Webcast on ePortfolios via Apple Digital Campus Exchange

Helen Chen posted a notice about an upcoming webcast by Jude Higdon for ADCE about the nature of ePortfolios in an environment where people are already using blogs and social software. The session will be a quasi-interactive Elluminate production.

Who needs an ePortfolio? All my coursework is on my blog…

EPortfolios have been defined in various ways by vendors, professional organizations, and institutions of higher education.
With emerging technologies such as social software that include the ability to freetag and syndicate across multiple resources and environments, the need for standalone ePortfolio “software” is perhaps called into question. This discussion will raise issues regarding the NetGen student, and how she is already using technology that has natural affordances that allow her to collect, aggregate, and syndicate content into portfolio views that can be useful to herself, other students, faculty, departments, colleges and universities, accreditation agencies, funding bodies, and potential employers.

I’ll hopefully tune in live, because this is exactly the stuff I’ve been thinking about for our ePortfolio project…

Almost forgot – it’s on Friday, March 17th at 11am MST.

Helen Chen posted a notice about an upcoming webcast by Jude Higdon for ADCE about the nature of ePortfolios in an environment where people are already using blogs and social software. The session will be a quasi-interactive Elluminate production.

Who needs an ePortfolio? All my coursework is on my blog…

EPortfolios have been defined in various ways by vendors, professional organizations, and institutions of higher education.
With emerging technologies such as social software that include the ability to freetag and syndicate across multiple resources and environments, the need for standalone ePortfolio “software” is perhaps called into question. This discussion will raise issues regarding the NetGen student, and how she is already using technology that has natural affordances that allow her to collect, aggregate, and syndicate content into portfolio views that can be useful to herself, other students, faculty, departments, colleges and universities, accreditation agencies, funding bodies, and potential employers.

I’ll hopefully tune in live, because this is exactly the stuff I’ve been thinking about for our ePortfolio project…

Almost forgot – it’s on Friday, March 17th at 11am MST.

Walled Gardens, Redux

Cole just wrote 2 announcements regarding the Big ADCE Kickoff (which is great and exciting). I got both announcements via RSS feeds, and clicked through to see the full posts. I’m going to use pictures here to make it about as painfully clear as possible.

First, there’s the announcement on his ADCE Tools to Enhance Teaching and Learning blog:

Cole\'s ADCE announcement on ADCE

Then, there’s the announcement on his own blog:

Cole\'s ADCE announcement on Camplesegroup.com

Now, I’ve got an account on ADCE. It’s even set to autofill for me so it’s relatively painless. But, guess which post got read?

Cole just wrote 2 announcements regarding the Big ADCE Kickoff (which is great and exciting). I got both announcements via RSS feeds, and clicked through to see the full posts. I’m going to use pictures here to make it about as painfully clear as possible.

First, there’s the announcement on his ADCE Tools to Enhance Teaching and Learning blog:

Cole\'s ADCE announcement on ADCE

Then, there’s the announcement on his own blog:

Cole\'s ADCE announcement on Camplesegroup.com

Now, I’ve got an account on ADCE. It’s even set to autofill for me so it’s relatively painless. But, guess which post got read?

On Walled Gardens of Content

I originally posted this entry on May 18, on the Apple Digital Campus Exchange (ADCE) “Tools to Enhance Teaching and Learning” weblog. I’d post a link, but everyone (including myself) would have to login to the ADCE system to read it. So I’m reposting it here in the hopes that it might make some difference. I’m not holding my breath. I was almost convinced that a walled garden might have value, but on further consideration I have to agree wholeheartedly with Alan – and won’t be posting to the ADCE weblogs unless/until the walled garden is opened up to everyone.

One thing that the read-write model of the internet is pretty much diametrically opposed to is the concept of content silos, or walled gardens of content.

There has to be a pretty compelling reason to lock content behind logins and registration. Restricting publishing is another matter, but restricting access to content that is not confidential is just plain wrong.

People won’t create accounts just to read content. Walled Gardens will wither and die – quickly atrophying into irrelevance.

