Archive for the ‘ds106’ Category
Boy Scout Saver: A Video Daily Create
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012Sometimes You Just Have to GIF Yourself Out of a Jam
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012I’m thinking of Jerry’s note this morning (happy to see him signed up for Camp Magic Macguffin)
ā@lukew: “an artist understands that self-renewal is the only way to avoid burning out.”ālooking at #ds106 as a self-renewal project.
— Jerry Slezak (@jslezak) May 22, 2012
With the startup of our online class, I worry about letting slip the time spent creating for class, itself the self-renewal I need as much as oxygen. Seeing Scottlo Warhol his Second Life self in a followup to Leelzebub’s own effort had me eager to try the tutorial.
But alas I am photoshopless until the new order comes in, and that was way more than I wanted to bite off and try in GIMP.
So I went for the next best thing, doing an animated GIF. When I visited the National Cryptologic Museum on Saturday I enjoyed watching the machine that had a computer controlled arm for loading data form a giant circular library system (I cannot recall the name of it), the robot arm seemed to have some good potential.
I shot some video on my iPhone and then loaded it into MPEG StreamClip to do some frame grabs (using the low res 320×240 size). I then used the web based Gifninja site to create the GIF above. It’s basic, and one frame moves a bit more, but I like it, especially the shadowy figure who passes behind.
It’s interesting to note that Gigninja has a new tool (at least since a year more or more ago) for splitting GIFs, might be some fun things to do with mashing up sequences of existing animated GIFS.
This takes me back to my first animated GIF, from December 14, 2011, when I used scenes from Frankenstein to declare ds106 IS ALIVE
It’s almost nostalgic to think of the birth of ds106- I wrote then
So itās not even place, itās three weeks out, why are all my colleagues, friends madly in their labs, and doing of all things, retro 1990s techno things like animated gifs?
And so it is with this wild ride that starts next month. It really is under the hand of Dr. Bava, but he is being humble and not wanting to be a mad dictator, but he does have a vision. I was lucky to spend an hour on Skype with Jim, Tom and Martha, just bouncing ideas.
What should unfold will be unlike many of the other MOOC efforts in that it is not hinged on the weekly drum beat drive of the syllabus and synchronous lecture like sessions in Elluminate. There wont be discussion forums (likely). it will be blog based, and very much individually driven. It will be what ever you want it to be- you will be able to follow the structure jim and Martha are doing at UMW as a āregularā class, or you can cherry pick the bits you want to do.
Itās all about a continuous pulse of creativity. Jim is reeally hooked into the notion of The Dailyshoot and Martha has a nifty duct tape and RSS system for crowdsourcing assignments.
My own idea, also influenced my dailyshoot (which you know I love) is that there could be small daily creative assignments available each day. One does not need to do them all, maybe for a class, it would be 2 or three per week. But they would all be small things one could do each do to create something new, maybe a graphic, a fake movie poster, a story played out in Amazon reviews. The thing about Dailyshoot is that it drives you to try new, and challenging, things.
All of these would be things people can do or not, but might feed the larger, conceptual assignments that are the frame of Jimās previous ds106 courses at UMW.
The, like now, ds106.us .. IT’S ALIVE. Come in and play now, come on over to Camp Magic Macguffin for the summer of ds106.
Homesick? Not Me!
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012Day one at Camp Magic MacGuffin and the best way to stave off homesickness is to stay busy. In that spirit I did a little exploring of the landscape with some activities and unpacking some of my camp equipment.
First, I opted to jump in and play with The Daily Create #134. The challenge was to redesign an image of an animal. I opened my camp kit and pulled out GIMP to alter a photo of an animal (so not truly the task) because I’d never used photo editors short of the auto-correct feature in iPhoto. Here’s what I came up with…
My personal favorite from the task was the Dande-hedgehog from CoachK though.
I also unpacked Minecraft and bee-bopped around there to see what that platform/game has to offer. Admittedly, this product has a tremendous following. A quick YouTube search of “Minecraft” and you’ll be up to your ears in video tutorials that rapidly take you through different aspects of the environment. Back in Camp Magic MacGuffin, it appears that Minecraft will be used for community and storytelling. Here’s a little trailer about Minecraft to explain the platform.
