Thursday, January 31, 2008

The next frontier...


I want to try to do some podcasting next, but I need to learn more -- for example, some ipods seem to be able to show video clips, some do not. Let's see what I can learn, how deep the techno-rabbit hole goes.




One of my colleagues, Susana Sotillo, was able to modify my Wiki -- so it looks like I am in business, at least with step one.

Stay tuned!

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

On Wikis

Yesterday I created my first WIKI, and today I figured out out how to put a table in it. The trick is to use the coding language. I downloaded a bit of bibliography as tab separated text from Filemaker Pro, then made some substitutions, of tabs for the vertical lines. Then I pasted it in the Wiki edit window, and it all worked.

You can see the result in

http://ialvarius.wikispaces.com/

I was always thinking of Wikis in terms of Databases which I could allow scholars to add to -- which is what I want to use it for -- but, looking at some of the examples my fellow professors have, I see now that the Wiki is another way of doing web pages. I wonder if doing web pages via Wiki is easier than doing them via Blackboard. There certainly seems some pretty clever things one can do - -how easily I do not yet know.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

More on Utopia


In an alternate life which never happened in this timeline, I wrote a novel (you can see the picture) about the bright (but guilty, with underachievement anxiety) son of Bill Gates type who becomes determined to create a form of utopia. When governmental and societal obstacles prevent him from getting anything done on Earth, he decides to try to create Utopia on Mars. To create this form of Utopia he first, through some very complex personality and aptitude tests) a group of individuals who are very intelligent, wide-ranging polymaths who combine very practical abilities with skills in the most abstract forms of thinking, who also have a pronounced artistic bent, yet are, by nature, basically cheerful and cooperative. Equally important, he brings to Mars the sort of small scale technology (based on developments in synthetic organic machines, which include robot-like (but reproducing) machines) which will allow each citizen to be totally self-sufficient. And the basic rules of the colony require each person to maintain that self-sufficiency. The basic idea is that freedom can be perfected when each person has enough to be his or her own master, and thus a society of equals can more easily come into being, particularly when there is no vast differences of abilities which force social stratification and thus inequality. I won’t go into many details, save that in this colony all leadership positions are rotated by lot, and all major questions taken up in a town meeting.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Today's Technological leap?

Today iJean was able to hook up my iSight to my iMac and after iJean turned off iChat, iJean was able to record
video to iMovie. Not too bad.


You can see an experiment iJean made witih iSight and Imovie at

http://chss2.montclair.edu/classics/1jeanpage/JAtestVid4.mov

By the way, instead of oral reports, iJean is having his Senior Humanities Seminar students make
short videos of their reports.

Again, some problems with fine print, but it all got figured out.

-- iJean

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Thoughts on Tech, part II

More thoughts on Technology, Part II

Well, the past few days I have had more tech adventures, all which teach lessons. As I told you, yesterday I tried to subscribe to Peter’s blog. Peter told me to specify Google reader, but when I tried it, it did not seem to work. I emailed Peter, and he told me I had to get an account. “Oh” I said. So I went to get an account, and tried to use Google reader. Did not get successful results. Emailed Peter again, with various screen captures illustrating my problems. He emails me that I was using an obsolete browser – more fine print. This was somewhat distressing, because I wondered, if I had to get a new browser, I might have to get a new operating system. I will need to do so soon anyway, because I have iMovie 3 on my G5, while the best (and free version) is probably iMovie 7, which, alas, needs OS X.4+ and I have only OS X.3+. And we know the fear that, if you change the operating system – what software that you need (like my version of Filemaker Pro) will then not work?

Me and the manual!


This is a serious problem to think about as we try to introduce new technology to our students, as well as fellow faculty. I think of the problems I have had, and I am probably a pretty tech-savvy guy. Can you imagine what might have happened if I had decided that everybody in my Senior Humanities Seminar should have a blog instead of a journal? At least I, as a full-time faculty member and Chair can get access to tech support that students probably can’t as easily. Think of the student who is using an old PC or Mac given to him by his brother, who barely knows what an operating system is, who suddenly is confronted with having to make a blog. I remember years ago when I helped put on some tech workshops. Time-stressed students and faculty, especially if they are not too tech-minded, hate the ‘fine-print’, especially when it manifests itself in incomprehensible problems. At least the problem I had made sense to me, because I am experienced enough with these problems to realize where to go looking for a solution. Thus, even though Peter did not suggest it to me, I tried my version of Safari – and it let me use Google Reader, so I was spared. Last semester one of my instructors encountered a problem with Blackboard which turned out to be some problem with, I think, the Firefox browser.

Thus, when we want to introduce technology to those who are not particularly interested in tech for itself, but only in achieving a purpose, we really need to make sure there is as little ‘fine print’ as possible, and that there is as much support as possible. But that would probably be too ideal a world, alas.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Musing on learning tech, part 1

Musing on learning more about educational technology Part 1

Yesterday, as some of you saw, I created my first blog and put up the first posting. So far, so good.

I am not much of a blog-reader, although I understand that some teachers use
blogs where once journals were assigned. I also wonder if video clips will supercede blogs for some educational functions.

In the past three days I have been getting my iSight webcam hooked up and
learning a bit about iChat, and, a few minutes ago, I attempted to subscribe to Peter Campbell’s blog. This was a good experience, because it makes me experience the
confusion and frustration I know my students probably face when they asked to
do one of my online exercises.

At this point I am quite interested in better ways so that online slideshows, videos and other material can be linked to online exercises which are carefully created to producd a logical and useful learning sequence, even some of the qualities of a private tutor. I have been creating online slideshows linked to BB exercises for Roman Civilization and General Humanities I. As I have been told, I tend to focus more on content…

-- Alvarius

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Socialism and time...

One hears how ‘Socialism has tried and has failed again and again. It has been proven that it cannot work.” While I am not sure whether socialism is possible or not, this argument is rubbish. As a Classics scholar, one should learn to take the long view. For example, imagine two Romans talking to each other during the high point of the Roman empire, let us say during the reign of Trajan (98-117 CE). One man praises the achievements of Trajan and the Empire, while another, who has just read Tacitus’ Dialogue On Orators (Dialogus de oratoribus) which connects the decline in oratory to the absence of democratic processes, complains about the loss of freedom. Imagine the other then saying “Democracy can’t work. The Athenians and other Greeks tried it, our forefathers tried it for awhile. It can’t work for long in a society of any size and complexity. Autocracy is the only solution – even the philosophers admit that now. Haven’t you read Dio of Prusa’s work On Kingship?”

Well, he would have been wrong, for, at least to some extent, democracy as been able to develop and even expand in the modern world. Why? New ideologies, new philosophies, but also new means of production and social organizations made it possible. As technology advances, bringing out of necessity new social formations, socialism or even communism may become as widespread and successful as democracy seems to be now.

-- Alvarius.