Highlights included Professor Claire Warwick, from UCL,
talking about how academics often underestimate the power of social media to
advance research. She posed the question: ‘Is scholarly culture being changed
by Facebook and social media?’ She argued that Twitter, for example, is not
just chatter and that tweeters often make serious scholarly points. She described
the Twitter phenomenon #tweetyourthesis, started by UCL, which involved PhD
students tweeting the main idea behind their research. Her robust response to
the idea that 140 characters are insufficient to describe research work was:
‘What kind of expert are you, if you can’t communicate your research to
absolutely anyone? Being able to communicate is not dumbing down.’
Students involved in ‘tweeting their theses’ reported that the process helped
them refine and clarify their ideas, broke down feelings of isolation, and
helped them make contacts across the globe.
Another highlight was our video link to Newcastle
University’s Digital kitchen project. A team led by Professor Paul Seedhouse
have created an interactive kitchen which will teach you how to speak French –
and make an omelette at the same time! Paul talked us through the project and
then handed over to researchers Anne Preston and Clare Hooper to demonstrate
how the kitchen worked – and we quickly decided we all wanted a French (German?
Spanish? Chinese?) kitchen of our own! The project plans to create more
kitchens for different languages and you can find out more at: http://digitalinstitute.ncl.ac.uk/ilablearn/kitchen
So…another symposium over and we begin to look forward to
the next one. Watch out for videos and slides from the event on our website
shortly http://www.llas.ac.uk/events/archive/6395
and for the call for papers in the summer.
LLAS looks forward to seeing you next year!
I have spotted this review of the E-learning Symposium By Benoit Guilbaud and wanted to share it with you:
ReplyDeleteDay 1: http://benguilbaud.wordpress.com/2012/01/28/llas-e-learning-symposium-2012-day-1/
Day 2: http://benguilbaud.wordpress.com/2012/02/02/llas-e-learning-symposium-2012-day-2/
In response to: "‘What kind of expert are you, if you can’t communicate your research to absolutely anyone? Being able to communicate is not dumbing down." I completely agree, but this does not demand twitter - the medium is not the message!
ReplyDeleteHere's another way of doing the same thing:
http://dissertationhaiku.wordpress.com/
Your dissertation as a Haiku!