So, were here! The Open Course in Technology Enhanced Learning started this week and were in for a fun and busy 10 weeks of MOOCing, hopefully.

  • Registration is still open so, if youre not one of the 900+ soles already involved and engaged, why not pop along to and join in?

What can we expect, now we have more details than were previously available? Weekly emails, weekly webinars (including archived recording as well), and an email providing an overview to the week ahead. This is exactly the kind of student engagement and signposting Ive been highlighting and pushing through my work and writing before. It is nice to see that I am in tune with ALT and those who are creating/running this MOOC! Thank you.

ocTEL aims to accommodate your communication preferences as far as possible, so wherever you feel most comfortable writing – as long as it is not behind a password login – we will do our best to collect it up and add it to the general mix.

Well, the first extended week is set aside for an induction to this MOOC, MOOCs in general, and the platform itself get us comfortable and accustomed to the technology so we can do the learning without worrying about it. You dont know how good this makes me feel all too often the students abilities and expectations are overlooked in online courses, and the induction is the one area that both suffers and is undervalued. With nicely labelled sections like Keeping calm in the face of abundance and Be selective, pace yourself, take time out it is clear that care and attention has been taken to make this a MOOC that can provide a template that others can learn from as well as being a good MOOC in its own right.

This is a professional development course, and its designers trust you, as a professional, to make your own judgements about what learning activities are useful to you and which you can skip. The reason there are so many options and alternative ways of spending your time is precisely to give you choice and control over selecting a path that feels right for you.

Part of the registration process was giving details of Twitter and blog accounts and the now accessible profile section on the ocTEL website allows you to add Google+, Facebook, and RSS links too. Any blog post from the feed that are tagged with the #ocTEL tag are collected and added to the mix this is why my posts have hashtags in their titles.

So, week one what are we doing? Our activities are designed to relax us and engage us, with both the technology and each other.

Activity 0.0: If you only do one thing To start with then, about me and Technology Enhanced Learning (TEL) I am a Learning Technologist and I have over 6 years experience of being one. Ever since I started using Twitter, and linking my blog to it, I have started to understand and fully appreciate the wide void that exists between those who engage socially in TEL and those who dont. Thinking back to before I engaged with the wider TEL community I cannot remember how I used to , or would now, learn new tools and techniques or how I would further myself and reading and work without it. This is not my first MOOC, in fact its my fifth. To date I have only finished one other MOOC, the Edinburgh eLearning and Digital Cultures MOOC.

Activity 0.1: Reflecting on your own work experience and ambitions for developing your teaching,  what is the most important question about TEL for you? Im not sure I have yet worked out my own personal most important question, but the questions I keep asking myself are ones around whether technology is actually improving education, or rather learning, and whether its an appropriate use of technology. Now this opens up many more questions for me, all based on an assumption that we can use technology (I freely admit that there are some instances where technology is just not needed, and we need to be big enough to know when this is and wise enough to say no to it) and that we can implement it properly I hear too many comments about an activity going wrong when all that happened is that expectations or implementati0n wasnt appropriate to the task or tool. If we can get this right then perhaps we can move on and actually get to the original question is technology actually improving education/learning?

Activity 0.3: Experiment with and/or reflect on different ways of communicating with fellow ocTEL participants. For the most part Ill continue to use this, my blog, for the majority of lengthy dialogue and notes/reflection, and Twitter for most discussion. I tried hard on the EDC MOOC to engage in the discussion boards but, for various reasons best described by , I couldnt and wouldnt keep up with them. It will be hard to ignore the other networks but I learned the hard way with EDC MOOC that it just isnt possible to keep up with everything.

Activity 0.4: Explore the resources on Technology Enhanced Learning Some of these resources Ive seen before, some I havent, but all were worth watching/reading to get an idea and thinking process behind this MOOCs developers.

I remember the Transforming Higher Education Through Technology Enhanced Learning report when it first came out and it was one of the first reports I read where I actually could relate to the contents and that the report/book contains a thought-provoking edited collection which offers far more than a straightforward account of outcomes [and] that it is both broad in scope and reflective in tone. It was good to be reminded of this again, in the context (for me) of what has changed since it was published.

Next week TEL concepts and approaches.

Related posts:

Open Course in Technology Enhanced Learning #ocTEL Online Induction: What happened? Reflection on the eLearning and Digital Cultures MOOC, Wk.0 #edcmooc

Posted in MOOC.

Tagged with ALT, Email, Facebook, Google, Hashtag, Induction, Learning Technology, MOOC, ocTEL, RSS, Student Experience, Technology, Webinar.

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Week, Week Induction

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Ahh, summer! Well, summer in Canada anyways! Here the winters are long, and we’re grateful when the temperature rises and the sun starts hanging around longer so we can go outside without toques and parkas!

And now that summer is finally arriving here in the western hemisphere, it’s that time of year when many of us in the Virtual Assistance and Online Business industry like to take some time to step back, regroup and assess where our businesses are at and how we need to strengthen them as we enter the last half of the year. No matter what season you find yourself in right now, it can be a season of growth and rejuvenation.


