Tag: nptech

Birmingham Bloggers I think we have a target:

Dave Harte - picture from aeioux on Flickr

For at least 3 years now Dave Harte from Digital Central has been supporting the digital media industry in Brum. Now it’s time to return the favour.

Dave is running the London Marathon next week. He’s been long on training but short on fundraising. Last year he raised £495 for St Mary’s Hospice in 3 months. Now he needs your help to repeat that trick but in 6 days. Why the Hospice…

They deal with those people who are coming to the end of their life and work hard to make those lives and the lives of the people around them a tiny bit more bearable. I’ve not had close dealings with them but I see their building on virtually every training run I do and as I’ve said before I feel a certain elation when I do as it represents the end of a climb and only a mile and a half to home.Have a read of their website to see the full scope of what they do but I think they’re worth the money. So let’s see how we get on. 7 days and counting. Updates on here and on Twitter.

Dave’s job is to run 26 and a bit miles. Ours is to raise £495 before he does his bit. I know which I think is easier! You can donate online here or using this widget (which sometimes doesn’t work) – which of course can also live on your blog.

Google University and the AI Campus, the future of learning?

Future types of study for universities.

Really interesting piece from Tony Hirst at the OU here which explores potential futures of learning. Among four options illustrated above two stuck out for me:

The ‘Google university’ differs from the easyUniversity in terms of student autonomy. The Google university envisions a world of rich materials, which students search for themselves. Far from being pre-packaged, these materials lend themselves to a variety of uses, and students locate and sequence these materials by means of automatic facilities that parse and interpret text, images, usage histories, ratings given by others and correlations with successful learning outcomes. The Google university is based on information and gives the student much autonomy.

Finally, the ‘AI campus’ scenario focuses on student learning from thoroughgoing intellectual engagement. Like the Google university, there is high student autonomy; but unlike the Google university, learning comes directly from the feedback provided by open-ended projects, experiments, simulations and gameworlds, rather than from documents or media clips. The AI campus shares with the professional school a concern to facilitate experience, but since the focus is not so clearly vocational, the AI campus emphasises student autonomy over mastery of predefined knowledge and skills. The AI campus is based on experience and gives the student some autonomy.

I’m finding that my work is increasingly like a combination of these two. Indeed most of the most interesting work will be. If we are to take part in a open education revolution then what skills do people need to have to handle this? I’d say that good educators will help people nurture focus and discipline.

Update: I didn’t expect to update this within minutes of posting, but David Wilcox over at his new blog and as part of the sicamp (why did I miss this? I was invited – doh!) asks about supporting personal learning. This is the comment I’ve left there:

David can you please stop having thoughts like mine but in different places at the same time. I hope you don’t mind me linking to something I blogged 10 mins ago? If not then please read this:

http://podnosh.com/blog/2008/04/05/google-university-and-the-ai-campus-the-future-of-learning/

I think the structures of personal learning are easy to understand and establish. As always success is a question of culture. How can we support each other to have the focus and discipline to excel at something?

Antonio Gould (a particular social media talent who hangs out in Birmingham and London) has been pursuing a
collaborative personal mba for a while:


Urban Obsessives or Civic Revolutionaries, they still look much like this…

Uban Obsessive

Take a good look at this picture. It is full of what I would call ordinary folk. None of them appear to be super heroes, to fit the heroic mould we have created for our social entrepreneurs and active citizens.

They are David Barrie’s fellow “bloody minded obsessives” who have collaborated on this urban project. He tells us

there are about ten people missing from the shot but this picture includes community leaders, an architect, a property developer, a former school cook and a janitor who won an Order of the British Empire – in part for her commitment to the cause. Every town or city in the world has such a group.

Dejan calls them urban obsessives.

Doug Henton of Collaborative Economics has a positive, more romantic catch-all description of the cadre.

He calls them civic revolutionaries.

I mention it simply because it is people such as these that populate the stories of the Grassroots Channel Podcast. You can see some of the pictures of these folk on our flickr account. More than 50 stories almost all from Birmingham. That’s a lot of bloody-minded urban obsessive civic revolutionaries for one city – but I know we’ve only just scratched the surface.