Archive for the ‘bunk5’ Category

 

My Own Macguffin: the Michael Wesch video

Sunday, June 3rd, 2012

Merriam-Webster Definition of MACGUFFIN: an object, event, or character in a film or story that serves to set and keep the plot in motion despite usually lacking intrinsic importance

I finally had some time to get into the swing of Camp so I thought I’d start by watching the Michael Wesch video. It started out a little strangely, I could see Martha Burtis but not hear her. I clicked round a bit and eventually saw a man who was introducing the presentation. While listening to him I organized a document to take some notes. I was happily watching and wrote a quote from the introduction “We know we are going someplace but we are just not quite sure where or how.”

When I went back in the video to confirm the speaker’s name and title, MBurtis was back. I clicked around in the video and she was everywhere! No matter where I found her, if I let her run, it eventually went back to the introduction regardless of the timestamp.  At 14 minutes: MBurtis and then intro; at 7min: MBurtis and then intro; at 40min: MBurtis and then intro. What’s up with that?

So where did that take me? Certainly around in circles! The same thing happened in other browsers. Do I need to watch the whole thing from the beginning to get the content? From other’s blog posts it seems that they have watched the video… Is there a hidden message in all of this for me? Is it a Digi-Ouija???

I went back to find our definition of digi-ouija – it made an elegant comparison to a macguffin but couldn’t remember who suggested this Bunk name or find the reference in my Twitter feed. In the amount of time that I have now spent trying to understand what was going on and explain it, I could have gone back to the beginning of the video and watched the whole thing!

As someone said at the beginning of the video,

“We know we are going someplace but we are just not quite sure where or how.”

That pretty much sums up my ds106 experience thus far!

Appetite for destruction: tdc 146

Saturday, June 2nd, 2012

Root system

Today’s Daily Create prompt: take a photo that represents destruction.  Exposed root systems make me feel unsettled.  It’s like seeing a person’s innards on the outside.  That’s just not how it’s supposed to be.

I’m no Truman Capote

Friday, June 1st, 2012

Today’s Daily Create assignment was to Bugs Bunny. At first I was intimidated on drawing a character or something that symbolizes life. Drawing something technical, such as a electronic circuit or building diagrams is what I love to do. Luckily the wise folks at DS106 included a link to YouTube with a video from the master animator himself Chuck Jones on how to draw Bugs Bunny. Grabbing my trusty Mitsubishi Uni Kuru Toga mechanical pencil (the ultimate geek tool) and went to work. I am pretty impressed with the out come. The video is incredibly informative and for my first try I am pretty happy with the results. After sketching Bugs I scanned the drawing and found out my scanner is creating lines in the captured picture. Lacking time I just added a tint to the picture to create a wood grain effect that make it look better and I was happy with it. 

bugs bunny drawing

 

Chuck Jones shows how to draw Bugs Bunny

Dear Family: a letter home from Camp Magic Macguffin (week #2)

Friday, June 1st, 2012

Dear Family,

I arrived at camp a little late, so I’m feeling behind and a little overwhelmed.  While everyone is skinny dipping in the lake tonight or making out in the poison ivy, I’ll be catching up on videos, articles, daily creates, and so on and so forth.  My bunk mates seem pretty cool and friendly, which helps.

You were right about camp not being as awkward as I thought it would be.  I dipped my toe into Minecraft today.  I’m looking forward to playing that more.  I’m also looking forward to becoming more adept at toggling between the Minecraft window and TeamSpeak window.  I feel pretty clumsy, but also motivated by the small amount of progress I made.

Ok.  Ok.  I’ll say it again.  You were right.  I’m glad I’m here.  I’m glad I didn’t wait until next year to sign up like I had planned.  I wanted to learn more about WordPress this summer.  I wanted to get into Minecraft this summer.  Camp Magic Macguffin is letting me do that and with other people.  Things aren’t quite as intimidating when there are other folks around.  There are other people to flouder with.  There are other people to help guide me through the road blocks.  So yeah…  I’m excited about camp.

That’s it family.  Until next week…

Mel

I Heart U DS106!

Friday, June 1st, 2012

This is a video I created for a Daily Create Assignment that required me to make a video of me saying “I love DS106″. It was really fun to make and forced me to find and utilize tools that I wouldn’t normally have used. Just wish I had more time to work on this video.

ds106: The Spring 2012 Course Evaluations

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Last Fall, in preparation for teaching ds106 this Spring, I blogged about a number of trends in my Spring 2011 course evaluations and how I wanted to work on my relatively poor scores when it comes to at least two elements of the course: “Clear Criteria for Grading” and “timely return of graded materials.” (We got course evaluations back much much quicker this year thanks to the course evaluation system moving online.) Turns out despite the best laid plans of mice and menaces, my numbers in both categories went down slightly. For example, “clear criteria for grading” was 3.95 out of 5 last year, and was 3.93 this year, which kinda pisses me off because I spent a lot more time framing expectations this time around. That said, grading in ds106 is very much part and parcel of one’s engagement in the work happening around the community, and despite how much I push this it always comes as a surprise to students at the end of the semester when it comes to grading.

