Web 2.0

Naujienos

reAct project International Conference 2012

23 Liepa 2012

The reAct project final conference, which brings this two year project to a close, will bring together a group of projects to discuss experiences and results centred around the main axes of the work done in the project. These are creativity and autonomy as facilitators of intrinsic motivation, and the challenges involved in integrating new approaches in traditional curricular contexts, which most innovative projects face. The conference will be a forum for these projects to share their perceptions around these axes and derive some conclusions.

 

The reAct Project - International Conference:

“Empowering teachers and learners for a digital world”

will be held in Valencia (Spain) on October 10, 2012.

 

ReAct, re-activating teachers and learners, is a transnational European project within the Lifelong Learning Programme of the European Union, KA3 (ICT). The project duration is from 01/01/2011 to 31/12/2012. The project website is at http://www.reactproject.eu

The percentage of youth who do not complete compulsory education is a significant social problem in Europe and one of the main challenges of professionals in training is promoting the intrinsic motivation of students. There is a huge disconnect between educational programs and what students expect to learn or see as relevant to their lives.

The goal of reAct is to develop a methodology based on enhancing the autonomy, creativity and collaboration of students and teachers through ICT tools including web 2.0, with a view to facilitating the development of learner motivation, and to explore how to integrate this innovation into existing educational programs.

The reAct project final conference, which brings this two year project to a close, will bring together a group of projects to discuss experiences and results centred around the main axes of the work done in the project. These are creativity and autonomy as facilitators of intrinsic motivation, and the challenges involved in integrating new approaches in traditional curricular contexts, which most innovative projects face. The conference will be a forum for these projects to share their perceptions around these axes and derive some conclusions. 

The structure of the reAct International Conference includes two keynote speeches. The first of these by Wim Veen (University of Delft, NL) will focus on innovation in the classroom, the other will be by Lieve van den Brand (European Commission, responsible for educational policy design)will look at educational innovation from a policy perspective. These will be followed by three round tables on creativity, autonomy, and innovation. Finally a brief presentation of the conclusions of the discussions will be made. 

The conference is to be webstreamed and the videos will be available later on in the project website http://www.reactproject.eu/conference_en/online-conference/

Projektai

Web2LLP

23 Gegužė 2012

The European Commission supported project Web2LLP was launched on 1 January 2012, with the aim to boost dissemination strategies of LLP projects through providing personalised support and training on the integration of  social media, as well as through identifying best-practices and sharing resources, resulting in more coherent, participatory and sustainable project activities in the European lifelong learning area.

 

Social media (or web 2.0 tools) are instruments allowing people to build social and business connections, share information and collaborate on projects online, empowering a variety of human activity involving learning, interaction, collaboration, knowledge building and economic growth.
The dissemination of projects' outcomes with a view to optimise their value is a key element of LLP projects and although social media marketing is an emergent and flourishing area specialising in boosting promotion of activities and companies through viral networking tools, LLP project teams often do not take up social media in their web strategies. This may be due to a variety of factors  including  a lack of understanding of the different tools not enough time to customise their web strategy or they may not have access to appropriate guidance and support on how to put in pace an effective web strategy.
Web2LLP will address this need by:

  • providing customised training, based on a bottom-up approach which is mindful to the needs of each project
  • raising the visibility of innovative good practice in the use of social media practices and
  • creating a common understanding as to how social media can be used as part of an effective dissemination strategies amongst LLP projects.

 

More information about the project and project partners is available on the Web2LLP home page.

Join the Web2LLP Diigo Group to share resources, post comments and collaborate.

Renginiai

eLearning 2.0 conference 2012

21 Gegužė 2012

The Fourth eLearning 2.0 conference aims to explore Technology-enhanced Learning in the context of Web 2.0 and social media including Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, Wikis and YouTube. It will be held on 7th and 8th June 2012 in Brunel Business School.

It brings together international Education, Information Systems and Technology-enhanced Learning researchers and practitioners to participate in sharing ideas and to enjoy the exciting surroundings of the historical capital of the UK – London.

