Short and Sweet Learning Moments

hershey-kiss

The first phase of redesigning our library resources is to identify the quality of the material we currently publish. I accomplished this by creating a content audit (an inventory a webpage’s elements including links, file formats, text, etc.)  of our tutorials and research guides. A few examples include a guide for navigating our physical library, guidelines for avoiding plagiarism, and pointers on creating research questions. The content in our guides are delivered over multiple platforms and formats, including text, images, slideshows, and videos.

Despite the variety of mediums in our tutorials, they all have one thing in common: they are bite sized learning moments, usually honing in under five minutes to complete.

This may seem like a lot of information to pack into a small amount of time, but could this be the way students learn best in the digital age? There are countless studies showing the decline in attention spans (When’s the last time you read an article from title to finish?), and an increase in ADHD diagnosis. As a result, user centered designers are constantly updating best practices for keeping users engaged.
How long should a video be? Will this site work on a mobile screen? What happens when the user loses connection to the web? These are all questions that come to mind when designing a digital experience, and in order to validate them we’ll need to be willing to test our assumptions of what works best for our students.

Copyright and Distance Ed. Webinar for Classroom Faculty

flyer: magna_webinar_april_30_2013 :: Copyright & Distance Education
Join Us for a Free Online Seminar sponsored by the CUNY Office of Library Services; Presented by Magna Online Seminars
 “How Recent Copyright Court Cases Affect Distance Education: What Educators Need to Know About Copyright”
Tuesday, April 30, 2013, 2pm-4pm
John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Lloyd Sealy Library Classroom, 899 10th Ave.
Presenter Linda Enghagen, University of Massachusetts at Amherst is the author of Fair Use Guidelines for Educators. Professor Enghagen will guide us through a review of best practices in fair use, including distribution of course material and assignment design.  The webinar will show you how to establish and implement policies to assure copyright compliance. Continue reading “Copyright and Distance Ed. Webinar for Classroom Faculty”

Egyptian Archeology at Michigan State

Have you ever wanted to learn about Egyptian archeology, but wished you had someone to walk you through it? You’re in luck. This week Boingboing has a post about an Open Access course being offered by a professor at Michigan State University. Only students enrolled in the class can take it for course credit, but those who are interested have access to much of the course content and are invited to participate in blog discussions with the rest of the class. If you’ve thought about taking (or teaching) an Open Access course, the professor includes a useful summary of what it is and how it works on his class website.

A Video Version of the Periodic Table

[from the Chronicle of Higher Education Wired Campus, 8/22/08]
A Video Version of the Periodic Table
The University of Nottingham, in England, has put a high-tech twist on the periodic table, creating a clickable version that points to short YouTube clips about each element.
The Periodic Table of Videos, as their creation is called, features 118 videos, each about 2 minutes long. Scientists perform experiments with the elements or describe unusual properties of each one. In the clip about Beryllium, for instance, a researcher refuses to open a jar holding a sample of the element, explaining that exposure to it can cause a rare and deadly disease. (Another researcher interviewed in the video explains that the element is used in the processing of medical X-rays.)
The “most watched” elemental video, according to the site, is the one for Sodium. If you drop sodium into water, the reaction is explosive, as researchers demonstrate. —Jeffrey R. Young

PubMed Now Indexes Videos of Experiments and Protocols in Life Sciences

For faculty who teach in the life sciences and use visual online resources to enhance learning, this will be of interest:

(from the Chronicle of Higher Ed. Wired Campus) PubMed Central, the National Library of Medicine’s online database, is now indexing videos from The Journal of Visualized Experiments. According to the publication’s official blog, JoVE is “the first video-journal to ever be accepted for publication in PubMed.”

The online, open-access journal publishes videos of experiments and protocols in the biological and life sciences and offers its video-articles to science bloggers to illustrate their posts. <full article>