The other area, “timely return of graded material” was an average of about 4.25 out of 5 last year across both sections, this year it was 4.13 for my larger, combined class. I am not as surprised about this because I pushed off our weekly meetings and didn’t send letter grades out after we met. I think part of my problem with both these categories is I am torn between totally abandoning the traditional notion of the letter grade but still making sure students have a clear sense of where they are throughout the semester—which is what I do three times a semester in individual conferences. This approach takes a ton of time, but I figure the more intimate, focused feedback on their progress and work is far more useful than a hard and fast grade. But I may be wrong on this count. I ride them regularly in their comments and through email from week 2 on so they don’t fail miserably out of the gate (which works very well, I highly recommend this—particularly for online students), the feedback is regular and sometimes brutal :)

As for the other categories for instructor evaluation, there were some my scores increased significantly others where it fell marginally. For example, this semester the class “met on schedule” was up .18 points from an average of about 4.62 to 4.8. Not sure what to say here, we met pretty regularly last year as well. Also, the “presented material in an organized fashion” was up about one-tenth of a point from an average of about 4.23 to 4.33—I think this has a lot to do with all of Alan Levine’s amazing framing of the assignments each week—I benefitted similarly from teaching alongside Martha the previous year as well.

I’m a little sad to report that my enthusiasm score went from an average of about 4.93 to 4.89—I wonder if this a case of a bit of ds106 ennui. This is most distressing for me, enthusiasm is all I got—it’s my life! :)

You can see all of the Instructor Evaluation details below:

The second part of the evaluation is the focus on the course experience. And I was pretty impressed with the results this time around because all six categories increased, and the separation of course experience from the instructor is promising for ds106. My larger take away from these scores—which I fully understand are subjective, unreliable, and potentially earth threatening— is the idea of the course and its usefulness transcending any one idea of an instructor, which is nice.

“I acquired substantial knowledge and/or skills in this course.” 4.57 –> 4.67
“I found instructor’s feedback useful”. 4.63 –> 4.85 (this is odd given how much I got tagged on feedback in my evaluation)
“I was encouraged to ask questions about the course material.” 4.79 –> 4.81
“I found the instructor to be helpful in clarifying difficult material.” 4.68 –> 4.85
“I was encouraged to reflect critically on course content.” 4.69 –> 4.88
“I found the instructor to be available outside of class for help (e.g., during office hours, special appointments, via e-mail, telephone).” 4.78 –> 4.84

Across the board the experience of the course ranked higher than last year, and it also had a 4.82 overall score which is significantly higher than the UMW average of 4.38.


The only thing I did radically differently this semester was to provide every student with the option to take the class face-to-face (f2f) or entirely online. Of the 34 who finished the class, 19 took it f2f and the remaining 15 took fully online (sometimes a few of these online students came to class for the fun of it). So close to a 60/40 cut when given the option to take it f2f or online. What was unfortunate about this go around, unlike last semester, is that I can’t distinguish the feedback from f2f and online students given they’re all in one section—last semester there was a f2f and a separate online section. That’s another point to consider. I had about 10 to 12 more registered students in a single session of ds106 than I usually do (last year I was lucky enough to get paid for two sections, but that was “corrected”) so I decided to overload to see how that would go, and in retrospect it wasn’t that much more work because I did a good job of keeping the onus on them to be part of the community, comment, interact, and basically forge their own relationships within and beyond the class. Placing the responsibility back on the students and following up with them on it periodically is rather effective for managing a very mild overload of students in my experience (don’t imagine it can or should scale much beyond a handful of students).

More and more I think the distinction between taking d106 online and f2f is arbitrary in terms of the value of the experience, and for me that is a radical development. ds106 is a web native class, it is born of and on the web making the f2f experience potentially interesting and reassuring, but at the same time vestigial. I like the f2f classroom, I like getting to know students their and having the physical space to congregate in. That said, based on my own experience I’m pretty certain it would be erroneous to privilege it in this regard.

Finally, here are some anonymous student quotes from the evaluations that were pretty fun:

It doesn’t get much more awesome than this one—attack the evaluators!:

Attempting to evaluate my teacher in this manner is flawed and unacceptable. To pretend that my teacher, Jim Groom, deserves to be evaluated according to a quantified list of predetermined measures would be an assault to his viability as an instructor, an advisor, and a mentor. Although you wrap up this ‘course evaluation’ with a pretty bow (telling me my input is important, that these evaluations matter, etc.), I absolutely refuse to reduce myself to participation in your quantitative course evaluations and ‘outcome assessments.’ Do you really believe I can summarize my teacher’s abilities with a series of “5s,” symbolizing his extraordinary capacity to inspire students to learn? I sincerely hope you do not.

