Author: Irmgard Huppe
#DigiFest21
All the following views in my short digifest21 review below are my own, and I also concede that views might be coloured by me having attended the ‘wrong’ sessions. Yes, I attended this year’s digifest, and – of course – it took place online. Even …
Looking back … and looking forward
24 December 2019 – nearly the end of the year … This morning, I heard on the radio that the Queen will look back to 2019 as a ‘bumpy year’. Who wouldn’t agree? Seems like we’re moving into bumpier times on an almost daily basis, looking at our future…
Quick review: Video in HE Symposium
Dominik Lukes, who organised the symposium, started us off with the attempt to assign a name and date to the following quote:https://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/02/15/books-obsoleteI think most of us were rather surprised to hear that Thomas Eddiso…
Visiting BETT 2019
On 23 January 2019 I afforded myself another visit to the BETT Show, which claims to be the World’s biggest education technology event https://www.bettshow.com/Even though it’s mainly addressing Schools, it can make sense to have good look around …
Thriving for a new balance
Something hard to maintain in my working life as a learning technologist is the thing called ‘balance’. On a daily basis, there seems to be too much technology and not enough learning. When software developers work hard on improving their products, it’…
Going round in circles with 23 Things?
I failed miserably to attend to 23 Things. Thing 3 (Digital Footprints), with the task to google my own name, took me back to an ancient blog posting in an old blog of mine, where I attended a course which tasked me to do exactly that: google my own na…
23 Things for Digital Knowledge
I just registered for this self-paced course for digital and online skills, initiated by the University of Edinburgh, see https://www.ed.ac.uk/information-services/learning-technology/social-tools/23thingsSo. The question is: why did I do this whe…
The upside of recording a presentation
Occasionally, it’s part of my job to pick up a video camera and record a presentation, if and when our lecture capture system doesn’t fulfil the specs of the intended outcome of the capture. It’s not a very challenging job, hence I often use the time t…
The upside of recording a presentation
Occasionally, it’s part of my job to pick up a video camera and record a presentation, if and when our lecture capture system doesn’t fulfil the specs of the intended outcome of the capture. It’s not a very challenging job, hence I often use the time t…
H5P conference in Tromso, 11 to 13 September 2017
I was lucky enough to attend this excellent conference, and there’s lots to report about, comment on etc. But as it always happens in September, I utterly ran out of time with some things, because the Brookes semester starts and that means … mmh … a few other ‘priorities’. However, I just found some notes I wrote while hanging around in Tromso Airport, and – just to make a start – I’m going to post them here:
Summary/Conference review
It is Wednesday afternoon, and I’m sitting at Tromso Airport, returning to Oxford after the H5P conference. And what a very special conference it was! It was not so much the content of the conference (and not even the brilliant provision of food, coffee and other drinks throughout …): it was the very positive energy, which created the real buzz. There were more participants than originally expected by the organisers, and they came from all over the world. Everyone seemed curious, wanted to explore H5P, find out more about its future. The H5P team provided the surrounding and atmosphere in which it was a pleasure to work. This does not only apply to the core team, but also to all the ‘newcomers’, who had joined the core team over the past few years, like for example their excellent designer, Jelena.
The atmosphere reminded me of the very early days of learning technology, during which I worked for a German textbook publisher, when eLearning was still a completely new and fresh field to explore. One of the things we did was trying to enthuse teachers to use a brilliant tool to create exercises for language learning, called ADAM & EVE – where ADAM was ‘automated document analysis and manipulation’ and EVE was ‘extensive variety of exercises’. This was in the days of text mode, and the operating system was DOS (just for those who of more advanced age …). The tool had a language database in the background, and based on algorithms was able to generate a variety of language exercises. Needless to say: in those early days it was not well received, sadly. Our ‘clients’ were highly suspicious, and focussed mainly on errors the system produced, rather than appreciating the powerful potential the tool had. Enough of the past, and back to H5P: the future!
H5P has the vision to make interactive content flow freely. The team wants to democratise interactive content in connection with open education by connecting with users, gathering feedback from the community. And that’s exactly what they do, and managed to demonstrate very convincingly throughout the conference.
… to be continued …
Let the exploration begin! |
H5P conference in Tromso, 11 to 13 September 2017
I was lucky enough to attend this excellent conference, and there’s lots to report about, comment on etc. But as it always happens in September, I utterly ran out of time with some things, because the Brookes semester starts and that means … mmh … a few other ‘priorities’. However, I just found some notes I wrote while hanging around in Tromso Airport, and – just to make a start – I’m going to post them here:
Summary/Conference review
It is Wednesday afternoon, and I’m sitting at Tromso Airport, returning to Oxford after the H5P conference. And what a very special conference it was! It was not so much the content of the conference (and not even the brilliant provision of food, coffee and other drinks throughout …): it was the very positive energy, which created the real buzz. There were more participants than originally expected by the organisers, and they came from all over the world. Everyone seemed curious, wanted to explore H5P, find out more about its future. The H5P team provided the surrounding and atmosphere in which it was a pleasure to work. This does not only apply to the core team, but also to all the ‘newcomers’, who had joined the core team over the past few years, like for example their excellent designer, Jelena.
The atmosphere reminded me of the very early days of learning technology, during which I worked for a German textbook publisher, when eLearning was still a completely new and fresh field to explore. One of the things we did was trying to enthuse teachers to use a brilliant tool to create exercises for language learning, called ADAM & EVE – where ADAM was ‘automated document analysis and manipulation’ and EVE was ‘extensive variety of exercises’. This was in the days of text mode, and the operating system was DOS (just for those who of more advanced age …). The tool had a language database in the background, and based on algorithms was able to generate a variety of language exercises. Needless to say: in those early days it was not well received, sadly. Our ‘clients’ were highly suspicious, and focussed mainly on errors the system produced, rather than appreciating the powerful potential the tool had. Enough of the past, and back to H5P: the future!
H5P has the vision to make interactive content flow freely. The team wants to democratise interactive content in connection with open education by connecting with users, gathering feedback from the community. And that’s exactly what they do, and managed to demonstrate very convincingly throughout the conference.
… to be continued …
Let the exploration begin! |