Themes include: evolving pedagogies for Web 2.0, security, privacy, social networking, podcasting, wikis, blogging, video sharing, screencasting, folksonomies, eLearning 2.0 and people with disabilities, the potential impact of eLearning 2.0 on the Third World, creativity and Web 2.0, Human-Computer Interaction, and Business.

 

The deadline for submitting abstracts ahs already passed, but for more information about the format of the conference and how to register, click here.

Naujienos

MEDEA Awards 2012

16 Balandis 2012

Annual competition to reward excellence and creativity in media in education.

Aim of the MEDEA Awards

The aim of the MEDEA Awards is to encourage innovation and good practice in the use of media (audio, video, graphics and animation) in education. The awards also recognise and promote excellence in the production and pedagogical design of media-rich learning resources.

In recent years there has been remarkable interest in the creation and use of digital video and audio in education, boosted by the increasing impact of multimedia and video based websites and applications on the internet and mobile devices. The pedagogical vision is clear: it is only when video and audio are routine components of education and online learning, that we will have an educational environment that reflects the media-rich world in which our learners now live.

Participation Guidelines

Before submitting a multimedia project or production, we strongly recommend that you read the Judging Criteria to understand what the judges are specifically looking for and the criteria they will use when judging your submission, as well as the Terms & Conditions of submission, where you will find the rules for participation in the MEDEA Awards. Read also the important Copyright Information page.

Entries need to be submitted via the online submission form and sent to arrive at the MEDEA Secretariat via post, e-mail or fax before the closing date: 17 September 2012 (midnight). All finalists will be notified in the beginning of November and will be invited to take part in the awards ceremony taking place during the Media & Learning Conference 2012, where the final winners will be announced.

MEDEA Awards 2012

  • The MEDEA Award for User-Generated Educational Media 2012
    This award honours the best entry submitted by teachers, students, learners, parents, professors, individual or organisational representatives in primary education, secondary education, higher education, adult education, vocational education and/or training.
  • The MEDEA Award for Professionally Produced Educational Media 2012
    This award will be awarded to the best professional educational media produced by a professional company or semi-professional production unit such as a broadcaster, professional multimedia producer or publisher, professional web design company, audiovisual or media department in larger institutions or organisations such as universities, government departments, companies, multinational institutions and organisations, etc.
  • The Special Prize for European Collaboration in the creation of Educational Media 2012
    This prize recognises excellent educational media productions and projects that come about as a result of European cross-border collaboration and recognises the impact such collaboration can have in increasing understanding and enhancing the European dimension.
  • The Special Prize for Educational Media Encouraging Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations 2012
    This prize will be dedicated to an entry or production that clearly uses (multi)media to encourage active ageing and solidarity between generations. All educational media productions, no matter in what format, be it website, video, game or interactive presentation, that illustrate, document or promote the active ageing and solidarity between generations.
  • The Special MEDEA Jury 2012 Prize
    The judges may, at their discretion, present a special award to an approach or production in recognition of exceptional innovation in pedagogic or technical design.
Renginiai

DisCo2012

09 Kovas 2012

Main topic: New media and education

 

Conference sub-themes

Theory and practice of distance learning
Web 2.0 and education
Virtual reality and education
M-learning
E-learning
Social and cultural aspects of distance learning and new media
Concepts and theories in distance learning and new media
Digital portfolio and social networks in education

Distance learning management
Management and organization
Quality assessment
Economic aspects of distance learning
Professional development and training of academic staff
Legislation, copyrights, and distance learning

Straipsniai

Teaching with social media in classroom settings: Top ten practices from teachers around Europe

23 Sausis 2012

This brochure presents the 10 best practices from the “Teachers’ competition for social media use in formal language learning contexts”, run throughout 2011. Now that we have highlighted current good practices through the competition, this special publication is about to share these deserving and admirable practices with a broader audience. We hope that this publication will be of interest to teachers, educators, parents and pupils sharing good practices in the use of social media in classroom settings.

