Archive for the ‘magicmacguffin’ Category

 

Objective Correlative Machine

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

Listening to Vonnegut, who could arguably be called the father (or one of the fathers) of postmodern literature, discuss dropping shapes into a computer to create stories is beautifully ironic as his work is anything but formulaic.  Nonetheless, he’s right.  Stories are made up of fundamental (read: ancient; timeless; played; spent?–I hope not.) human experiences. The trick isn’t discovering what those experiences are–we all live them and know them–or to come up with a “novel” set of circumstances that house that experience, but rather to find a (not the)  objective correlative for that experience…the holy grail of storytelling.  It’s that last part that computers can’t do. So, without further ado, I give you the Objective Correlative Machine acting upon one of my least favorite novels: Moby Dick.

 

Hello world!

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

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Daily Create 142: Annoying noise: Record a sound that sets…

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012



Daily Create 142: Annoying noise: Record a sound that sets your teeth on edge.

My First Week at Camp Magic Macguffin

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

Dear family,

My first week of camp was awesome! I got to share with everyone one of our cool family stories and I got to hear about some other campers families. It was a good ”get to know you” activity. I am still trying to learn the routines at camp, but I am getting there! We had a surprise guest come visit us at camp and explain what direction he would like our camp to head towards, his name was Michael Wesch. By direction I mean that I think this camp is going to teach us how to become more fluent in different multimedia forms. I was inspired by the passion he seemed to hold for the possibilities the internet and multimedia can have with connecting people around the world together.

Listening to Michael Wesch talk I started thinking about my own experiences thus far with the web and multimedia. I realized that I have this awesome tool with unlimited possibilities and I barely know how to use it. I can use the web and multimedia for more then just keeping up with old friends, I can express my ideas through different media outlets to people all across the world.

If you can’t tell, I am really excited about camp and all of the different things I am going to learn! I know by the end of camp that I will be able to utilize the web and all the different multimedia outlets to really communicate effectively with others and hopefully become a part of a global community and help others to join as well.

Well I think it is time for lights out. Write to you again soon!

Ciara

p.s. I was not quite sure how our camp sends ”mail” so hopefully this gets to you!

Ups and Downs

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

Thanks to the inspiration of my good friend (and constant inspiration) I have been posting positive learning moments on Facebook recently. She started doing so to counter the feelings all of the standardized testing was causing (she teaches third grade). I loved the idea and started doing so as well. It helps me to start my day thinking of these positive events.

One day last week I wrote this:

Fun learning moment for today: I headed out walking around our school this morning looking for objects which my students might wonder about and ran into a former student. She’s now a fourth grader and has a rough time at home. She walked with me looking for objects and had a great eye for ideas and thought about what my first graders would find most interesting. I wanted pinecones and she pointed out the right kind of trees (something I didn’t know). She was so thoughtful, it started my day off right!

That was a great up for my day.

The next morning I had to run back out to my car for something I had forgotten. As I walked towards my car I noticed the same girl sitting on the same bench in front of the school. She does so most days. I think she is just looking for a quiet moment to herself. (When it’s cold or rainy our principal will open her office window and call to this little one to come keep her company.)

As I watched the girl’s mother pulled up, got out of the car, and went over to yell at her daughter. I couldn’t hear the words but I could hear the tone. When the girl stood up she smacked her on the bottom, pointed to the car, and kept yelling until her daughter was inside the car. Then she got in and drove away.

As she pulled out of our parking lot she passed our principal walking in and they waved at one another. I walked over and shared what I had seen. My principal was quite surprised, given that the mother had just smiled and waved.

That was a serious down for the day.

The Shaping of Stories

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

I agree with all the story shapings that Vonnegut explained in his video. 1. A person gets into trouble, but overcomes it. 2. the average person gets something great, and it goes totally wrong. Or 3. A lower person starts off badly, good things happen, and they over come everything and remain triumphant.

I chose to talk about the shaping of the movie “Another Cinderella Story” and it is under number 3. It is basically the modern day Cinderella Story. Just Like Vonnegut stated in the video, the movie starts at the bottom with a teenage girl whose father’s died and she was living with her step mom. Of course, like always, the step mother treated her badly, but she found happiness in dance at her school. Along with that, there was a Super going to her school that she was dying to meet but her step mother wants her other daughters to meet him instead.

Vonnegut stated how good things happened to this person repeated by her “godmother”, but in the movie the teenage girl finally meets the Superstar and he treats her like a princess. Then like always, the climax comes when she wants to go to an important event but her step mother disapproved. But the Superstar, is the super hero, and dances with her at the event that she snuck to and helps her win a dance scholarship and moves out and away from her Step Mother. So like always the good person(the teenage girl) wins, and the bad person(the step mother) loses. the teenage girl remembers the day her life changes when she meet the Superstar and knows that he helped change her horrible life.

 

05/25 Letter Home

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

Dear Mom, Dad, and family,

During my first week at Camp Magic MacGuffin, I’ve been helping the camp directors set up my activities! I’ve also been doing lots of unpacking. You remember how long it took me to pack up everything I needed for camp! I already had a Google account, but now I also have a Flickr account for photo sharing, a YouTube account for video sharing, a SoundCloud account for sharing sound clips, and finally, a Twitter account, for, well…tweeting! My fellow campers and camp counselors/directors all follow me on Twitter. I follow them too. When we tweet at each other, we use hashtag “#ds106″ to categorize our posts. When you click the hashtag, you will be able to see all the people talking about that category! My picture on the sites is of our puppy, Tux! I used his picture as an icon to represent all of my new accounts. I set up my profile for the DS106 class, listing all of these new accounts. My new website, marcey109.com, is being set up. I will write blog posts on the site. In fact, I have a new post to add. We watched a video presentation by Michael Wesch, an expert in internet culture. He was a keynote speaker at UMW last year. I wrote a blog post reacting to his speech. It was very informative and taught me a lot about the internet. It is so important to educate the next generation (my future students) on how to use the internet properly to tell their story!

