May 29, 2009
I’ve never met Dr Weber in person, but we have been in contact via Twitter, and I chalk this week’s BOTW down as a success for microblogging.
Dr Weber is the CEO of MITA (Multiple Intelligences Teaching Approach), and a former teacher, so she is mostly focused on education rather than on work-based L&D. All the same, her blog – Brain Leaders and Learners – provides plenty of food for thought, as it’s based on a good understanding of what actually happens in the brain during learning, rather than on pop-psychology.
It’s impossible to pick a best three from this site, as I normally would. It’s too full of good stuff. Instead, I recommend you visit and enjoy looking around. If you really want a place to get started, try here 25 Facts to rejuvenate your brain, or here: Multi-Task for Bottlenecked Brain.
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Blog of the week, Uncategorized |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
May 11, 2009
Has the world gone mad?
Surely only a blog with a history of hundreds of entries is worthy of the prestigious Blog of the Week award?
Usually, yes. However, today we make an exception for Charles Jennings of Duntroon. If you’re in the Learning and Development field you probably already know Charles, formerly the global head of Learning and Development for Thomson Reuters.
Charles is always worth listening to, is very generous with his time, and has plenty of insight to share from his background in business and academia.
Which is why today’s blog of the week goes to Charles Jennings’ blog. Which only has one entry. I just know it will be worth following in the future.
That sole entry is a considered review of The Sabre-Toothed Future. The subtitle for the blog is improving performance through learning innovation. Expect more thought-provoking stuff to follow.
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Blog of the week |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 27, 2009
I was busy compiling a list of great Twitter Tools when I found that – of course – someone else had got there first and done a bang up job.
Two someones, actually.
The first is Yunghui Lim, whose 8 Excellent Tools to Extract Insights from Twitter Streams is generating a great deal of traffic on Social Media Today.
The second is Britain’s own Phil Bradley, the librarian with attitude, whose Twitter Search – 20 alternative search enginesactually contains more utilities that I have found useful, because they are all about search. The worst thing about Twitter is that it’s endlessly ephemeral. Neil Lasher has compared it to ’shouting out of the window while driving the car”. A lot of the shouts are nonsense. Some are really valuable.
My two favourite utilities:
Tweepsearch - lets you find people you might actually have something in common with based on key words in their biographies
Monitter – provides a live feed on key word searches of tweets. Automatically refreshes. Like Tweetscan, but for three words at a time.
One that I think is useful, but can’t quite make my mind up:
Tweet Effect – tells you how many followers you picked up or lost on each tweet. Just how interested are people in your comments about your morning coffee?
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Micro Blogging, Uncategorized |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 26, 2009
Brandon Hall have released a free report on Learning Technology Products 2009. At 526 pages, it’s a useful reference guide to suppliers.
It contains extracts from three major Brandon Hall reports:
- Authoring Tool KnowledgeBase
- LMS KnowledgeBase
- LCMS KnowledgeBase
I like the way Brandon Hall are open about things. One of the headings in the report introduction is ‘How We Make Money’. Closely followed by ‘What We Don’t Do’. It’s all quite clear. They are able to supply this report for free, by the way, because it’s supported by supplier advertising. Fair enough. Let’s have more of such honesty.
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Analysts |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 24, 2009
I’m delighted to be a judge of this year’s Software Satisfaction Awards, run by Sift Media, the people behind Training Zone.
I’ll be judging in the Learning Software category, which Learning Technologies is sponsoring, and I look forward to seeing some of the great solutions out there.
If you’re at a learning technologies company and are interested, just click to enter the awards.
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Learning Technologies Conference 2008 |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 6, 2009
What’s not to like about Indiana-based learning and design specialist Cathy Moore? She has good ideas on how to design learning better and expresses them clearly. Here’s how she describes herself:
For more than 25 years, I’ve used technology to help people learn. These days, I help people strengthen their instructional design skills, and I design and write elearning for businesses.
That’s typical Cathy – clear and useful, with a sense of fun - as expressed by the title of her blog “Making change, lively ideas for e-learning”.
Unusually, in this BOTW I am not going to suggest a long list of blog entries to visit, just one: Be an elearning action hero!, from 2008 and brought to my attention by Clark Quinn yesterday.
In this post, Cathy describes using an action mapping approach to designing learning. In short this means beginning design not by asking ‘what does the learner need to know?’ but ‘what does the learner need to do?’ The difference: the former lends itself to spec creep, and the potentially endless addition of material. The latter focuses on the minimum amount of information needed to meet an organisational goal.
This week Cathy published her elearning blueprint which makes it easier to implement action mapping in e-learning.
Cathy, for your efforts in helping rid the world of boring elearning we salue you and present you with the coveted Learning Technologies Blog of the Week Award.
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Blog of the week |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 3, 2009
At this year’s Learning Technologies conference, we had three delegates kindly attend each session and write it up. With the rather grand title of ‘rapporteurs’ these delegates laboured away to produce a report on proceedings, and their work is now available here.
Click to read the Learning Technologies Conference 2009 Report.
If you’re a member of the Learning and Skills Group, this report will serve as a handy index to the 36 videos taken at the conference, and accessible via the Learning and Skills Group site.
Our thanks go to the rapporteurs:
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#LT09UK |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor
March 2, 2009
Goalless after 120 minutes of open play, yesterday’s English League Carling Cup was decided on penalties.
Mancheter United beat Spurs 4-1, but the real winner was e-learning, as the Red’s ‘keeper Ben Foster revealed afterwards in the Telegraph:
Me and [goalkeeping coach] Eric Steele looked at a little iPod before the penalties were taken. It had a video of their penalty takers. It’s a new one for us. When Eric came to the club I’d never seen anything like it before. I don’t think any of us had. It’s a fantastic tool for us.
Minutes later, Foster saved Jamie O’Hara’s spot-kick. Learning doesn’t get more just-in-time than that.
Congratulations to Eric Steele, and to anyone out there using portable media for learning. The best thing about this story? None of the news coverage of the story mentions ‘e-learning’ or ‘mobile-learning’. The jargon is irrelevant. It’s all about the results – and what a result.
—– LATEST SCORE —–
Delighted that this story got picked up by the Guardian Online, but the comment:
People selling computers to educational establishments tried to spin the news as an endorsement of the powers of their services claiming somewhat improbably that “the real winner was e-learning”.
… rather missed my light hearted attempt at a tabloid tone. Or maybe I’ve missed the point, after all the unnamed author adds this:
Nevertheless, IT fans are likely to see the iPod’s use as an example of a new technology-aided game that might be dubbed Football 2.0.
Football 2.0 – love it!
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Mobile Learning |
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Posted by donaldhtaylor