Over the past month, we have been listening to our members, VAClassroom faculty and business colleagues to identify the top skills and services that are being readily outsourced by the business community. Based on this, we first compiled a list of 19 hot skills and posted a special survey to our VAClassroom community!


Well, let me tell you our community responded in waves and submitted tons of surveys with their selections and feedback so that we were able to narrow the list down to the eight most requested skills.


So now, using that valuable input, we are excited to officially announce the top eight skill-based topics selected that will serve as the curriculum this years Summer Skill Camp!


1. GOOGLE TOOLS – Building your business, maximizing your productivity and enhancing your communications using Google Tools. (Docs, Forms, Reader, Alerts, Photo-sharing, iGoogle etc)


2. ECOMMERCE SET-UP – Building a Product Launch Marketing Campaign with 1ShoppingCart.


3. MOBILE MARKETING – Building an Effective Mobile Marketing Campaign for a Local Business Owner.


4. FACEBOOK CONTESTS – Blueprint for Creating a Compelling Facebook Contest.


5. SOCIAL MEDIA MEASUREMENT – Building a Social Media Measurement System and Report for Your Clients.


6. SETTING RATES AND BUILDING PACKAGES – Discovering the Fine Art of Setting Rates and Building Effective Packages for Your Services.


7.  SEO and LINK-BUILDING – Discovering New Tactics for Building Relevant One-Way Links to Your Website.


8. SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORING – Setting up a Social Media Monitoring System for Any Type of Client.


This year’s Skill Camp will be similar to last year’s popular format, except for one key change: this time we will be running two 90-minute sessions per week for the month of July as opposed to scheduling weekly webinars across the entire summer. The two sessions will happen on Tuesday and Thursday at 12pm PDT (3pm EDT). We have chosen this time in order to best accommodate the different time zones of our global student audience.


So no matter what season you find yourself in as a Virtual Assistant or Online Professional, take some time to look at your business and see if there are any areas where you may need to sharpen your skills or acquire new powerful tools. If you are interested in more information about our 2011 Summer Skill Camp, check it out here.


And if you have any questions or comments, please write us a note in the comment box below or on our VAClassroom Facebook Page.



This is the trailer for the up and coming Rendez-vous with French Cinema event which stops in London from 4 – 7th April. Films this year will be shown at Cine Lumiere and Curzon Soho. All the screenings will feature exclusive Q&As with directors and actors. Films will be shown in the original French with English subtitles so you can test your knowledge!

To kick start the festival on Thursday 4th of April, the Cine Lumiere will host In The House, with an exclusive on-stage interview with star Kristin Scott Thomas at 5pm. Populaire, directed by Régis Roinsard, will be screened at the Curzon Soho the same evening. A Q&A with the director and actors Déborah François and Romain Duris will take place afterwards.

The following evening, Thérèse Desqueyroux will be shown at the Curzon Soho, and followed by a Q&A with Audrey Tautou, best known for Amelie.

In addition, Cine Lumiere will also be holding a French Classics season each Sunday from 31st March, starting with Les Valseuses.

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London

We’re not saying you should never speak English again.

Imagine you’re someone like Sandy.

You might have taken years of high school French without ever perfecting your accent. You might have flash cards and workbooks, but you freeze up in real-life situations.

Not anymore.

Rosetta Stone is a fast, easy way to learn to think in your new language. Whether you end up traveling the Côte dAzur or jamming out to bal musette, your destiny is waiting.

All you need to do is take the first step.

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Sandy, Sandy Jack

Adobe Illustrator CS6 is an awesome tool for making vector graphics. Its probably the vector creation software of choice for most graphic designers and other professionals who create graphics for a living. Like all Adobe products, its packed with features, and comes with a steep learning curve.  I learned how to use Illustrator at a rudimentary level in two Indiana University IT Training Workshops, Illustrator CS6: The Basics, and Adobe CS6: Pen Tool Basics.  Now that Im somewhat comfortable with the software, I practice on my own. My skills are improving a little, but if Im going to become really good at Illustrator, I have to seek out some more training resources. (See the post I wrote  for the Tips Blog about taking the skills you learn in a workshop to the next level).

Random Illustrator objects.

There are a lot of Illustrator tutorials out there.  Ill share some of them with you now.

  1. Adobe Illustrator on Adobe TV. Learn the software from the source.
  2. Check the Adobe Illustrator Blog for more tutorials and tips.
  3. Vector Tuts+ has a lot of content including tutorials, articles, tips, and resources. Premium members can access features such as online courses and an ebook library.
  4. Astute Graphics blog has a quite a few free tutorials, tips, and tricks.
  5. Chris Spooners Spoon Graphics offers free Illustrator and Photoshop tutorials.  You can find more content on his Facebook  page too.
  6. An excellent source for technology training is lynda.com. Most lynda content is available  to paying subscribers only, but if youre serious about learning, its probably worth the expense. IU students, facutly, and staff get lynda for free!

I think those are enough resources to get you (and me) started. Im collecting Illustrator tutorial resources on Pearltrees, check there once in a while to see if anything new shows up.