Projektai

Web 2.0. suported Higher Education Institutional Learning Scenarios for Collaborative Learning

06 Sausis 2012

Project WebWise brings together a range of European higher education institutions (from Germany, Bulgaria, Italy, Slovenia, Greece and Great Britain) active in the field of public health education as well as experts for innovating e-learning, to analyze, experiment and develop innovative learning scenarios within public health education.

The general objective of WebWise is to support the improvement, the quality, the efficiency and the accessibility of Higher Education using the structure of the Bologna process and the innovative methodological collaborative Web 2.0. learning tools.

 

Within this objective, the project will aim to:

  1. Identify innovative learning scenarios and learning designs within public health or general health education.
  2. Suggest and test a number of innovations to improve the learning process within the scenarios
  3. Identify and elaborate the key improvements from the pilots.
  4. Recommend how such improvements may be transferred in public health education and to other areas of Higher Education.
  5. Disseminate recommendations to competent authorities on a national and European level.

 

TARGET GROUPS

  • Regulatory bodies
  • Managers
  • Deliverers
  • Users

in public health and public health related study programmes.

                                             

OUTCOMES

  • Recommendations for optimizing learning scenarios
  • Best practices database
Naujienos

EU project - Simple Web2.0 platform for educators

12 Sausis 2012

The Web2.0ERC platform is now open for exclusive use by educators

Web2.0ERC is an European Union education project to help educators who find ICT and Web2.0 confusing and difficult to access.

 

The project has built a simple web site and a set of the most popular tools (Wikis, Blogs, communications, Social Networking etc.) with clear guides on:

  • How to use the tools
  • How they can be used in education

 

The project is providing a simple and secure environment to use ICT for educators in their work and in their classes. The project is also looking at other Web 2.0 tools that can be used to create content, share the content and communicate.

 

The Web2.0ERC platform has been piloted with educators at every level and is now open for exclusive use by educators. On the platform you will find guides, videos and examples of how the platform can be used autonomously. You can register on the platform at: http://platform.web20erc.eu/login/index.php

 

To ensure only genuine educators use the platform to make courses a verification process will take place:

  1. Register on the platform (create account).
  2. ‘Apply for teacher privileges’ from the Help menu (complete the brief form)
  3. You will receive an email when approved
  4. You will see the, ‘Create a course wizard’ in the Courses menu.

 

It is highly recommended that you read the Help for teachers in the Help menu as there will be no additional support.

 

In addition, a large number of resources on the use of Web2.0 tools in education have been gathered and are available on the website. These include video tutorials, academic papers, best practices, case studies and use case scenarios, and user contributed ideas (see http://www.web20erc.eu/deliverables )

Naujienos

SVEA Final Conference: "Next Generation Learning - How to Integrate Social Media in Vocational and Adult Training"

22 Gruodis 2011

The use of web 2.0 social platforms such as wiki’s, blogs and podcasts offers new possibilities for networking and project management. Users are able to publish their own texts, images or videos, and can share them with others. A European partner consortium, including MFG Baden-Württemberg in Germany, CSP Innovazioni nelle ICT in Italy, EuroPACE ivzw in Belgium, FUNDECYT in Spain, and Coleg sir Gâr in Wales, aimed to realize the organizational and educational development potential of web 2.0, through an innovative EU-funded project called SVEA.

The Next Generation Learning Conference was organised on the 23rd of November 2011 as the final event of the SVEA project and as pre-conference event of the Media & Learning 2011 Conference.

 

The Next Generation Learning Conference was open to all learning practitioners, trainers, curriculum designers, directors and managers of training institutions and offered a unique opportunity to discuss the benefits arising from the growing use of social media in vocational and adult training.

 

The programme

The participants of the conference were welcomed by Dr. Nicola Schelling, Director of the Representation of the State of Baden-Württemberg to the EU. After the warm welcome the programme kicked off with the three keynote speakers of the day.