I did purchase a Minecraft subscription for the experiment so that I can be fully immersed in the DS106 experience. I will admit though, I am always a little skeptical about virtual worlds for learning and sharing. There was a time when I played World of Warcraft and after some time could begin to see potential lessons in leadership, anthropology of gaming environments, social protocols and mores, etc. It took some time and creative thinking to get passed the game to see those things though. None the less, Minecraft is different than WOW (even if it were just in cost alone) in many ways including the ability to host and create your own world with a specific purpose. So, I’m all in on Minecraft. Perhaps I’ll create my own little world (apart from my own little world I live in regularly) and explore some possibilities for learning, teaching, and fun.
I jumped in on the Twitter feeds, browsed my fellow campers blogs and began watching the week’s assigned video for reflection. I just need to find the time to do all this camping.
As for homesickness, being active and immersed is the best way to stave off those “I miss home” blues. So, stay busy campers!
Comrade Avatar
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012Leelzebub continues to set the pace with her recent outpouring of fun and inspiring ds106 assignments. I learned more about using photoshop in the 90 plus minutes it took me to do the Warhol This assignment than I ever did watching those YouTube tutorials that the youngsters like to make nowadays. And that’s one of the great and wacky things about doing these things.
What at the beginning looked like a quick and easy warm up assignment for Camp Magic MacGuffin (it begins tomorrow, BTW), turned into a serious challenge. It again forced me to confront the digital skill set I am least comfortable with: image editing. I haven’t a clue about color, perspective and all that jazz. I’ll certainly look at Warhol’s soup cans with greater appreciation after my struggle to follow this helpful tutorial in trying to make something out of this old Second Life snapshot I found in my inventory recently.
And I suppose this virtual friend from a long time ago is where the story in this assignment is. She and I met at the headquarters building of the now defunct Communist Party of Second Life. The group had formed in playful opposition to the then rampant commercialization taking place in SL. Lots of PR and marketing firms were trying to get their clients to invest big in the virtual world. It was supposed to be the next big thing.
Though it was just a few years ago that I dabbled in such politics and activism, I’d completely forgotten about it until I found the photos of this character whose name I cannot for the life of me recall. There’s even the possibility that the avatar was me. How’s that for weird?
And suddenly there are dozens of potential story lines fighting for my attention. They’re just begging me to run with them for a little while to see what happens. There’s been a lot of these unexpected imaginative flights of fancy these days. The text files needing to be revised and revisited are piling up like Oreo cookie crumbs on a Tardis (new series) bed.
But I haven’t time for such frivolity. I need to get my bags packed for CMM. Leelzebub is miles ahead and I’m stuck on Corona Cay with my domestic Daleks. They don’t even exterminate intruders while I’m away. Things are getting serious here – very serious.
Jumping from one ds106 class to the next
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012
cc licensed ( BY NC SA ) flickr photo shared by febbrile
This is about as close as I might get to a reflection on my first round of teaching an on site section of ds106 at the University of Mary Washington- the class had barely wrapped and we were off into prep for Faculty Academy, and this week, ds106 cranks up for its summer iteration. I dropped the ball on my audio reflections leaving about 4 recordings sitting high and dry.
Not to mention it is 2am and I have an online presentation to deliver at 9am.
But if I don’t blog it now, I might lose it all, given (another pending blog post) a summer of travel that starts in less than 48 hours.
Enough prelude, get to it, Levine!
First of all, this was about the first time since the mid 1990s that I was teaching a class; then like now, I am humbled at how much in underestimate the toll it takes. No, let me go one back than first of all- it was a thrilling experience I have no regrets on, and could not be prouder of the work done by all of my students (see the collection of final projects).
Knowing how to do the ds106 work is one thing, being able to assist 25 students in doing it… another. I have to say that they accomplish much on what they learn to and not so much what I teach them; I am there to set the pace, to nudge, coach, cajole.
