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Nercomp Workshop: The Horizon Report

Categories: News

The Horizon Report, co-published by the New Media Consortium (NMC) and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI), describes emerging technologies thought likely to impact teaching, learning and creative expression in higher education.  This report was the topic of a recent NERCOMP event, documented in an Emerging Technology wiki.  Speakers were Phil Long, Bryan Alexander and Cyprien Lomas.

There was much discussion about social computing and personal broadcasting, both of which have flourished in the last year, with examples of various types of blogs and podcasts. Enabling these forms of expression has been technologies such as search, RSS, tagging and folksonomies as exemplified in web applications such as Flickr, del.icio.us, Technorati, Bloglines and more recently, Podzinger.

Further out on the horizon was the delivery of educational content to cell phones, still nascent in the US but now commonplace in Japan where cellphones are used to communicate in classes and even to take exams.  Also on the horizon was educational gaming, particularly massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) and context-aware environments and devices.

A major obstacle to adopting many of these new technologies in education has been integrating them with curricular systems in use as most institutions.  It was noted that most course management systems including Blackboard and WebCT did not support blogging, podcasting, tagging or RSS.

Nercomp 2006 Annual Conference

Categories: News

Many people from Middlebury presented at this year’s Nercomp annual conference.  I did a session entitled “From Taxonomies to Folksonomies: The Evolution of Organization.”  Other Middlebury sessions included:

Adam Franco did a poster session entitled “Using Frameworks to Ease Curricular Systems Development, Interoperability, and Maintenance.”  A common thread in all of these presentations was evolution.  I discussed the evolution of organization, particularly in the presentation and tracking of news.  Adam’s poster session addressed how frameworks can simplify the evolution of applications.  Mike and Graeme discussed the evolution of Privateye, a web application they have been developing for parsing logs.  I was not able to attend the session by Bryan and Carrie, but since its title includes “evolving web environment…”

Nercomp SIG: Emerging Trends and Technologies

Categories: News
October 28, 2005Shel
Sax and I gave a short presentation on iPods at Middlebury yesterday at
a Nercomp Special Interest Group (SIG) conference in Bolton MA
organized by Shel and Bryan Alexander. Have added slides of my
presentation to my iPods in Education
site. Shel discussed the logistics and assessment of the Language
School iPod Pilot project. Dave Guertin showed some of his work in scientific visualization and Bryan Alexander touched on all sorts of emerging technologies a few of which he has included in his presentation site.

Others presenters include Brian Lamb
from who has been promoting MovableType blogs to faculty and students
at the University of British Columbia and has developed an interesting tool for aggregating RSS feeds and Joel Foreman from George Mason University discussed gaming, particularly MMOGs and how these could be used in education.

NERCOMP 2005 Annual Conference

Categories: News

March 6-8, 2005

Shel Sax, Alex Chapin, Dave Guertin and Adam Franco as well as others from Middlebury attended the 2005 Nercomp annual conference in Worcester, MA.

Shel and Dave Donahue lead a session entitled IT-Library Merger: Part II (an Update). Alex and Adam did a session entitled Building Institutional Repositories from the Bottom Up.