And this one ain’t so bad either:

This has been the most work intensive and the most rewarding course I’ve taken at UMW. It is unlike anything else I’ve taken before, and I’ve gained so much valuable knowledge about Web2.0 and online presence, not to mention the increased confidence in my creative and technical abilities. I will use the skills I’ve learned in this class for many years to come, no matter what profession I end up working in.

The idea of the intensity of the work is a recurring theme in the evaluations (which makes me happy, get your monies worth folks):

Overall I really enjoyed this class. At times I thought the work load was a little bit much for a 100 level class, but Jim was very understanding of our busy schedules.

Where is written that all 100 level classes are less work and by default easier? This is a fallacy of some kind, right?

The work was tedious most weeks, but the hard work was well worth it. I learned so many useful skills in this class. Allowing us an extra week for video was truly helpful–I recommend doing that again.

This is a great class that overloads right near the end, starting with the video weeks. Seriously, those burnt me out hardcore. The radio thing was already a TON of work, then 30 stars of video, THEN 15 remix stars ALL WHILE I’m supposed to be doing final projects, in addition to my OTHER CLASSES and work and a social life? C’mon.

This course has been very enlightening in terms of things that can be accomplished through the web as a medium. However, the class is so fast-paced, if you don’t have the time for it in your schedule, it is advised to NOT take it. It requires so much time and energy through some parts of the semester and can be difficult to juggle the coursework amidst work for other, more crucial classes! I love the idea of the course though and it has definitely been an interesting experience!

And the money quote which is at the heart of ds106:

I LOVED this class. It really opened my mind to my potential creativity

Why I Love the Internets

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

I guess it was around 1:00 when I sat down to do something at the computer.  I can’t remember what my purpose was, but I’m pretty sure it was mildly important.  I somehow ended up at the 3D Printing @ MWU blog and then I read some of Tim Owens‘ tweets (@timmmmyboy).  And those lead me to the Magic Macguffin summer camp.  Mind = blown.

I am now a registered camper at Camp Magic Macguffin, and I’m looking forward to the next 10 weeks of immersion in digital storytelling and having the balls ovaries to participate actively and thoughtfully in these online environments.

 

 

TDC 143 – Sky

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

I know I was driving when I took this picture, which is not the safest way to do The Daily Create. I thought of The Daily Create and I decided to take the photograph it while I was thinking about it.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jessrigelhaupt/7305628628/

How to hangout at camp without hanging out. #DS106

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

Today’s Camp Macguffin campfire hangout was very entertaining and informative. I joined the camp fire hangout this morning from work. The problem is that my workplace is not really conducive to sending audio and video, so while I could see and hear everything going on I could only participate via the text chat. So when I discovered that I could watch and listen to the hangout from Google Plus, I gave up my seat so someone else could join in and I watched from the bushes where I discovered olHatchetJack was  stalking watching the proceedings.
Here’s what it looked like in my browser.

cc licensed ( BY NC SD ) flickr photo shared by wwnorm
This seems like a good way to get more participants especially if we use  Twitter instead of the built in chat in the hangout. Late arrivals would still be able to experience the live event, kind of from the back row, and if anyone leaves early,  someone else could grab the vacated spot. It just means someone in the hangout needs to watch the Twitter back channel to relay any comments or questions. I think Alan and Bryan Alexander were on Twitter for some of the time as I saw them Tweeting during the campfire.

I don’t know all the details but when the hangout started, I found our host, Alan on G+ with a notice which told me he was in a hangout. Clicking on the notice, I could suddenly see and hear the hangout even though I hadn’t joined it. I think it has to be a public, broadcast hangout to work this way. Anyway I thought it was pretty cool. The only thing I couldn’t see was the hangout chat. I think there’s a way to watch from YouTube, too.

The point of all this is that campers can participates even if they get the “hangout full” message when trying to join. I’ll probably have to use this approach for most of the remaining hangouts unless I’m away from work. I think the hangouts will be a great way to get some group interaction, so I encourage everyone to check it out. Hey, we could even have hangouts for our bunk groups too.

That’s all. Now I’ve got to go take some pictures of the sky for TDC, see ya.

That’s my story. Any Questions?

Camp Magic MacGuffin : First Impressions

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

hatchetjackToday, after missing the bus and a week late, I finally made it to Camp Magic MacGuffin. Hurray for me! Once here I was welcomed by my Camp Counselor Hatchet Jack. My immediate thought was “In five days we’ll all either be working in an underground gold mine for him… or be dead by his hand”. When your bio on the Camp Counselor page in the orientation pamphlet is written as a manifesto, you know you are working with someone with a sound mind. Anyhow, he seems stable enough to be a counselor and he wields an impressive handmade hatchet that he most likely made himself. Well I am off to unpack and meet everyone in Bunk 5.