The biggest struggle was my in class strategies and presence; I do not feel like I developed the “shtick” or way to carry the show in my own way. I have no expectations of doing the class a la Jim Groom, who really ends up generating a frenzy of energy among his students (with his gift of talking smack to people and them loving it). Part of it was perhaps the awkward beginning, the 2 weeks of class when it started and I was coming in via Skype, meaning it took more time for the students and I to get to know each other.
What worked best were sessions where I broke things down into small segments of students doing rapid prototyping or group activities. What worked least best was the sessions where I just got up and talked and showed. It was uphill all the way to engage in discussions (though there were good ones when we discussed YouTube genres).
Some of the best classes happened in February, and the peak was likely the night I had them do Foley sounds for a Charlie Chaplin silent film- here is their final work
The intensity of the work was hard, and I sensed many of my students were so focussed on getting their “30 stars” of video assignments, that doing that superseded the making art damnit goal. I did not think I would have to be explicit in criteria for writing up assignments, but even with commenting, I see posts with thrilling titles like “Mashup Assignment”, no links, and not the kind of “story behind the story” I asked for often.
I should go to the half full glass as I had at least 6-8 students who did really good blog writing and pretty much documented their progress. I think all of us got worn out through the video section, but then again, so many students rose to the occasion who had never done video before.
Assignment wise, the “Return to the Silent Era” may have been the killer one, with over 40 people completing it, and the work of Ben Rimes hitting the crowning achievement of appearing in a British tabloid.
My biggest contribution might have ben creating the assignment remix generator, riffing off of the ideas of Tom Woodward for a mechanism for creating different “card twists” to change up a randomly selected assignment. The unplanned gem was in asking students to go back to the original assignments and identify media from another student’s work to use as a reference for the remix. As of this writing, there were 143 new remix assignments done.
The coding on that was largely on the shoulders of the work Martha Burtis did last year on the assignments site. I’ve been doing some cleanup and improvements on that site as well.
The next add on for the remix site might be a tool to encourage re-writing of existing assignments to work in different disciplines, so you could have a tool that lets the user select, say Math, and they get randomly chosen existing assignment and have to contribute a new way to do it for their selected discipline. It’s pretty much the same engine.
All of this is fraying as I enter into the weird colored zone of the summer section I am co-teaching with Martha. This one is a 10 week course, completely online. As a counter to the “Summer of Oblivion” the theme of this summer is bright and happy camp experience as Camp Magic Macguffin. It is my role to bring some sanity and civility to what was a horror sceme last summer.
Martha and I have done a fun series of weekly videos, playing with the theme– the whackiest part was we set up a swag store before sitting down to tweak the syllabus. But this is the fun part about this class being done in a performance mode- the direction and shape will be driven by the people that show up.
And boy have people been great to sign up to take the class or even hover around as wise experienced camp counselors. For our open participants, see a new guide to participation we set up on the main mother site. The things we’d ask the open folks to do are to play as much as they can with the assignments, as well as keeping the flow of Daily Create going. Mainly we hope you interact with our students via their blog posts and tweets.
Now I getting really sleepy and blog sloppy. The summer course may be a ton of work, but it is going to be some crazy unknown directions as hopefully our participants start changing up our story.
If you have been wavering about being in ds106, now is the prime time to jump in- we already have in the first days some art being create, but mostly a lot of the community stepping in and trying to connect with the students.
I was going to work this into another post, but with the cacophony of blogs going on and on about MOOCs and such- I can say as long as I can have some say, there will be no cheap “x” added to ds106- it is what it is, open participants can ge the full or half full immersion that makes it fomcfortabnle (damn I am tired).
Rocking with ds106 in the summer of Magic. Join in now.
ASIDE ā Campās Begun!
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012Camp Magic MacGuffin has begun! I’m very excited about it. Meeting the other DS106 participants is one the best parts about the class, seeing who takes to it immediately, seeing who evolves into the course, and just getting to know everyone!
I’ve got a couple projects that I want to get done by tomorrow night that are camp-related. So, looking forward to that.
King of the Road
Saturday, May 19th, 2012Though this entry doesn’t adhere to any specific ds106 assignment, the sacred position the animated GIF holds in the ds106 canonĀ permits me, I believe, to try to weave some sort of digital story. I’m motivated by a sentiment I’ve heard from many ds106 friends since my recent return to Second Life. Essentially, a lot of folks believe that Second Life is dead. This evening I took a little road trip in my recently purchased 1967 Chevy II that hopefully will put that notion to rest. Second Life is not dead – yet anyway.
