friends of the Landing  could pick their favourites and we could send out Landing gifts to the lucky winners?

  • Jon Dron created a wiki page Logging in in the group The Landing Help Community January 24, 2011 - 2:41pm
    The Landing is a closed community, though members may share anything they create on it with the rest of the world. You must have an Athabasca University user ID on the system,  or be an invited guest, to log in. If you log in to...
  • Jon Dron created a wiki page Your first visit to the Landing in the group The Landing Help Community January 24, 2011 - 2:06pm
    Welcome to The Landing Athabasca Landing has many of the features of social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace. However, it is better able to control privacy settings and allow you to connect with and to create groups with members of the...
  • Jon Dron created a wiki page Getting to know the Landing in the group The Landing Help Community January 24, 2011 - 2:03pm
    The Landing offers a huge range of facilties for you to share things with others, make connections with people, communicate,  and form communities. This is a very brief overview of some of the main features, but is not comprehensive. Do feel...
  • An interesting article (thanks to Mary Pringle for alerting me to this). The claimed finding is that fact retrieval is improved through taking tests. Or, to put it another way that better reflects what is actually being researched here, taking...
  • Jon Dron commented on a bookmark Multitasking: The Brain Seeks Novelty January 10, 2011 - 10:35am
    @Brian - I think so, for some things, in some ways, though the devil is in the detail. To engage in a learning experience is, by definition, to encounter the novel. I'm far from convinced that we should over-stress that in the learning process (see...
  • Jon Dron bookmarked Multitasking: The Brain Seeks Novelty January 9, 2011 - 10:16am
    This is your brain on Twitter/facebook/email/iPhone/TV/crack cocaine. Very simple and what should be an obvious message for site designers in online learning: never show exactly the same page twice. In learning we move from one novelty to the...
    Comments
    • Brian Stewart January 9, 2011 - 11:35am

      Jon

      If I have got this correctly, the doing itself facilitates the learning experience as it enables content absorption through bits of content attaching themselves to the dopamine flowing among neurons, metaphorically speaking.

      To take this a little further, does this lead to the suggestion that providing a continuous series of learning activities would likely be more successful than the approach of a text with a couple of assignments? 

       

    • Mary Pringle January 10, 2011 - 9:46am

      Note that the researcher is concerned with how we can keep ourselves from being novelty-seeking zombies. I'm not denying the benefit of multiple activities in a course and of using various techniques to engage learners. I'm saying, though, that the 'discipline' part of academic disciplines does often require an act of the will to focus attention on something in a way that does not come naturally to us.  I want to support learners in every way, including the understanding that many things worth pursuing do not come easily or naturally.

    • Jon Dron January 10, 2011 - 10:35am

      @Brian - I think so, for some things, in some ways, though the devil is in the detail. To engage in a learning experience is, by definition, to encounter the novel. I'm far from convinced that we should over-stress that in the learning process (see Mary's point) as another really important part of the process is to do with anchoring it in what we already know. Indeed, in vaguely Socratic mode, a lot of the process is not to do with learning things that are novel but in creating novel connections between things we already know, seeing how things fit together and constructing models in our heads/bodies. Plus, a lot of what matters in some forms of learning is to do with repetition (albeit with gradual change implied) to improve: practice in music and sports, say. My ambitions are a little lowlier here...

      I think this research is potentially useful because it gives a bit more basis for ways we might encourage and motivate learners through simple design choices in the learning environment. One of the things that a linear book naturally provides, but a hierarchical hypertext doesn't, is continual change - a good book makes you want to move on to the next page. In a typical LMS implementation, where what we initially encounter on every visit is more often than not  exactly what we encountered last time, we are often wasting an opportunity to capture the viewer's interest at exactly the point it would be most useful. Sure, we could think of its static form as being a little like a book's front cover, but it has the affordance to be more than that. It doesn't have to take much: apart from obvious techniques like my discussion forum edict, we can include stuff like random glossary entries, RSS feeds and announcements to help pique interest. I've always done that kind of thing because, intuitively, it seemed like a good idea to sustain a sense of involvement and engagement. This little bit of research suggests there's a good basis for doing it in brain science and, while deliberate manipulation of an addiction response might be touching on grey ethical ground, there are few things more motivating than withdrawal symptoms! Of course, taking Mary's point, it should be done with care: the novelty should be aligned with intended learning, not just to keep learners addicted to the site :-)

      @Mary - yes, I like the zombie image! And I agree that this is only a tiny part of the story of how we should help learners. However, the whole point of teaching is to make learning easier than it would be without it. If we can reduce the need for willpower to engage in the first place, then the rest of the battle should be that much easier. Aiming for maximal novelty is probably not helpful and it has to be constructively aligned, but anything we can do to help people overcome inertia, fear or ennui is probably a useful thing.

  • Jon Dron uploaded the file very small Landing logo January 6, 2011 - 4:15pm
    for general use on the landing site
  • Jon Dron bookmarked The Educational Benefit of Ugly Fonts January 5, 2011 - 7:54pm
    Disfluency turns out to be rather good: people seem to learn better from things that are harder to read. Time to rethink those strategies about always making things as easy and clear as possible!
    Comments
  • Why did it take so long? Internet Exploder is about passable nowadays but not even close to best of breed and the extreme lack of trust in it that Microsoft meticulously cultivated over a decade or more should have put it to bed much sooner. Despite...
  • Big numbers. Very big numbers. Open courseware has been wonderful for MIT and wonderful for learners around the world. The costs of infrastructure to support this may be high but the payoffs seem more than worth it.
  • Fascinating: I particularly like 'the best way to avoid failure is to fail constantly' - that one took a moment to absorb but makes great sense.