Go Virtual!

Thanks to the wonderful Jokay, I was invited to be a keynote speaker at the NSW LearnscopeGo Virtual” conference today. There were about 20 participants actually in Wollongong, where the conference was held physically, and another 30 or so participants attending from inside Second Life. Apart from a few technical issues (and these seem to be surprisingly minimal really – just tricky getting voice working and in synch with no delay or feedback) it went very well.

My talk was titled Play and Identity in Digital Spaces, and I combined the material from about three of my previous talks and four or five different papers. I want to especially thank Jazzydee and Achariya for dropping in and contributing stories about their avatars!

Later in the day, I was also involved in a panel discussion about leverages the affordances of Second Life for education. Panelists included:

  • Jo Kay, Freelance Design, Facilitation and Virtual Worlds Consultant
  • Sean FitzGerald, Independent Researcher, Consultant, Trainer and Presenter
  • Angela Thomas, University of Sydney
  • Alan Levine, Vice President, NMC Community and CTO, NMC: The New Media Consortium
  • Nick Noakes, Director, Center for Enhanced Learning & Teaching, Hong Kong

Here’s a nice shot of CDB and I after the panel discussion. CDB is coming to Australia next month!!! He’ll be doing a lecture tour and meeting up with people interested in using Second Life for education, so if anybody wants to meet up with him (and me!) in Sydney let me know :)

(Thanks to Jokay and Alan for images)

PS: I’ve been writing a paper the last couple of weeks, and preparing this conference talk, and doing a hundred other tasks, including some extra and unexpected teaching, so the blog has suffered!

My Digital Fiction Presentation for Futures in Literacy Conference

Creative Conferencing – The “Unconference”

Today I was invited to be a discussion leader / facilitator at an “unconference” on blogging.  Although I am unsure whether I can accept the invitation yet, I just loved the instructions for the facilitator and wanted to share, particularly in light of some of the critique of the traditional conference scene (poor Alan!). Here are the instructions:

This will be an unusual conference. We generally won’t have speakers, panels or an audience.  We will have discussions and sessions, and each session will have a discussion leader.

The discussion leader
Think of the discussion leader as a reporter who is creating a story with quotes from the people in the room. So, instead of having a panel and an audience we just have contributors.  We feel this more accurately reflects what’s going on. It’s not uncommon for the audience at a conference to have more expertise collectively than the people who are speaking.

The discussion leader is also the editor, so if he or she feels that a point has been made they must move on to the next point quickly. No droning, no filibusters, no repeating an idea over and over.

The discussion leader can also call on people.

Think of it as a weblog
Think of the conference as if it were a weblog. At the beginning of each session, the leader talks between five and fifteen minutes. He or she will introduce the idea and some of the people in the room.

Then he or she will facilitate the discussion among all the contributors in the room, inviting others to comment and asking questions of others. It is hoped that everyone who would like to contribute to the discussion will be able to do so in the allotted time.

We have a limited amount of time, and a group of participants whose time is valuable. The leader’s job is to make sure the show stays interesting, even captivating. If it gets boring people will leave the
room and schmooze, or read their email, or whatever. So the leader’s job is to keep it moving. Sometimes this may mean cutting people off.

How to prepare
Since every person in a session is considered an equal participant, everyone should prepare at least a little. Think about the subject, read the comments on the Conference site. Follow weblogs from other
people who are paticipating. Think about what you want to get out of the session, and what questions you wish to raise, and what information or points of view you’d like to get from the session.

Everyone is a journalist
This will be an unusual conference in that almost everyone participating writes publicly. So we assume that everyone present is a journalist.

On the record
All conversations, whether to the entire room or one-to-one, unless otherwise stated, clearly and up front, are on the record and for attribution. You do not need to ask permission to quote something you hear at the conference. Of course you may ask for permission to quote, and you may choose not to quote things you hear.

It’s a user’s conference
Most technology conferences are centered around the vendors. This is not like those conferences. Here, vendors are welcome, and we hope they will help by sponsoring in some way, but they participate mainly by listening.

Most of the people who will be talking are users. These are the revolutionaries. Vendors make a living by creating tools that these people use to change the world. So much attention is focused on technology.

At this conference we turn it around and focus on what people are doing with the technology.

Internet access
Wireless internet access will be available. Each session will also be hopefully be podcast, audio only. You are welcome to bring your own recording equipment and cameras are allowed. You are free to record it and broadcast it any way you like as long as you don’t interfere with the sessions in any way.

That’s pretty exciting.

I like this: It’s not uncommon for the audience at a conference to have more expertise collectively than the people who are speaking.

