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  • Steven Warburton

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    July 2008

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    Key blogs

    • TwoFourLearning
      What it says on the tin. TwoFourLearning learning blog.
    • Brian Kelly
      Thoughts on Web developments, with an emphasis on best practices and areas of innovation.
    • Ulises Ali Mejias
      Currently a Research Consultant with Cornell University.
    • Graham Attwell
      Director of the Welsh independent research institute, Pontydysgu and a founder of the software research and development company, the Knownet.
    • Margarita Perez-Garcia
      Personal blog on digital self, ePortfolio, eLearning and education issues.
    • Lilia Efimova
      PhD researcher based in the Netherlands, with an interest in blog as a research tools and for knowledge work within corporations.
    • Scott Wilson
      Assistant director at CETIS, UK.
    • George Siemens
      Instructor, Red River College.
    • Barbara Ganley
      Barbara Ganley's reflections on teaching-with-technology.
    • James Farmer
      James Farmer is a Melbourne based education designer and social software consultant.
    • Sebastian Fiedler
      Doctoral student in Media Pedagogy at the University of Augsburg, Germany.
    • Stephen Downes
      Senior research officer with the National Research Council of Canada.
    • Josie Fraser
      UK based educational technologist.

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    Disruptive technologies in education

    My Slideshare

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    Virtual environments and game-based learning

    These presentations form part of a double workshop given alongside Margarita Perez-Garcia at the recent 6th Open Classroom Conference held in Stockholm from October 24th to 26th 2007. The title for this particularly lively session was “Second Life beyond the hype: taking real world education into virtual spaces, a recipe for failure?”. Audience participation was high and the discussions that precipitated from each of these position pieces provided valuable insight into how and where educators see the current state of play with regards to using MUVEs (such as Second Life) in educational contexts. As with all emerging technologies, the understandings elaborated during the one and half hours stemmed as much from reflections on technology i.e. metaverses in use, as from the design principles that lie behind many 'narrative free' virtual world offerings. In light of this, much of the session concentrated on pragmatics, taking apart the current rhetoric on MUVEs that seems to promise a 'do anything', 'be anything' alternative reality.

     

    Presentation 1: Virtual vanity: sex, shopping and reputation in Second Life

     

    Presentation 2: MUVEs: technical state-of-play and their future potentialities

     

    Further details of the workshop and other resources can be found on the newly launched Prism(lab) site.