Mix and Rip Learners

Contrary to what you might surmise from reading what my wife describes as rather pessimistic posts, I am as taken by the potential of social networking and collective intelligence as the next guy (or gal or whatever). Sometimes all I have to evaluate the proposals of others are my own experiences (often based in the hard data I collect).

A fellow blogger’s post mentioned the RipMixLearners project and I followed the link to investigate. You might understand the position of this project by reading the following quotation:

Since we can’t expect the lecturers to take on much of the work themselves, we need to provide support services, both for developing digital course materials, and navigating copyright restrictions that might apply.

I wonder what makes a difference in the situation described here vs. my own. A main research interest has long been the use of technology to extend and enhance the lecture experience in large introductory classes (see some research citations).

I have not found that students make much use of online recordings of lectures in comparison to notes (the type of notes that might be able to get from a more able classmate, but also the type of notes that might easily be offered online). I have also found that while students in my studies have been quite willing to access “expert notes” provided by others, they have not been that interested in contributing to collective notes (a wiki).

Perhaps the assumption that all or many are interested is the flaw. What sometimes concerns me about the impressive examples provided by others is that the presence of such cases does not necessarily imply that such behaviors are likely to be typical of most learners. At first, I thought that was fine, because the expressiveness/interest of some could serve as a resource for others. However, what I have observed is a little different. There appears to be a resentment that sets in when those who give it a go are not followed by others. There is a sense of being used.

What may be described here are contributions made by some who are outside and therefore different from the target group. If this is a reality, this is different that I the way I would prefer it would work, but I guess I don’t make the rules.

There are complexities here yet to be illuminated.

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XtraNormal – Avatar-Based Movies – Write Your Own

My previous post invited you to view a very creative project intro developed by a couple of Grand Forks teachers. Their mini-movie was created using a new online resource called xtranormal.

xtranormal allows users to script avatar-based movies. The narrative is generated by typing a script. You can select camera angles and the set. The process takes a little time, but it is easy to save a work in progress.

You can embed a movie you generate with xtranormal from Youtube, but that seems overkill for a simple demo. If you are interested, view my demo from the xtranormal site. The movie demonstrates a few of the basic techniques you can apply after only a few minutes of exploration.

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