Archive for the ‘openonline’ Category

 

Glam Rock Me Baby!

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

GlamZazzy

I’m a child of the 70s, so glam rock is where it’s at for me! I saw Elton at the Garden in ’76 when he dressed up as the Statue of Liberty and rose up from a trap door in the stage floor. In an instant, my mind was opened to a new world of anything goes! It was that and all the smoke.

Topping the list of my favorites are David Bowie and Freddy Mercury of Queen. In the early 80s, they collaborated on an amazing song and video called “Under Pressure.” The video looks like a mashup you’d see on the web today, completely ahead of its time: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWca8OGaR0U .
While I’m laying down some basic tracks, I initially need vocals. We can use them as reference tracks as we go along, or we may keep them, who knows? For now, vocals is what I need.”Under Pressure” resonates more today than during the Reagan era that it was born to.  This song begs for a revisit in the 21st century using the 21st century’s capability for crowdsourcing. So, what say you, campers and all those DS106 people out there? Help me with the first step.

Please do me the favor of uploading a track of your singing, shouting, talking, or overdramatically-reading the lyrics to the song Under Pressure. Please do it acapella (that means no instrumentation, just your voice). If you are off-key, that’s what autotune is for, if we need to. I kinda like offkey. I will be laying down the initial tracks in the original E flat major if you are musically inclined. Otherwise, on-key is optional :)

The lyrics are here:

http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/queen/underpressure.html

How to upload and record? Get a SoundCloud account. You caneither record right there or upload right there. Then, put your track in the “Zazzy Under Pressure” group at http://soundcloud.com/groups/zazzy-under-pressure .

Looking forward to hearing you explore your vocal chops, as they say in the “BIZ.”

Potential of You and Me

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

This is what I see on my keyboard while listening to #ds106radio from work. Tripper Harrison is spinning some lovely today through the Magic Macguffin PA system.

Camp and Summer Goals

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

A quick post… I’ve got a few goals for my summer at Camp that may take me slightly off the beaten path from the rest of the campers. I guess that’s one of the great things about being a DS106 graduate: I can set my own assignment schedule!

I want to focus on video and audio assignments, particularly the latter, because I’m quite weak in the audio department. My talents lie in the visual/design and the written world, and I think my blog reflects that; you don’t see much of those assignments.

Camping Pod by Sheep"R"Us

Camping Pod by Sheep"R"Us

CC Attribution_NonCommercial_NoDerivsClick here to see this image on Flickr.

Also, I plan to participate in Camp NaNoWriMo in June and August, and I would like to do more traditional artwork–painting, that is to say. I’ve discovered a real passion for painting this year, and my foray isn’t entirely separate from DS106. I really allowed myself to embrace the artist within me after the Summer of Oblivion. I felt myself come alive during that time like I had not felt in a while, and I finally accepted that creativity is an essential part of my life–not just writing, but all kinds of creativity.

Separate from DS106, I’d like to work in exercise and The Daily Create as part of my daily routine. I’ve successfully added 750words.com into my schedule, so it’s time to take the next step.

Off to Summer Camp

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

This summer in addition to my regular duties at the University of Mary Washington I’m also pleased to announce that I will be a camp counselor at Camp Magic Macguffin. For the summer iteration of ds106, Martha Burtis and Alan Levine are rethinking how the course is structured to mix things up a bit and I’m really excited. Last year the summer course was built around the narrative of Dr. Oblivion from Videodrome and ended with a massacre at a cabin (amongst other odd side narratives). This year my understanding is that the entire mountain has been swept clean and a new and happy place for students was built in its place.

As a camp counselor I have the unique privilege of following a select group of students, commenting on their work, encouraging, mentoring, advising, and just being a part of the daily life at camp. It’s a great model for open classes! I’m taking on the persona of “Sgt. Pepperstrong” however I’m going to continue to blog about my work here (I already have way too many personalities to add another). You’ll be seeing more ds106 work from me as well as highlights from the summer course appear here. We’ll also be congregating in Google Hangouts as well as building a virtual camp in Minecraft! Sound like fun? There’s still time to sign up and get involved. It might just be the motivation you need to get excited about learning online again and building out a professional learning network. I can’t begin to describe what it has done for my career!

TDC: The Story of a Photo

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

After putting together The Daily Create earlier this year I’ve been lucky to have Alan Levine refining the backend of the site and loading up a bunch of assignments. The semester got so busy I didn’t end up participating all that much but decided to jump back in yesterday, and I’m glad I did. Yesterday was a video assignment to tell a story about an old photo. What I love about these types of assignments is that you get to see an intimate moment of the other ds106 participants as they tell a story on camera. I only wish we could figure out the Youtube feed, for some reason there are massive delays for some folks and even my video is still on available on the TDC site a day later.

