paul hollins cetis13 introduction

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Welcome presentation by Paul Hollins CETIS co-director at CETIS13

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Page 1: Paul Hollins Cetis13 introduction
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#CETIS13Open for Education: Technology Innovation in Universities and Colleges

Presented by Paul Hollins (co) Director JISC CETIS

Birmingham March 12 & 13 2013

Email [email protected] Twitter @paulhollins

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Priorities ...

The Wi Fi Code is ...

Ctis2013WiFi p/w: Ct152013

The Twitter Hashtag ...

#cetis13

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The CETIS Conferences ...1. e-Learning tools, Standards and Systems.

2. e-Framework and Reference Models.

3. Linking Formal and Informal learning

4. Beyond Standards - Holistic Approaches to Educational Technology and Interoperability.

5. Technology for Learning Teaching and the Institution

6. A Brave New World?

7. Never Waste a Good Crisis, Innovation & Technology in Institutions.

8. The Future Just Happened? Technology Innovation in Universities and Colleges

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Introduction

Definitions and distinctions Examples Limitations and challenges Opportunities for Education

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Are Thought Leaders killing thought ? (Haque 2013)

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Einstein's TED Talk E= Mc2

Audience reaction perhaps ?

1. What’s the “point” of this ?

2. How can we “leverage” this ?

3. How does this effect the bottom line ?

4. How can we monetise this ?

5. What does it do ?

6. How can we utilise this to gain competitive advantage ?

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Similarly Picasso’s

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Our Keynote Presenters

“Digital citizenship and Open social”

Professor Patrick McAndrew Josie Fraser

“The Path to Open Learning is Paved with Good Intentions”

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Questions

• What’s happening with JISC ?

• What’s happening or going to happen to CETIS ?

• Will there be a CETIS conference next year ?

• And the most important question of what’s happening in TEL ?

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The “New” CETIS ...

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Key Trends (NMC Horizon scan 2013)…• Openness , concepts like open content, open data, and open resources,

along with notions of transparency and easy access to data and information is becoming a value.

• The workforce demands skills from college graduates that are more often acquired from informal learning experiences than in universities.

• Massively open online courses are being widely explored as alternatives and supplements to traditional university courses.

• There is an increasing interest in using new sources of data for personalizing the learning experience and for performance measurement.

• The role of educators continues to change due to the vast resources that are accessible to students via the Internet.

• Education paradigms are shifting to include online learning, hybrid learning, and collaborative models.

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Key Challenges (NMC Horizon scan 2013)…• Faculty training still does not acknowledge the fact that digital media

literacy continues its rise in importance as a key skill in every discipline and profession.

• The emergence of new scholarly forms of authoring, publishing, and researching outpace sufficient and scalable modes of assessment.

• Too often it is education’s own processes and practices that limit broader uptake of new technologies.

• The demand for personalized learning is not adequately supported by current technology or practices.

• New models of education are bringing unprecedented competition to the traditional models of higher education.

• Most academics are not using new technologies for learning and teaching, nor for organizing their own research.

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Today’s Sessions ...

Room 4B - IMS QTI v2.1 courtesy of Wilbert Kraan

Room 4A - HE Information Landscape –Seize the Day courtesy of Adam Cooper

Room 5/6 - Open Practice and OER sustainability – courtesy of Lorna Campbell and Phil Barker

Room I - The future of CETIS (Today’s premier session) courtesy Of Li Yuan and me

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The Extra Additional Sessions... Start 16.40

Room 4A - Extending Widget’s capabilities -

Elaine Pearson and Miltiades Papadopoulos

Room 5/6 - Relationship Management Enhancing the Student Experience -

Simon Whittemore/Myles Danson and Jean Mutton

Room 4B - Augmented Reality a study in scarlet -Laura Skilton and Matt Ramirez from Mimas

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Tomorrows Sessions ...

Room 1 - Open Innovation and Open Development – courtesy of Scott Wilson and Simon Whittemore

Room 4A - Skills and Competence opportunities - courtesy of Simon Grant and Adam Cooper

Room 5/6 - Analytics and institutional capabilities – courtesy of Sheila Macneil, Martin Hawksey and David Sherlock

Room 4b - Open MIC 13 – courtesy of Mark Power

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Thank You !

References :

Johnson, L., Adams Becker, S., Cummins, M., Estrada, V., Freeman, A., and Ludgate, H. (2013). NMC Horizon Report: 2013 Higher Education Edition. Austin, Texas: The New Media Consortium

Haque, U. (2013) Let's Save Great Ideas from the Ideas Industry

http://blogs.hbr.org/haque/2013/03/lets_save_great_ideas_from_the.html (Accessed March 2013)

Email [email protected] Twitter @paulhollins