Edited by Jonathan Vernon, Friday, 10 Sept 2010, 21:29
Just spent the last two hours in conversation with a university contemporary and colleague from the 1980s and 1990s with whom I produced numerous training and information films. I would produce and write, he'd direct and edit. Last job we did together? 1996, the launch of the European Stock Exchange EASDAQ. (Which coinsided with the home birth of my son
The match of skills that worked in the past will as a result be renewed - he is highly technical and has been generating video material for smartphones for the last year. We've both approached online learning from different perspectives, but have a child-like curiosity still.
We laughed over a comment, very 80s, that a senior producer in corporate video production made to us as we started out, that people can be put into three categories: maps, taps and chaps.
Maps. Making and fixing stuff.
Taps. Accountants and writing.
Chaps. Selling and getting on with people.
My thinking is that a basic team of three needs one of each, though two would do as long as all bases are covered. He is the map, I'm the tap, so we need a 'chap.'
The language may be arcane, but the thinking is sound.
Now that I am happy on Skype I'm more than happy to use this tool more often.
I have several other tools to use though, e-portfolios, wikis, compendium ...
Skype across the decades
Just spent the last two hours in conversation with a university contemporary and colleague from the 1980s and 1990s with whom I produced numerous training and information films. I would produce and write, he'd direct and edit. Last job we did together? 1996, the launch of the European Stock Exchange EASDAQ. (Which coinsided with the home birth of my son
The match of skills that worked in the past will as a result be renewed - he is highly technical and has been generating video material for smartphones for the last year. We've both approached online learning from different perspectives, but have a child-like curiosity still.
We laughed over a comment, very 80s, that a senior producer in corporate video production made to us as we started out, that people can be put into three categories: maps, taps and chaps.
Maps. Making and fixing stuff.
Taps. Accountants and writing.
Chaps. Selling and getting on with people.
My thinking is that a basic team of three needs one of each, though two would do as long as all bases are covered. He is the map, I'm the tap, so we need a 'chap.'
The language may be arcane, but the thinking is sound.
Now that I am happy on Skype I'm more than happy to use this tool more often.
I have several other tools to use though, e-portfolios, wikis, compendium ...