web 2.0 in higher education

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Web 2.0 in Higher Education Mark van Harmelen

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Page 1: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Web 2.0in

Higher Education

Mark van Harmelen

Page 2: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

What’s it all about?

Sharing Contentcreate

savefinduse

re-usemix

mash-uprepurpose

sharetext, graphics, sound, video,

slideshows, ….

Page 3: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

What’s it all about? Social software

helping people interact

form groups manage processes

pursue common interests and endeavours

learnresearch

Page 4: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Wikis, blogshelp people communicate

source: http://www.modernlifeisrubbish.co.uk

Page 5: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

RSS, Atomnotification of changes

Page 6: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Social bookmarkingcollecting knowledge together

del.icio.us home page

Page 7: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Web start pagesorganise your / your group’s web use

Page 8: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Picture sharingeducational information, visual projects

Page 9: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Video sharingeducational content – avoiding rescheduling lectures

Page 10: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Podcasting, Vidcastingaudio, video with RSS for notification

Page 11: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Mashupssuperimpose data

Page 12: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Social networksinteract with learners, teachers and researchers

via social networks

Page 13: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Common threadstags

commentsratings

RSS and notificationfavorites

friends

network as platformfor collaboration

user-generated contentmutually-added value

building community

Page 14: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

you need totry it

to understandit

Page 15: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

EducationLibrariesServices

Page 16: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Education and Web 2.0

Page 17: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

…applied scaffolding

pagestructurecontent suggestionsmulti-waysuggestion /feedback

Page 18: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

… learning together

Page 19: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

…communication / participation withGoogle Groups

168 messages68 topicsguess 75% mebut significant effectfeedback from one class member: felt involved in a course for the first time

Page 20: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Library 2.0 / Repository 2.0go where the user is

Page 21: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Library 2.0 / Repository 2.0enable the growth of user generated content ratings recommendations reviews user tagging and tag exploitation

make it possible to meetcollaborate with and help each otherthereby building communities

Page 22: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Some service issues

Here or there?What here?Control and legal liability vs experimentationWho as users and IPRServices staff as advisors in a new field What’s best? What should our strategy be? How should we learn about this?

Page 23: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Examples

• Edinburgh – Strategy first• Brighton – Elgg, anyone uses, 4.5% use• Leeds – Elgg, staff trained first,

consequent use for teaching• Warwick – Own blog software, longest

running scheme, highest use

Page 24: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

thanksMark van HarmelenIndependent consultant and School of Computer ScienceUniversity of [email protected]

Page 25: Web 2.0 in Higher Education

Credits and licenceCredits

Web/neurone Flynn-BurhoeThumbs up by Sean DreilingerCommunity line drawing by

the New School Masters in Media Studies Program and The Opportunity AgendaScreendumps by Mark van Harmelen

License for this presentation http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/