But this quite true fact is kind of intimidating: If it gets boring people will leave the room and schmooze, or read their email, or whatever.

Sometimes I get very tired when colleagues IN AN EDUCATION FACULTY lecture to students that we should not consider children to be “empty vessels to be filled up” and yet that is the very paradigm they use themselves when lecturing.  Its also very very frustrating when the worst offenders of being lame and uncreative and masters of boring dot point powerpoint shows are lecturers from an education faculty, or speakers in an education strand.  HELLO!!!  We are supposed to be EXPERTS in pedagogy!!!

Anyway  I am really hoping I get to go to this “unconference” as it sounds fabulous, and provides a creative model for sharing, collaborating and communicating with colleagues.

Ego-Maniacs, Griefers and Attention Seekers at Conferences

‘media should help communicate a message, not interfere with it for the sake of the media’

I’ve waited a while to write this because I thought time might temper my opinion but it hasn’t and so here it is. How do you cope when you are a presenter at a professional conference and some ego-maniac in the audience persistently interrupts, offers his own opinion and criticises the speaker’s comments?

Without naming names, here is what happened. Continue reading

**** NMC to Offer Symposium on Creativity in Second Life August 12-18

Press Release from Larry Pixel

NMC to Offer Symposium on Creativity in Second Life August 12-18

I write today to announce an upcoming event that you may find of interest. As you know, immersive virtual environments offer possibilities for teaching and learning that the NMC community—and others—are exploring. This August, NMC will host a one-of-a-kind event: a week-long online symposium on the topic of creativity, held entirely inside the virtual world of Second Life.

The week-long symposium will feature self-paced, hands-on studio sessions in machinima, fashion, sculpture/modeling, and virtual photography, including access to expert instructors; breakout sessions on topics like basic and advanced building concepts, avatar design, scripting, machinima, and photography; discussions of educational aspects of virtual worlds; creative teaching techniques; and more. Participants will benefit from in-world instruction and interaction, resources on the flat web, and plenty of practice time. Featured keynote sessions will open and close the symposium, and the week will include social and arts events, tours, and a showcase where participants can demonstrate their new skills and show off their projects.

The event will take place August 12-18, 2007, at the new NMC Conference Center sim in Second Life that adjoins the original NMC Campus.

The call for proposals will open on Monday, July 2 and will be announced broadly. We invite you to save the dates and make plans to attend this unique event! More details about the conference will accompany the Call for Proposals.

Please help us spread the word by sharing this information with others who may be interested.

Larry Pixel
NMC

Australasian Second Life Conference

AustConf_001

Despite jetlag and a bad case of the sniffles I managed to make it yesterday to a great selection of speakers at the Second Life Australasian education conference.

This conference was run by my long time SL friend, Jokay Wollongong, and her colleague Sean Fitzgerald. I had met and heard almost all of the speakers before but the surprise for me was hearing all about the work of NZ educator, Isa Goodman, who is doing just incredible things with groups all over New Zealand.

Jokay and Sean have also put together this fabulous SL newbie tips video:

With so many new and non-gamer users streaming into SL, these tips are invaluable for getting past the culture shock of the somewhat complicated gaming interface.

I Left My Heart in San Francisco

Tony Bennet and these images say it better than me!

Am home now, and have just woken up after 16 hours (!!!) of sleep – I was totally exhausted and barely slept for more than 4 hours a night over the past two and a bit weeks. The NMC conference was fantastic, the ECAR panel session went well although I was pretty run down by that stage from all the flying and lack of sleep and I barely made it through my section coherently (note to self: presenting at one conference per overseas trip might be all I can manage in future).

It was wonderful to meet so many people I had only known in Second Life previously (Larry, Heidi, Nick, Alan), and to catch up with a lovely colleague/friend I hadn’t seen for two years (Barbara). I also met the lovely Joanna, the wonderful Lyr Lobo (who has already invited me to a SL Renaissance-style party in SL!), Reuben, Craig, Intellagirl (who sat next to me on a SL panel and answered hundreds of questions so eloquently), and best of all, I met the FAMOUS Second Life artist, Stella Costello whose art work I have admired since starting in SL!!!! I met a whole lot of other new people (some who are coming out to Australia so I will see again soon!) and saw a lot of other famed SL personalities in the distance (but was too shy to intrude and say hello). I’ve forgotten everybody’s names – but I hope I will get more opportunities to speak to people in Second Life that said hello to me in passing at both conferences!