In any case it gave me an opportunity to pull out one of many embarrassing photos from my childhood and talk on camera, plus I got to play around with the video feature of our shiny new camera. Here’s what I submitted:

Let the demolition begin (Taken with Instagram at Salem Fields…

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012



Let the demolition begin (Taken with Instagram at Salem Fields Community)

UMW Faculty Academy

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

I had the honour to be invited to speak at University of Mary Washington’s 2012 Faculty Academy in Virginia. Andy Rush did an excellent job of recording the session.


The thought of talking straight for an hour terrified me that I’d have a room full of sleeping people, so I tried to incorporate some of Cathy Davidson’s advice about encouraging large groups to think, pair, share. I took her idea one step in the doodle direction and asked them to draw. I scheduled regular doodle breaks to punctuate the segments between my agenda of history, brainstorming, planning, teaching, learning. Finally I tried to mash that up with Stephen Brookfield‘s critical incidents questionnaire so I could get feedback about the most engaging/least engaging moments in the session.

The big take away is that DS106 and ds106radio communities have given me the tools and inspiration to unleash my creativity in ways that best suit my learning. I hope I convinced a few folks to take DS106 a spin this summer at Camp MacGuffin

and a few more to pick up a pencil and sketch to brainstorm, plan, teach and learn.

For those of you, who are like me and prefer to skim content, here’s the slide deck you can quickly click through.

I wanted to end with a bang, so I paid homage to Jim Groom’s excellent TEDxNYED talk where he was able to deliver the first 3 minutes of a talk based on animated gifs without the projector working. He improvised and BECAME the animated gif. It was legendary.Below is the animated GIF renactment of McCaule Culkin in Home Alone represented the disastrous act, No Child Left Behind.

Of course presenting was a thrill but in truth, this event was a huge professional development opportunity for me. I learned a ton from so many amazing folks.

This was my second time in Virginia on the lovely UMW campus. This time I got to meet so many more incredible UMW staff and faculty, in addition to the awesome CUNY and Oberlin crews who I have only known online.

The first day was Grant’s really great presentation on Tinkering, Learning & The Adjacent Possible.

I wanted to riff off this concept, so I included my visual note as a first slide in my own presentation the next day:

@grantpotter Tinkering, Learning & The Adjacent Possible

What a treat to meet Michael Bransons Smith & Luke Waltzer (& see Mikhail again, of course). I loved their presentation on Dreaming about 100 Gadzillion BAzillion posts (we’re not gonna get hung up on the math).

100 Bazillion Posts A Year. CUNY Federation, Curriculum & Management #Umwfa12 @mgershovich @lwaltzer @mbransons

I was pleased to see Shannon Hauser present her blog journey. I cannot express how much I appreciate student voices at these events. Her dashboard was inspiring. It told a story on its own but it was great to have her give a bit of insight into the inner workings.

@shauser What a Long Strange Trip it's Been #umwfa12

It was cool to sit in the discussions about The Domain of One’s Own, which thanks to coolest CIO, Justin Webb (who happens to have the coolest CIO name, EVAR) is being made available to 400 students this coming fall.

A Domain Of One's Own #umwfa12

Another highligh was getting to see the MakerBots in action, thanks to the tinkering of Tim Owens.

Maker @timmmyboy With More Pompadour Cc @drgarcia @leelzebub

Especially after seeing David Darts reach for his source code.


cc licensed ( BY NC SD ) flickr photo shared by giulia.forsythe

David Darts is the artist provocateur / inventor of the Pirate Box, which inspired @Noiseprofessor to build one for Alan. Eventually that adorable little box came to hold thousands of files, affectionately known as StoryBox. It goes without saying, but I’ll say it anyway, it’s always awesome to spend any amount of time with Alan too, of course.


cc licensed ( BY ) flickr photo shared by cogdogblog

cc licensed ( BY NC SD ) flickr photo shared by rushaw

Just as I was finishing this post up, GNA encouraged me to think about things I learned from doing this presentation. Good question. I really like the idea of having people graph their attention but I think I could have spent more time explaining or (here’s a radical concept) include a drawing of how I expected the axis to look. One piece of feedback I received from the index cards was that “forced doodling was awkward” and I should have given space for participants to gracefully opt out of drawing if it was out of their comfort zone.