I have downloaded a virtual world program called Minecraft. You will see that on the credit card billing statement ;) We haven’t used it yet, but it looks pretty cool and I am excited to get started. Eventually, our campfires will take place on that program.

I participated in my first Daily Create on Wednesday. I recorded a short video clip of myself talking about a family legend. I wrote about Mom’s mother. It was really neat to reflect and share my stories and thoughts with everyone at camp. I liked that the camp directors both responded to my video. It made me feel special!!

I wasn’t able to join the first week’s campfire, because I was away at EA’s (my best friend) graduation. Hopefully I will make it around the campfire this week though!

Camp has been lots of fun and I am looking forward to next week! Miss you!

xoxo Marcey

Reaction to Michael Wesch Video

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

After watching internet culture expert, Dr. Wesch’s, talk, I realized that I am not as technologically savvy as I had thought. I’d like to think I have some skills on the internet, definitely in the social networking aspect, as I grew up with AIM/instant messaging and MySpace in middle school, which warped into the creation of Facebook in 9th grade and Twitter in my later high school career. Being a social butterfly has always been my main reason for internet usage, something that is quite unfortunate for my academic achievement! Dr. Wesch expanded my thoughts on the influence of internet today and it’s prevalence in the classroom and other educational settings. I found this information particularly interesting because I am training to be an elementary school teacher! I was very excited to start the course off with a combination of the topics of education and technology. During my freshman year at Mary Washington, I took a freshman seminar entitled Mash-Up and Remix in Cyberspace (or something of the sort). I believe this course exposed me to the internet more than any other (so far), while using Dr. Wesch’s perspective. I watched this video in segments over the past week and took some notes on some of the points I found most thought-provoking.

I really enjoyed the title of his presentation, “From Knowledgeable to Knowledge-able.” Knowledgeability is knowing how to do things versus memorizing and regurgitating information that probably isn’t even very beneficial in the long scheme of things. The ability to be able to do things and perform tasks is very important in addition to basic background knowledge for students. This is where experiential education and learning comes in to play. I am very passionate about giving students opportunities and experiences to learn, rather than lecturing them in the front of the classroom. I think this is definitely a point that Dr. Wesch was trying to communicate through his presentation.

I found the Dove commercial particularly interesting, even inspiring at first! Although, later, I was very disappointed by the contrasting viewpoints displayed by the company. The point Dr. Wesch made about information literacy pairs with some of my concerns about the internet and it’s use in schools. How do we train our students to know what’s real and what’s fake? What information is reliable? When heavily incorporating the internet in schools, I find it extremely important to educate students on how to weed through irrelevant and misleading sources. If teachers approach the use of the internet as a tool, instead of a distraction, incorporation in the classroom will be much more successful. Like Dr. Wesch said, rather than making technology (internet usage) a requirement, teachers and professors should use it as an aid, students will indirectly learn how to operate it, in hopes for a higher academic goal.

I think blogging is really beneficial because students can display their ideas, while other students can comment with additional ideas, even contrasting ones. These types of collaborations represent reason for so many advances in the cyber world.

DS106: Letter home – week one

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

Hey folks

Missing you loads from over here by the lake, with the conifers humming and guitar strings waving in the breeze….

First week at camp! As you know the flight from England was a little delayed so I arrived after everyone else, but the camp directors have been great at welcoming me and making sure that I’m set up to receive all the class info and swimming times.

So far I’ve sussed out a few of the gems of the camp, especially doing cross country on Sunday which I ran in a PB  - check out some of our team’s movement pics here. Mine’s a wedding pic which I thought was a dud – but new friends have helped me see things differently and realise that a photo can be beautiful even if it’s not quite how you planned it. As a natural organiser, that’s a revelation!

You’ll be pleased to hear I’ve also made some connections.  Over Monday’s muffins, I shared a pic of the train sign from last weekend which was more about how an image needs to be ‘connected’ than the theme itself, but also contained a cheesy pun related to both railways and the theme of the day (groan).

It’s not all marshmallows and campfires, though – today’s annoying noise task left me contemplating that the sounds that annoy us seem to fall into two categories.  On a primal level, we’ve got the pitchy squeaks that offend our ears by being too unrefined, too unlike the rise and fall of the human voice, like my screeching violin example. And on a more thoughtful level we’ve got the ones like Mikeberta’s clock ticking, which demands a more cognitive response.

One thing that I’d like to get from next week is a bit more feedback from my fellow campers – but with bunkhouse buddies released today I’ve no doubt my new gang will be chatty bedfellows!

Must dash, the lake’s open for swimming so I’m off to practise my (s)crawl…

Love to you all

xxx

This post is a summary of week one of an online digital storytelling course

Thank you Kurt Vonnegut!

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

The shape of the Snow White Story

Snow white starts off as a princess with a stepmother. Gets chased out of the castle by a huntsman contracted to kill her. Finds a cottage in the woods, where she makes seven new friends. Eats poisoned apple and dies. Kissed by a prince and lives happily ever after!