Podcasts and Strategic Planning, Teaching and Learning

Recent resources tagged with Podcasts and Strategic Planning, Teaching and Learning.

E07 Podcast: A Strategy for Deploying Web 2.0 Technologies

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on September 24, 2008

This forty-three minute podcast features a session from the 2007 EDUCAUSE Annual Conference. The presentation, "Riding the 2.0 Wave (Successfully): A Strategy for Deploying Web 2.0 Technologies," explains Marist College's award-winning work with Web 2.0 applications. This work has led to the development of an e-learning 2.0 strategy for the pedagogically based deployment of these technologies. This session includes methodologies for controlling costs, enhancing learning, and ensuring alignment with strategic goals. PowerPoint slides are also available for this session.

Session presenters include:

E07 Podcast: An Interview with Chris Adie, Academic Liason Director for the University of Edinburgh

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on November 05, 2007

In this 13 minute podcast, we feature an interview with Dr. Chris Adie, Academic Liaison Director for the College of Science and Engineering in the Information Services Group of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. He provides a key strategic link between the College and Information Services, covering the entire portfolio of IT, Library, eLearning and learning spaces technology. Previous positions have included Head, Specialist Services Division of Edinburgh University Computing Services. A physicist by training, Chris has many years experience of software development in commercial and academic support roles.

This interview was conducted at the EDUCAUSE 2007 Annual Conference in Seattle, Washington. It was conducted by Bill Hogue, Vice President for Information Technology and Chief Information Officer for the eight campuses of the University of South Carolina.

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EDUCAUSE2006 Podcast: Multicampus Planning to Enhance Teaching

Created by Carie Lee Page (EDUCAUSE) on February 26, 2007

In this 44-minute recording from the 2006 EDUCAUSE Annual Conference, we'll hear from David Gray, Robert Green, and Mark Schlesinger in a session entitled Multicampus Planning to Enhance Teaching with Technology: The University of Massachusetts Initiative. They will share background and early assessments from a 10-year planning initiative aimed at the most effective use of technology to improve teaching and learning.

 

Informal Spaces & The Design Process, An Interview with Lori Gee & Terry Hajduk

Created by Jarret S. Cummings (EDUCAUSE) on October 12, 2005
In my second interview with Lori Gee and Terry Hajduk,  we discussed participant questions related to their ELI '05 Fall Focus Session presentation, The Importance of Informal Spaces for Learning, Collaboration, and Socialization. While our first conversation focused on issues of institutional culture, this interview addresses the design process for informal learning spaces. Participants asked Gee and Hajduk to address:
  • How widely Gee and Hajduk's views on informal space design are shared across the architect / designer community
  • The extent to which architects and designers may be approaching the design process based on "boilerplates from the past"
  • The weaknesses of applying business space design models to learning environments, and
  • Their starting points for designing a library today, based on contemporary views of informal spaces.
If you would like to view their original presentation in addition to listening to the attached MP3 file, you can access it via the focus session proceedings.

Institutional Culture & Informal Space Design, An Interview with Lori Gee &Terry Hajduk

Created by Jarret S. Cummings (EDUCAUSE) on October 12, 2005
Lori Gee, Learning Environments Strategist for Herman Miller, Inc., and Terry Hajduk, Principal at ARX Design, conducted the general session presentation The Importance of Informal Spaces for Learning, Collaboration, and Socialization at ELI's 2005 Fall Focus Session in Sept. Recently, they joined me to discuss two sets of participant questions stemming from their presentation.

In the first interview, which is attached as an MP3 file, Gee and Hajduk discuss some of the cultural issues related to the design of informal learning spaces. In particular, focus session participants were interested in getting their views on:
  • Integrating a student-centered design philosophy into research-centric institutional environments
  • Guidelines for piloting informal space design approaches;
  • Strategies for getting student input into the design process, and
  • Whether assessment findings establish the effectiveness of informal space design approaches in enhancing learning.
As you listen to the interview, you may find it useful to review Gee and Hajduk's original presentation, whi

Importance of Informal Spaces for Learning, Collaboration, and Socialization - ELI '05 Fall Focus Session Audio

Created by Jarret S. Cummings (EDUCAUSE) on October 07, 2005

The attached MP3 file contains the audio from the general session presentation conducted by Lori Gee and Terry Hajduk at the ELI ’05 Fall Focus Session – Design of Informal Learning Spaces. In their presentation, Gee and Hajduk highlighted the following principles as central to the design of effective informal learning spaces:

  • The entire campus is a learning environment that provides opportunities for further learning;
  • Informal spaces for learning, collaboration, and socialization are critical components of both scheduled and unscheduled campus spaces; and
  • Space drives behaviors and behaviors need to change for our society to realize its learning goals.

Gee and Hajduk explored these principles across a range of institutional examples. To view those examples while listening to the file, you can download a PDF file of their presentation from the focus session proceedings.

Trends in Informal Space Design - Audio from ELI '05 Fall Focus Session

Created by Jarret S. Cummings (EDUCAUSE) on October 07, 2005

The attached MP3 file contains the full audio from the general session presentation conducted by Malcolm Brown and Phil Long at the ELI '05 Fall Focus Session - Design of Informal Learning SpacesIn the presentation, Brown and Long identify three trends as significantly influencing the present and future of informal learning space design:

  • Intentional support for social learning strategies, informed by principles
  • A return to human-centered design, and
  • Support for diverse, personally-owned devices to enrich academic learning.

You can review the presentation slides while listening to Brown and Long’s session by downloading their PowerPoint file from the focus session proceedings.