UPDATE: Additional Resources & References
The Art of Changing the Brain, James Zull

Being a Critically Reflective Teacher, Stephen Brookfield

Now You See It, Cathy Davidson

Back of the Napkin, Dan Roam
Gamestorming, Sunni Brown
Visual Teams, David Sibbet
The Shape of Thoughts, Nick Sousanis

Cost of Knowledge. Elsevier Boycott
My Visual Practice Resource Page

Fosse animated gifs

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

Just getting warmed up for camp by making a couple of Bob Fosse choreography animated gifs. His work seems to lend itself to the format. First, the man himself, from The Little Prince:

Fosse

This was done by downloading the clip from YouTube, then opening in QuickTime Pro and exporting as an image sequence. The first time was a default of 4 frames per second, which was too choppy, so I changed it to 8. Then I tried the Gifninja site our camp director Alan Levine used, but I didn’t like it. Too fuzzy. So I used Picasion instead, at fast speed.

Then (always a favorite of mine) the Sweet Charity dance hall girls (this one is subtle): 

Bigspender3

For this one I did the same thing with Quicktime, but then tried Make a GIF instead. It lets you use 20 images instead of just 10 like Picasion, but that made a huge file (over 1 MB) so it wouldn’t play well. I went back to Picasion.

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Hatchet Jack Layin’ Down the Law

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

I’ve been thinking about how I need to run the cabin. What is acceptable behavior and what is not? I have a few ideas of course cuz I done this before. But I am curious just how others might be restricting, or allowing, behaviors of the campers.

I have thought about my mom, and how she raised me. Tall as the redwoods and all that. I have thought about the role if structure in my life and how I have been fighting rules and getting in a word of trouble as a result. What is an old man to do with a pack of rascal campers?

I started a list of some rules I have been thinking about. Pretty strict and strait forward. No jumping on the bunks and stuff like that. I am looking for ideas from other experienced campers and staff members. Reaching out for help is ol’ Hatchet Jack.

Here is where some of my early ideas are. Feel free to add some you think are useful. I best get some ground rules set up before them campers take over, right?

Back to Photography

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

Some folks who have only been a part of my network since I began working in instructional technology might not realize my BA is in Studio Art with a concentration in Graphic Design. Since Longwood didn’t have a full Graphic Design program, only a concentration, it meant I was exposed to a wide variety of art forms during my years as an art major, which was awesome. The two standouts for me that had nothing to do with a computer were Screen-printing and Photography. In fact I loved the photography course so much I ended up taking a few advanced courses as electives. These were all traditional black and white photography classes taught using manual cameras and learning the ropes of developing your own film and exposing prints in a dark room.

Even back in 2003 the writing was on the wall for the digital occupation of the photo world. All color photography courses were taught with the film being developed elsewhere and scanned in to a computer due to the high cost of the materials and complex work to develop on your own. I don’t know if they’ve moved completely digital yet, but I imagine it’s only a matter of time before buying the film and materials become too difficult and the line between understanding the original artform and what it has become is crossed (my graphic design courses were completely digital for example as no one in their right mind still practices the art without the help of Adobe CS).

All this to bring me back to last week when some equipment DTLT purchased came in. We own one DSLR already that I’ve never played with, but decided to expand to a second camera kit with a few different lenses. We bought a Canon T3i with a 50mm f1.4 lens and an 11~16mm aspherical wide angle lens along with a 580EX II flash and bag. I picked them up from our secretary on Friday and decided to take them home for the weekend for some “testing”. It’s been like falling in love all over again.

I can remember never knowing what a photo would look like until I dropped the paper into the bath of chemicals and waited. Did I develop the film properly? Had I exposed it long enough? Too long? Were the tongs I was using going to smudge the damn paper and ruin an awesome print? All of these things are no longer an issue as I can simply look at an LCD and immediately see what worked and what didn’t. With a basic 4GB card we had in the office I can take hundreds of photos (did I mention I bought my film in bulk and rolled it into empty canisters, 24 photos at a time? Uphill both ways?). After a weekend of playing I can see why the 50mm lives up to its reputation. It’s amazing to have a tool in your hands that allows you to see the world in a different way. I’m also starting to see how having a good camera pushes you to publish more. My Flickr photostream has been buzzing with new photos all weekend and I’m pretty darn proud of how much of it I love. I think Andy Rush said it best:

@ I love seeing the results of a technology tool meeting up with your creative abilities. #whatitsallabout #godtlt

@rushaw

Andy Rush

Here is a small selection of some of the shots I’ve grabbed so far of my daughter and around the office. I’m sure there’s more to come as time goes on.