In terms of process, the GIF above was made with MPEG StreamClip from a video file I captured using iShowU HD while motoring in a SL road network. Since I’d forgotten the procedure, I revisited the Bava’s definitive tutorial on the subject. The idea was born from my emerging idea to build an animated GIF museum in Second Life.
One of the neat things about driving these roadways is the opportunity it presents to see the depth and breadth of what has been created in Second Life. For me the mind blowing part is that everything one encounters has been built and placed by other folks. There is certainly a good bit of frivolity and unsavory stuff on offer. But there are also breathtaking moments to be found along the way.
Travelling around in such a way also provides the opportunity to connect with random strangers. I had to skid to a stop when I saw the avatar above dressed in stunning traditional Turkish clothing. She was on her way to a cultural festival in SL that was to feature live music and dancing avatars. I offered to give her a ride there but she said it was on island region and she needed to teleport there after allowing me to snap a few photos.
After parting ways, I switched my t-shirt and hit the road again. It wasn’t long before I noticed this friendly pirate dancing on a picnic table along the roadway. When asked why I was driving around, I said I was planning on writing a travel log about motoring in Second Life.
When I asked what sort of story could I write about a dancing pirate, she said she had a few ideas. So we hopped in the Chevy and headed down the road and together brainstormed a madcap adventure in voice chat. The only problem was that our voice connection got cut whenever the car crossed from one region to the next. We drove a long loop around the region and were able to come up with an idea for a recurring series of photo blog posts and animated GIFs featuring a fast driving digital story teller who once was plagued with low self-esteem issues and his light-hearted sidekick: a scantily clad dancing pirate who’s forgotten more about Second Life than most people will ever learn.
I just hope Second Life lasts long enough for us to put a few of these together.
Waiting for the Dinner Bell. Iām Hungry.
Saturday, May 19th, 2012Well campers, I been waiting around and cleaning up the camp. Trimming bushes, racking leaves, beating the daylights out of rugs and a few squirrels and mopping the floors. Camp is looking good for opening day.
I been thinking about dinner bells because that is how you know the chow is on at camp. I have a favorite bell. It is at the bottom of the ol’ Grand Canyon and it tells the whole Phantom Ranch that chow is on in the morning and in the evening. Someday I am going to ring the dang thing just for fun.
Like a Hole in the Head
Saturday, May 19th, 2012I need another thing to do like a hole in the head. I wrapping my second semester with Daemen and elected to spend some Summer months engaged in DS106 to boost my digital storytelling and have a little fun.
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CC BY-NC-ND: red5standingby |
There’s a lot going on this Summer and I’m knee deep in a bunch of exciting projects:
- Lots of faculty development programs
- Instructional design and technology support for a bunch of courses
- QR Coding project for our Research and Information Commons
- Video projects for a few special initiatives
- Continuing work with our distance education quality initiative
Visual Assignment: Pippin a la Warhol
Thursday, May 17th, 2012Warhol Something: Andy Warhol was an iconic pop art mastermind. Now you can be one too! Take a photograph, or use an existing one, and create a piece of pop art.
Click here to see this image on Flickr.
I’d wanted to do this assignment for a while, and since graduating, I’ve had a bit of time on my hands. I began with a photo I’d taken about a year ago of my boyfriend’s dog, Pippin, and followed the very useful tutorial provided by the assignment’s creator. The process was more complicated than I thought, and I had to bite down the urge to go off on my own. I’m glad I chose to stick with the directions, because I learned several new things, like creating sets/groups, texturizing, and the “load selection” ability, which wowed me.
I’m happy with the way it turned out, and I may even print it off at Kinko’s!
One thing the tutorial suggested that I couldn’t do was attached a signature. I may end up pulling out ye olde clunky scanner and digitizing my John Hancock, since I thought that was a neat idea. I might as well “own” my creations. I’ve been really surprised by my skill for this stuff.