I can see having a requirement for a login to post in the discussion boards, or to comment on a weblog (although even that is questionable). But the concept of having to log in just to find the URL to a weblog is pretty shortsighted.

Hopefully that’s just an oversight that will be quickly righted (especially considering the fact that Google has already found the ADCE blogs).

Update: I’ve put a quick-and-dirty PlanetADCE site up, which aggregates all posts from all ADCE blogs into one easy-to-read page. Enjoy!

PlanetADCE remains the only way to read the ADCE weblog posts. At least until the walled garden stormtroopers decide to seal our backdoor entrance…

The only way this kind of walled garden would fly is if it were the first, the only, or the largest (by an order of magnitude or so). ADCE isn’t any of those, but it does offer some cool things. For me the biggest draw of ADCE is the fact that it’s getting Carl Berger blogging. If that was the only product of the project, it would be well worth it.

I originally posted this entry on May 18, on the Apple Digital Campus Exchange (ADCE) “Tools to Enhance Teaching and Learning” weblog. I’d post a link, but everyone (including myself) would have to login to the ADCE system to read it. So I’m reposting it here in the hopes that it might make some difference. I’m not holding my breath. I was almost convinced that a walled garden might have value, but on further consideration I have to agree wholeheartedly with Alan – and won’t be posting to the ADCE weblogs unless/until the walled garden is opened up to everyone.

One thing that the read-write model of the internet is pretty much diametrically opposed to is the concept of content silos, or walled gardens of content.

There has to be a pretty compelling reason to lock content behind logins and registration. Restricting publishing is another matter, but restricting access to content that is not confidential is just plain wrong.

People won’t create accounts just to read content. Walled Gardens will wither and die – quickly atrophying into irrelevance.

I can see having a requirement for a login to post in the discussion boards, or to comment on a weblog (although even that is questionable). But the concept of having to log in just to find the URL to a weblog is pretty shortsighted.

Hopefully that’s just an oversight that will be quickly righted (especially considering the fact that Google has already found the ADCE blogs).

Update: I’ve put a quick-and-dirty PlanetADCE site up, which aggregates all posts from all ADCE blogs into one easy-to-read page. Enjoy!

PlanetADCE remains the only way to read the ADCE weblog posts. At least until the walled garden stormtroopers decide to seal our backdoor entrance…

The only way this kind of walled garden would fly is if it were the first, the only, or the largest (by an order of magnitude or so). ADCE isn’t any of those, but it does offer some cool things. For me the biggest draw of ADCE is the fact that it’s getting Carl Berger blogging. If that was the only product of the project, it would be well worth it.

Carl Berger is Blogging!

Excellent news! Carl Berger, the Gandalf of EDUCAUSE and Merlot, has (finally) started blogging! Thanks for doing that, Carl, and I look forward to reading your posts!

Leadership Institute Blog » Blog Archive » Hello from Carl Berger Judging from the photo in that post, I’m wondering/hoping he’ll be making the trek to NMC2005 in Honolulu this year.

It’s even cooler that Carl is blogging as part of the Apple Digital Campus initiative. I listened to the EDUCAUSE NLII podcasts, and it sounds like they’re going to be doing some very cool stuff in the next year.

I would have posted this as a comment directly on the ADC Institute blog post, but they’ve turned off comments unless you’re registered on the blog. And they’ve disabled registration… 🙂

Excellent news! Carl Berger, the Gandalf of EDUCAUSE and Merlot, has (finally) started blogging! Thanks for doing that, Carl, and I look forward to reading your posts!

Leadership Institute Blog » Blog Archive » Hello from Carl Berger Judging from the photo in that post, I’m wondering/hoping he’ll be making the trek to NMC2005 in Honolulu this year.

It’s even cooler that Carl is blogging as part of the Apple Digital Campus initiative. I listened to the EDUCAUSE NLII podcasts, and it sounds like they’re going to be doing some very cool stuff in the next year.

I would have posted this as a comment directly on the ADC Institute blog post, but they’ve turned off comments unless you’re registered on the blog. And they’ve disabled registration… 🙂