On some of the hottest days of the year this week, I ventured southwards for two conferences, both featuring birds and both styled in hot pink. EchoExperience25 at the University of Nottingham https://info.echo360.com/attendee-hub-echoexperience-emea and UCISA Women in Technology in Liverpool WiT25 – UCISA At WiT Katie and I spoke about what works in our …
Category: conference
BLTC 2016 – a review in pictures
This year’s Brookes Learning and Teaching Conference LEARNING ON THE EDGE took place on 4 July, in a slightly unusual space, which is normally inhabited by very creative Urban Design students. The conference was held on 3 different floors.
In the basement visitors were welcomed, provided with food, drinks and they had plenty of space for networking:
The 2nd floor provided a large seated space for the keynote: ‘Mind the gap‘ with Kirsti Lonka from the University of Helsinki. The ‘gap’ refers to the wide empty space between digital natives and our educational practices. Kirsti compared current students’ experience to being on a ‘long-haul flight’ (= switch all personal digital devices off) and her talk focussed on ideas how to create new cultures for study and academic work,
Also on the second floor was a space for ‘cutting edge’ technology, where Gerard Helmich and Simon Llewellyn moved visitors into different realities:
AND there was the Minerva bridge, hosting – among other things – the digital barometer, asking people to position themselves in the digital climate of the world of work. Here you see three visitors in action:
BLTC 2016 – a review in pictures
This year’s Brookes Learning and Teaching Conference LEARNING ON THE EDGE took place on 4 July, in a slightly unusual space, which is normally inhabited by very creative Urban Design students. The conference was held on 3 different floors.
In the basement visitors were welcomed, provided with food, drinks and they had plenty of space for networking:
The 2nd floor provided a large seated space for the keynote: ‘Mind the gap‘ with Kirsti Lonka from the University of Helsinki. The ‘gap’ refers to the wide empty space between digital natives and our educational practices. Kirsti compared current students’ experience to being on a ‘long-haul flight’ (= switch all personal digital devices off) and her talk focussed on ideas how to create new cultures for study and academic work,
Also on the second floor was a space for ‘cutting edge’ technology, where Gerard Helmich and Simon Llewellyn moved visitors into different realities:
AND there was the Minerva bridge, hosting – among other things – the digital barometer, asking people to position themselves in the digital climate of the world of work. Here you see three visitors in action: