Several are in Brighton:
Brightwave's e-learning production process
Great to have a few months between modules as it gives me the opportunity to look beyond the MAODE modules at what interests me most: learnign and development in a corporate setting, the practicalities of enhancing the skills and building on the motivations and interests of people in their daily working lives.
The above chart adds detail to a familiar productoin process.
The benefit of turning to an outside supplier for such services (and for the the supplier to call upon the specialist skills of freelancers), is the accountability, the clarity of the stages, the parameters set by budgets and schedules and the lack of politics, as well as the engagement with a diversity of cultures, experiences and background which you simply do no get when everything is carried out in-house, the biggest bugbear of most providers in the the tertiary sector who insist on doing it all themselves.
Particularly impressed with Laura Overton who I have heard speak at Learning Technologies in the past.
Brightwave, quite rightly, include a transcript with these face paced, tightly edited, packed interviews.
This doesn't preclude the benefit of taking notes. I also cut and paste the transcript then go through highlighting, re-arranging the text and doing what Jakob Neilsen would call making it 'web friendly'.
Even if I don't share this online, the act of doing this is a vital way to engage and memorise the information.
I've come to understand in the last few days (B822 End of Module Exam) that a 'mnemonic' is any devise or technique that aids memory, so reading this start the mylenations process, comment and those tracks become established. Cut and paste, doing something of your own with the content, go follow the links, add links of your own, cut and paste into a blog (here or externally), then share it into Facebook or Twitter and pick up others who know more or less and can contribute.
All of this is a very human way og aggregating and securing knowledge.
Ideally everyone would be milling around my garden right now, we'd pick up the conversation, then drift away to other things.
I have no reason to plug these guys but as an e-learning practioner I want to try and engage with everything 'out there'.
I was fabulously impressed with this service and totally sold on the benefits of blended learning, of doing it live, synchronously with a highly professional, amusing and sparky moderator and equally passionate fellow students.
Though I appreciate that this level of intensity is unsustainable over the duration of a module, it is nonetheless what the once fornightly Elluminate session ought to be like.
It doesn't require bells and whistles. The platform is simple.
The human interaction is key. We learn best from each other with the right mix of the knowledgeable and the ignorant who are keen to learn.
Ebbinghaus came up with the 'Forgetting Curve' to indicate how what we learn is soon forgotten unless we continue to engage with it, social learning is a painless way to repeat this engagement process. It also defies the latent loneliness of studying alone with your books and eBooks, LMS and PLE.
The historian EHCarr said 'study a subject until you hear its people speak', in a social learning context you hear these voices. A commentator on Radio 4 (search in my OU Student blog for the reference) said some months ago 'research a subject until the narrative reveals itself' which as my subject of interest is e-learning is achieved by doing this, over a 1000 e-learning posts in my blog and over two years on the Open University's MA in Open & Distance Learning.
I picked up the name Ebbinghaus in a paper written by James Cory- Wright on the Brightwave website, responded to a prompt for disucssion in an Epic Linkedin Group and am posting all of this in my Open University Student Blog to share with fellow travellers on the MAODE: H807, H808, H 800, H810, H809 and/or any ellectives a person may choose to do as an alterantive.
Epic and Brightave, along with Kineo and others are part of the e-learning cluster in Brighton.
Find out more at Wired Sussex.
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