 

First, Dr. Godelieve Van den Brande, Senior Policy Officer responsible for 'ICT and education' from Directorate General Education and Culture of the European Commission talked about the Future Challenges for the EU in the Field of e‐Education’. She focused on a few of the problems when using ICT in an educational environment:

  • ICT is still embedded in a traditional learning paradigm
  • The real potential of ICT to make learning more innovative, creative, relevant and interesting is not being realised within formal Education and Training.
  • A lot of innovative ICT projects in Europe do not reach beyond the “early adopter stage”

 

Still the main issue concerning ICT in an educational environment remains implementation. To overcome these problems the European Commission already implemented a lot of initiatives and programmes like Socrates Minerva, e-Learning, Lifelong Learning Programme... To obtain even better results Europe outlined a number of targets to be reached by 2020, e.g.:

  • Decreasing the ‘Early School Leaving’ from 14,4% (in 2009) to 10% at the most (in 2020)
  • Increasing the ‘Higher Education Attainment (age 30-34) from 32,3% (in 2009) to 40% at least (in 2020)

 

The European Commission is convinced Education and Training have a unique role to play in enhancing the use of ICT for learning and should take up a leadership role. The actions set up under ET 2020 are oriented around three objectives to be tackled simultaneously:

  • Increasing digital competences
  • ICT and an enhancer of innovation of Education and Training
  • Improving the e-skills of the professionals

In her presentation Dr. Van den Brande outlined the key factors to success for these three objectives. For example a key factor to increase the digital competences can be the implementation of an ICT skills supplement to the European Skills Passport. Therefore the development of a better measurability system for the use and impact of ICT in education is critical.

 

Support to Member States to reach the objectives of ET2020 and to mainstream ICT in educational policies and practices will be given through the ‘Creative Classrooms for an innovative Europe’ initiative. This scheme will be launched mid-2012, initially only for compulsory education, later on lifelong learning will also be included.

 

The second keynote speaker at the SVEA Final Conference was professor Gráinne Conole, professor of Learning Innovation at the University of Leicester (UK). Title of her presentation wasPandora’s Box – the Implications of New Social and Participatory Media”. Professor Conole highlighted the changing educational context of today:

  • The rapidly changing technological environment
  • The new digital literacy skills needed for learners and teachers
  • The new emerging open practices
  • The new forms of online community and interactivity

 

Adopting new so-called e-pedagogies in education gives the learner a new experience but also leads to new paradoxes concerning the teachers:

  • New technologies are not extensively used
  • There is a lack of uptake of OER
  • There is little use beyond the early adopted
  • Despite the rhetoric and funding there is little evidence of transformation.

 

To overcome this paradox professor Conole stressed the importance of implementing open practices in all steps of education, not only for students but also for teachers.

 

In her concluding remarks she focused on the way to evolve from ‘closed practices’ to ‘open practices’ and the advantages from these open practices:

  • Open, participatory and social media enable new forms of communication and collaboration
  • Communities in these spaces are complex and distributed
  • Learners and teachers need to develop new digital literacy skills to harness their potential
  • We need to rethink how we design, support and assess learning
  • Open, participatory and social media can provide mechanisms for us to share and discuss teaching and research ideas in new ways
  • We are seeing a blurring of boundaries: teachers/learners, teaching/research, real/virtual spaces, formal/informal modes of communication and publication

 

Third and last keynote speaker of the day was Ms. Helen Keegan, Senior Lecturer at the University of Salford (UK). In her enthusiastic talk she used a lot of examples from her own experience as a lecturer and programme leader on Interactive Media and Social Technologies.

 

She talked about processes, challenges and tensions in implementing Web 2.0 including how the distinction between the public and private person tends to disappear when using technologies like Twitter and Facebook for educational purposes. Experiences with her students showed that sometimes the border between public and private life becomes very thin.

 

In another example she demonstrated ‘the power of the hashtag’ (Twitter), using a hashtag to inform her students in real time while attending a conference in Seattle (U.S.). By using this technology her students were part of/participating in the conference. Via her they could ask questions, make remarks. These were just a few of the examples Helen Keegan gave on how she uses new technologies to make education more driven by learner interests and less by a strict curriculum.

