EDUCAUSE Live!
The Gutenberg-e Project: Opportunities and Challenges in Publishing Born-Digital Monographs
| Title: | The Gutenberg-e Project: Opportunities and Challenges in Publishing Born-Digital Monographs (ID: LIVE0816) | | Author(s): | Kate Wittenberg (Columbia University) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (08/01/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | The Gutenberg-e project was created as a bold experiment to explore whether peer-reviewed, born-digital monographs would alter the way historical scholarship is presented, whether scholars would receive the same professional credit for these publications as they would from work published in print, and whether the project would enable the publication of monographs that would otherwise be turned down for financial reasons by university presses. The project has a history that includes both exciting breakthroughs and significant challenges. A number of the authors have created completely new models of collaboration in the scholarly communication process as well as new models of historical scholarship and narrative. We have come to understand that e-books require a significant level of investment in both editorial and technical staff time in order to create publications that reach their full potential as works of digital scholarship. We have also learned that integrating and sustaining this work within a collaborative publishing, library, and technology organization presents significant challenges and great opportunities. | | View this resource: | |
Meeting Communications Needs in Campus Dorms
| Title: | Meeting Communications Needs in Campus Dorms (ID: LIVE0814) | | Author(s): | Dewitt Latimer (University of Notre Dame) and Walt Magnussen (Texas A&M University) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (07/01/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | For the past decade, campuses in the United States have been offering comprehensive communications services in campus dorms that include high speed Internet, cable television, and telephone services (local line, long distance, and voice mail in some cases). With students migrating to other forms of personal communications such as cell phones and text messaging, campuses are reevaluating the need for telephone lines in the dorms. This panel will discuss the implementations at both Notre Dame and Texas A&M University. Included in the discussion will be student opinion polls, wireless alternatives, and E911 and other safety considerations. | | View this resource: | |
The Horizon Report, Inside and Out
| Title: | The Horizon Report, Inside and Out (ID: LIVE0812) | | Author(s): | Julie K. Little (EDUCAUSE) and Malcolm B. Brown (Dartmouth College) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (06/05/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | Planning for emerging technologies is an important part of much of the work we do supporting IT in higher education. The Horizon Report can assist with this effort, as it identifies "emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, or creative expression within learning-focused institutions." Join us for an interactive session as we explore how this annual publication, a joint undertaking of the New Media Consortium and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative, is produced and structured. We will also examine the community resources available through the Horizon Project and share ways in which you can put the report to work for you at your institution. | | View this resource: | |
Digital Visual Literacy: Interdisciplinary Skills for the 21st-Century Learner
| Title: | Digital Visual Literacy: Interdisciplinary Skills for the 21st-Century Learner (ID: LIVE0810) | | Author(s): | Florence Martin (Mesa Community College), John J. Gibson (Glendale Community College), and Oris Friesen (Mesa Community College) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (05/06/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | As international culture and commerce become increasingly reliant on visual communications, visual literacy has developed into an essential skill for 21st-century college graduates. With advancements in technology and the digitizing of information, digital literacy has also grown in importance. Digital visual literacy (DVL) is the ability to critically analyze digital visual materials, create effective visual communications, and make judgments and decisions using visual representations of thoughts and ideas. These skills, which actively engage our cognitive processing of visual images, have evolved from concepts at the intersection of a range of established disciplines. This session will discuss this exciting new literacy, showcase the free materials developed under a National Science Foundation Advanced Technological Education grant, and share recent feedback from instructors who have integrated these pioneering instructional modules into their courses. The discussion will benefit faculty, staff, and administrators infusing their curriculum with fresh IT skills. | | View this resource: | |
Knowledge Sharing: Some Myths and Ideas, and a Little IT
| Title: | Knowledge Sharing: Some Myths and Ideas, and a Little IT (ID: LIVE088) | | Author(s): | Jean Engle (NASA/Johnson Space Center) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (04/11/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | Today in many circles the mention of knowledge management conjures up fears of complex IT systems (often equated with failure) or a new initiative (often associated with vague requirements). How do you develop a knowledge management program that incorporates the essence of organizational learning and knowledge sharing without new tools or systems? The Johnson Space Center has embarked on such a quest to define a program that leverages the wealth of knowledge of 50 years of human space flight not only for today's workforce but also for generations to come. | | View this resource: | |
The Why and How of Web Accessibility
| Title: | The Why and How of Web Accessibility (ID: LIVE087) | | Author(s): | Harry Hochheiser (Towson University) and Tracy Mitrano (Cornell University) | | Origin: | EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (04/04/2008) | | Type: | Presentations/Speeches | | Abstract: | The challenge of web accessibility raises issues of both policy and technology. This session features experts in each of these two areas. Policy guru Tracy Mitrano says: "Developing a web accessibility policy has been one of the greatest but most rewarding challenges I have faced in creating an IT policy framework at Cornell. With the EDUCAUSE Live! audience, I would like to share some of the struggles and stories about that process and what accessibility, education, and the web have come to mean to me as a result." Technology expert Harry Hochheiser summarizes: "Although the need for accessible web sites is widely accepted, many developers are still uncertain about the costs and limitations associated with designs that account for users with varying skills, capabilities, and computing tools. Fortunately, these problems are solvable: with proper planning and design, web sites can be interactive, engaging, highly functional, and accessible. The combination of accessibility guidelines and automated evaluation tools can help any developer build sites that are more accessible and usable for all users." | | View this resource: | |
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