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August 12, 2013 By adibm

Social Media Provides Jet Fuel to Boost E-Learning – Part 1

How can social media boost effectiveness of traditional E-Learning courses? E-Learning and social media each facilitate the transfer of information across long distances and great divides. It should be simple, then, to find a symbiotic relationship between the two.

Let’s start with Twitter. The combination of Twitter’s forced brevity and its focus on topically-engineered “hashtags” provide an efficient way to aggregate snippets of information (that may also include external links) relevant to a specific subject. For instance, associating the #elearning hashtag to your tweet will include it among the vast sea of search results for E-Learning-related tweets.

How can instructional designers and course developers leverage the real time power of Twitter? Imagine a Texas Defensive Driving course developed in Storyline, Lectora, or other authoring tool. You, the student, open up the course and are pleased to find an embedded live Twitter feed on the right-hand pane that is automatically filtered to display tweets appended with the #TexasDefensiveDriving hashtag. This is a new kind of immersive experience in the E-Learning world: You would be able to share your own insights about the course in real-time—comments about the user interface, user experience, accessibility, content, and other important elements of instructional design.

What ramifications would Twitter integration like this have? For starters, it would make the lives of the instructional designers of that course easier. They don’t have to pull feedback from a scattered base. All the insight they need lies in that one hashtag. For that reason, I think this integration would also lead to the eventual phasing out of the traditional survey.

Who do you know that leverages the power of Twitter with eLearning? How are they using it or what obstacles prevent its use? I’d love to hear your stories.

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June 17, 2013 By adibm

Leveraging the Power of Infographics – Randy Krum

The following is a resource sheet provided by Randy Krum of InfoNewt and coolinfographics.com, who spoke on the topic of leveraging the power of infographics at our E-Learning Symposium last Wednesday.

Randy Krum

Intro to Infographics

NASA Planet Four: http://planetfour.org/
Tower of Beer: http://www.rothira.com/tower-of-beer
2011 Wisconsin Crash Calendar: http://www.ghsa.org/html/resources/showcase/wi1.html

Online Infographics

How Affiliate Marketing Works: http://www.sugarrae.com/affiliate-marketing/how-affiliate-marketing-works/
History of Christmas Trees: http://www.christmastreemarket.com/History-of-the-Christmas-Tree-Origin-Infographic-s/311.htm
Motorcycle Helmet Laws: http://infonewt.com/portfolio/client-work/15569745
Sage Hill School: http://www.sagehillschool.org/podium/default.aspx?t=1409
Honda Accord: http://www.flickr.com/photos/hondanews/7950209832
Hotels.com Infographics: http://press.hotels.com/en-us/infographics/
Sudan Bombing: http://www.sudanbombing.org/infographic
Bringing Down Osama Bin Laden: http://columnfivemedia.com/work-items/namesake-infographic-breakdown-of-the-takedown-%E2%80%94-osamas-last-hour/
Death & Taxes Poster: http://deathandtaxesposter.com
The Visual History of Halloween: http://www.frightcatalog.com/halloween-history/
Student Bullying: http://www.buckfirelaw.com/library/student-bullying-in-united-states-statistics-and-facts.cfm
James Bond Movies: http://blogs.hrblock.com/2012/09/25/50-years-of-bond-james-bond-infographic/

Internal Infographics

Bedford Budget Poster: http://infonewt.com/portfolio/client-work/8781697
My Digital Life 2.0: http://infonewt.com/portfolio/client-work/8784483

Design Tips

The Caffeine Poster: http://www.coolinfographics.com/caffeine-poster/
The BBC-o-Gram: http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/2010/the-bbc-o-gram/
The Obama Energy Agenda: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/05/06/president-jobs-gas-prices-read-his-remarks-download-graphic
Periodic Table of Visualization Methods: http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html
The Visual Miscellaneum: http://amzn.to/MjBdPq
The Conversation Prism: http://www.theconversationprism.com/
Aftermath of the Haiti Earthquake: http://designforhaiti.com/6442

Infographic Tools

The Noun Project: http://thenounproject.com/
Wordle: http://www.wordle.net/
Chartle: http://www.chartle.net/
DIY Chart: http://diychart.com/
Gliffy: http://www.gliffy.com
Piktochart: http://piktochart.com/
Easel.ly: http://www.easel.ly/
Infogr.am: http://infogr.am/
Google Public Data: http://www.google.com/publicdata/directory
Tableau Public: http://www.tableausoftware.com/public/
BatchGeo: http://batchgeo.com/
LinkedIN Maps: http://inmaps.linkedinlabs.com/
Infographic Resumes Pinterest Board: http://pinterest.com/rtkrum/infographic-visual-resumes/
Vizualize.me: http://vizualize.me/
CVgram.me: https://cvgram.me/
Kinzaa: http://kinzaa.com/
Re.vu: http://re.vu/
ResumUP: http://resumup.com/

More Information

Edward Tufte: http://www.edwardtufte.com
FlowingData: http://flowingdata.com/
Visualize This book, Nathan Yau: http://amzn.to/NxjuXi
The Power of Infographics book, Mark Smiciklas: http://amzn.to/MwuF4c
Information Graphics book, Sandra Rendgen: http://amzn.to/PhROXf
The Data Journalism Handbook: http://datajournalismhandbook.org/

Contact Info

Cool Infographics book, Randy Krum: http://amzn.to/139upf4
Cool Infographics Blog: http://www.coolinfographics.com/
LinkedIN: http://www.linkedin.com/in/rtkrum/
Twitter: @rtkrum https://twitter.com/rtkrum
Google+: http://gplus.to/rtkrum
InfoNewt Infographics Design: http://infonewt.com/
Email: randy@infonewt.com

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June 4, 2013 By adibm

Humanizing eLearning With Informal Video by Tom Carroll & Katie O’Malley

As a medium for entertainment and learning, video is an Internet star. YouTube claims to have more than 1 billion unique visitors each month. Globally, 25% of all YouTube views are from mobile devices. Much of this new video content is shot on inexpensive equipment by amateur videographers. The videos feature friends and workplace experts – not professional actors – connecting with their viewers in refreshingly informal ways.

Join Katie O’Malley and her colleague Tom Carroll during their June 12th session at the 2013 E-Learning Symposium in Austin, Texas, titled “Humanizing E-Learning with Informal Video: Plusses, Pitfalls, and Practices.” During the session, Katie and Tom will step through the production of an actual informal video for a workplace learning project and share their challenges and triumphs. There will be plenty of examples provided to help you avoid common project pitfalls, focus on effective production practices, and decide whether informal video is right for your next e-learning project.

The folks at Radiolab thought informal video was right for their project. What do you think?

A RadioLab Example

Radiolab’s most recent blog post features show hosts Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich in an American Hipster video that documents the behind-the-scenes creation of Radiolab. There are two versions of the video – the informal RadioLab version and the full and “formal” American Hipster video.

Informal Version

The Radiolab version of the video has been shortened by nearly half and informal video clips have been added to the tip and tail of the piece.

Radiolab Behind the Scenes – 6 minutes

Radiolab Behind the Scenes from Radiolab on Vimeo.

 

Formal Version

Here’s the American Hipster version, which is nearly 11 minutes long. It features beautifully produced professional video where the hosts never “break the 4th wall” and directly address the viewers by looking into the camera.

Radiolab: Americal Hipster Presents #50 (New York City – Art) –11 minutes

Want to Play?

We’d like to learn with you think about informal video. If you would, please watch both videos and share via an entry to this blog your thoughts about how informal video does or does not enhance the Radiolab video version.

We hope to see you next week at the E-Learning Symposium!

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