 

But she not only highlighted all the advantages new technologies can bring to education. She also pointed out that things can go wrong, e.g. inappropriate behaviour online. People who use social networking a lot do not automatically have digital citizenship, which means they do not always talk open and honest, do not respect other opinions, ....

 

The third part of her presentation focused on the blurring boundaries new technologies brings to the relationships between teachers, learners and mentors.

To conclude, she focused on opening up the processes of knowledge creation. While these new processes can cause confusion, mistakes made should also be seen as opportunities for further learning.

 

After these interesting keynote speakers it was time for three members of the SVEA-team to take the floor. Ms. Petra Newrly (MFG), Ms. Lara Marcellin (CSP) and Dr. Tony Toole (CSG) gave a quick roundup what the SVEA-project was all about, how it was conducted and what were the main lessons learned. All this information can be found on the SVEA project website.

 

After a short break it was time for some workshops on this SVEA Final Conference. The participants could chose between two parallel workshops, one targeting the managers of training institutions, the other one targeting the trainers.

 

The first group, moderated by Dr. Tony Toole, talked about what Vocational and Adult Training Institutions will have to change to optimize their organisational processes when using social media.

 

Professor Mark Stiles (University of Staffordshire, UK) focused on the organisational policies, governance and processes as barriers to the use of social media. He gave the participants the following messages:

  • “Social media use” in education is an innovation
  • Many organisations – especially educational ones – struggle to maintain innovations
  • “Social media use” challenges organisational structures and cultures
  • Learners and practitioners will lose heart if things are made difficult and fail to meet their expectations

These messages should be taken into account when ‘fighting’ policies, governance and bureaucracy in an educational institution. Most important for professor Stiles was showing and proving innovation works!

Ms. Francesca Carmagnola (ENGIM Piemonte, Italy) talked about ‘Participatory learning and working in Vocational and Educational Training’ and explained how they used new social media to provide a greater support for innovation at her institution. Although they already focused on forms of collaborative working between co-workers, trainers and students, new tools made it much easier to adapt to this new way of working together. The main outcomes being:

  • Behavioural change: thanks to the easiness of the participating tools every member of the ‘Community of Practice’ participates in the creation of content
  • Reduction of the digital divide
  • A continued and growing enthusiasm for collaboration
  • Many self-organised networks

 

The second group, moderated by Professor Wim Van Petegem (K.U.Leuven), focused on how trainers can overcome resistance and benefit from the integration of social media in vocational and training institutions.

 

First Mr. Tom Wambeke (ILO, United Nations, Italy) explored, in a tight scheduled presentation, some of the social media myths. He gave a short re-cap of success factors of major web2.0 learning and training initiatives. Afterwards he demystified social media myths and reflected upon challenges and statements about social media implementation. Lastly he explored jointly quick wins that can be implemented in the organization, and share models, tools and interesting practices. During his dynamic talk he gave a lot of good practises in using web 2.0 in training institutions.


 

Secondly, Dr. Steven Verjans (Open Universiteit, the Netherlands) talked about the way they introduce new social media in his institution. It comes down to a few basic rules:

  • Show and share good examples
  • Take small steps, one at time
  • Stay close to practice
  • Stay close (enough) to comfort zone
  • Listen, evaluate, improve

 

After the workshops it was time for the final part of this SVEA Final Conference. Both groups joined forces again to participate in a discussion session on “Social Media: a new hype or a revolution that will shape the way we learn?”

 

Using the concept of a ‘Fish Bowl Discussion’ made it possible for all participants in the conference to join this very lively discussion lead by Prof. Tony Toole.

 

The participants

Over 65 participants from 6 countries (Belgium, Germany, Italy, Spain, The Netherlands, United Kingdom) came to the conference to discuss the topic of social media use in vocational and adult training and learning.

 

Participants were asked for their feedback after the conference and the responses have been very positive. There were also some positive comments on twitter.

Katalogas

SchoolTool: the Global Student Information System

07 Gruodis 2011

SchoolTool is an open source, web based student information system designed for schools in the developing world, with strong support for translation, localization and automated deployment and updates via the Ubuntu Linux installer and package management system.