But the best part of my trip by far came at the very end when all the work had finished and I had a few days of R&R in San Francisco before flying back to Sydney. What a magical, gorgeous, fun and exciting city San Francisco is!!!! Plus I had *the* most amazing tour guide ever (my favourite mysterious blog commenter) who took me to absolutely every corner of the city and beyond (thank you DDD, in fact I really cannot thank you enough!!!!!).

I so totally fell in love with San Francisco – I didn’t think any city would rival Paris as my favourite, but SF would at least be on par if not better!!! I adored it!!

So, I am definitely planning to travel via SF to any other conference I ever go to in the US in future. And here are my tips for travelling and getting around in SF to remind me for next time – I’ll put this under the fold so as not to bore anybody! Continue reading

Pleasure, Play, Participation and Promise: the audio to my conference talk

Thanks to the wonderful Alan Levine, I now have the audio recording to go with my NMC talk, here:


Alan’s write-up of my talk is on the NMC blog here – thanks so much!

NMC Conference – Hello Indianapolis!

I haven’t seen much outside the hotel room yet but I’ve made it safe and (relatively) sound to Indianapolis for the NMC conference!   I was allocated the Vice Presidential Suite which is just breathtaking and I am being treated like I am famous :)   I’ve finally met Heidi, Nick and Alan -Heidi and Nick are exactly like I expected (delightful!), but since Alan cavorts around Second Life in a slightly scary looking dog avatar I had no concept that he would actually be soft and friendly (hehe).

I am enjoying complimentary broadband access from the comfort of my suite which is fantastic because I am now working on last minute edits to my talk for tomorrow.  If anybody wants to listen to my talk the audio is being streamed into Second Life.  I will be speaking at 2:45 – 4:00 pm Thursday June 7th Indiana time, and the streaming will be into the NMC campus (just look for Corwin Carillon or CDB Barkley in SL and ask them for a landmark as they will be live in the session and in SL simultaneously.)

Otherwise my slides I already blogged below, so feel free to leave comments or questions here.

I’m Heading Off for June to Speak, Research, Speak, Plan more Research etc etc…

The major speaking event I have is the featured session at the NMC Summer Conference. I was specifically invited to speak about a “bit of everything” related to my research, so here’s the slides that accompany the talk. I hope I can arrange an audio stream to support the slides for the near future.

And here is the line-up for our panel session at the ECAR conference:

ecar.jpg

Youth Online – almost there!

cover

Yay! Here is my final book cover!!!

And here is one of the endorsements:

insidecover

How lovely of Len Unsworth to write such kind words.

Tasks for May

Here’s a litte list, just so readers will realise why I am blogging infrequently or even not at all these past few months:

1) Finish writing a book chapter for the book “Multimodal Semiotics” – now we have the contract all signed, sealed and delivered this one should be quickly and painlessly written over the next few days.

2) This leads to 2) the conference paper Julia and I are sharing to produce a “teacher-focussed” paper for the New Literacies strand of the September Future of Literacy conference.

3) Following these I have a big chapter of Second Life Education to write for the edited volume I will be editing with my colleaguess, see info:

Identity, Learning and Support in Virtual Worlds

A Proposal for an Edited Volume
Co-editors: Sharon Tettegah, Craig A. Cunningham & Angela Thomas.

This book explores the educational use and implications of various virtual environments. We focus on the use of chat spaces, Web 2.0, 3D Web or object oriented web (Web 3.0), and virtual environment applications.

Introduction

The World Wide Web, Internet and other technologies continue to evolve. Emerging most recently are so-called “multi-user virtual environments” (MUVEs) such as virtual worlds, which transcend the static Web pages of Web 1.0 as well as the predetermined applications of Web 2.0 to provide e-ecologies with the capacity to immerse the user in a “place” that cuts across time and space and affords opportunities for communication, exploration, collaboration, shared inquiry, and both formal and informal learning. Through its chapters and tightly integrated Introduction and Conclusion, this book introduces the reader to these spaces, and the myriad possibilities they represent for the further evolution of education at the prek-12, post-secondary, and lifelong learning levels.

Our approach to this book involves reflecting on, “what does it mean to teach and learn within and with virtual environments? It means that we as learners are no longer engaged in one way interactions. Virtual environments have enabled us to be highly immersed in spaces that yield high social presence, constructivist learning, interactive problem solving, and surprisingly are still enjoyable. This book will be divided into three sections: Section 1 on identity, section 2 on learning and section 3 on community development and support.

4) An article for E-Learning I promised Sharon, who is editing this special edition with a focus on SL.

5) Preparation for the two key conference talks I’m delivering in May, and prep for numerous meetings with colleagues (some planned, some hoped for) with a view to consider possiple future joint project work with colleagues from the NMC and beyond.

Can’t Keep Up!

I have so many things happening offline right now that I can’t do everything I want to online, like:

the MiT5 conference sessions that are being streamed into Second Life;

the Ars Virtua Conference that’s being held in Second Life;

The improvisational theatre workshops in Second Life.

I’m hoping to make some sessions but unfortunately they mostly happen in either the wee hours (when I need my beauty sleep) or during my working day, which is full of teaching, grading hundreds of assignments, developing course material, reviewing articles, writing book chapters, meetings, grant applications, visiting schools and you know… the usual academic “stuff”.   I really love every aspect of my job (well, except for the admin) but there’s just so much of every aspect that there isn’t enough room to fit everything in.  And when I try to, I end up giving entire lectures in a foggy haze.

My June Plans

I have quite a busy schedule planned for June, with talks, presentations, panel discussions, and research network meetings.

I will first be arriving in San Francisco where I’ll be meting up with colleagues to discuss some joint research project plans (and going to the Ghiradelli chocolate factory, let’s not forget!)

Then its a very busy week in Indianapolis at the New Media Consortium Summer Conference. At this conference I’ll be speaking about my favourite subject:

Pleasure, Play, Participation and Promise: Socio-emotional dimensions of digital culture which are transforming the shape of new media literacies.

Drawing on several inter-related ethnographic studies of multimodal virtual worlds, this session will examine the significance of affect on transformative moments in people’s online lives. These moments, whether filled with great joy and hilarity or laden with angst and sorrow, are all moments which crystallize experience, provide a privileged locus for the creation of knowledge, and have a significant impact upon identity. From younger adolescents who embrace online communities as part of their normal socialization, to the silver surfers, the older generation of converts to digital culture, I will explore the motivations and emotions of a range of individual cases in order to illuminate the key factors which are driving the changing dimensions of new media literacies.

I hope to see a lot of colleagues at the NMC conference that until now I’ve only met in Second Life or via online conferences. It is sure to be the highlight of my year :) Oh and I will get to hear Edward Castronova give a keynote! :)

Next is a panel discussion I’ll be on at the ECAR (EDUCAUSE Centre for applied research) Summer conference in Boulder, Colorado.

At this conference I’ll be speaking about teaching in Second Life. Here are the details:

This ain’t your daddy’s classroom, that’s for sure! Serious(ly fun) living and learning in the virtual world of Second Life

Is serious learning possible in a virtual world? The panelists in this session have each mounted significant and sustained efforts in the virtual world of Second Life™ to explore that question first hand across a variety of disciplines and settings. Collectively they have amassed years of experience in such settings, and clearly measurable successes. Join them as they discuss their projects, the challenges they’ve faced, the insights they have gained along the way, and their recommendations for institutions and faculty considering a virtual world presence.

Larry Johnson, aka Larry Pixel, The New Media Consortium
Phillip Long, aka Radar Radio, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sarah Robbins, aka Intelligirl, Ball State University
Angela Thomas, aka Anya Ixchel, University of Sydney

Then I head back to San Francisco for a little R&R for a few days before the long flight back to Sydney.  The minute I get back I’ll be heading up north to Armidale for a two day mega session with teachers, talking about machinima, digital fiction, and virtual worlds.  And then June will be over.  Phew!  If you are at any of these conferences do come and say hello!

Rock You Experiment

My wordpress account doesn’t let me embed slideshare presentations, and the splashcast software, I have been informed, has a “bug” that they are working on. So I have resorted to using Rock You to embed my slide shows… it’s very teenybopper – MySpace ish but… here it is :) I got to include music and flashing lips…. *laughs* Enjoy!


| View Show | Create Your Own

Evocative Spaces and Aesthetic Grabs (My YouTube Talk)

Click the image to go to the slides for my talk at the NMC’s Online Conference on the Convergence of Web Culture and Video

A complete list of all videos mentioned in the talk are included “under the fold”.

Continue reading

In Melbourne

Hello from Melbourne, more specifically, from the Australian Children’s Television Foundation, where I have been in meetings with Len Unsworth, the ACTF staff, and executives from the Victorian Department of Education about doing an exciting collaborative research project together.  This project has been a long time in the planning, and during this process Len and I submitted a paper to a governmental inquiry about the effects of television and multimedia on education in Victoria, the full report of which can be downloaded from here.  We’re working together to apply for funding from the Australian Research Council, and actually, its an awful lot of work preparing the application.  Lots of meetings, discussions, preliminary writing, even premiliminary publications and presentations.  I wonder if friends and colleagues in other countries have such long and complex procedures for attracting funding resources to research initiatives? 

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