TED team blog for SEMS/SoI at City University London
Posts tagged future?
Gamification overview
Jan 23rd

Achievement for reading this post.
(based on WordPress logo, created using Tagxedo)
While I’ve been working at City I’ve also been studying on the MA in Academic Practice (MAAP) programme run by the Learning Development Centre and I am now on the final ‘dissertation’ module. I wasn’t looking forward to writing another dissertation and thankfully there is a publication option that requires a conference presentation and published paper instead, and, having chosen this route, I decided to look at an area that has attracted some interest recently but that I hadn’t had a reason to investigate – Gamification in Education. I have just received confirmation of my paper being accepted for presentation, and thought it was a good excuse to put something up on this blog about it.
Horizon Report Preview
Jan 2nd

Creating Mathematical ‘Objects’ through 3D Printing
(© 2012 – The Simons Foundation )
Since 2002, the New Media Consortium (NMC) has been undertaking the Horizon Project. This involves soliciting the views of a wide range of influential people in the educational technology community (and beyond) on technologies that are likely to have a significant impact on education over the next 5 years. Each February reports are published which provide an overview of the chosen technologies, their significance to specific domains and the timescale over which it is expected adoption will take place. In advance of the main report the NMC also publishes the shortlist and a preview of the main report and the 2013 Higher Education preview is now available. What follows are some of my thoughts on the items selected for the Report.
OpenBadges Investigation
Dec 6th
Over the next few months, Farzana Latif (School of Health Sciences) and I will be investigating the possible uses of OpenBadges at City. OpenBadges are based on the same idea as the ones awarded to Scouts: they are a visual recognition that a person has mastered a particular skill. Skills acquisition is a very important part of learning, but formal qualifications often mask these in favour of examination results, so we want to look at whether there would be benefits in introducing a badges-based mechanism to enable students to show their skills and competencies, in addition to their grades. This project is being supported by the Learning Development Centre as one of their Learning Development Projects for 2012/13, and would be interested in hearing from City staff and students who want to give us their views.
OpenBadges been developed by the Mozilla Foundation (makers of the Firefox web browser among other things) specifically with education in mind, and so have security and verification features built into them which mean that it very difficult for a student to fake their award. They can also be set to expire automatically, so could be used for other purposes such as limited-time authorisations.
Skills are acquired in all disciplines, some of them common to most, such as academic writing, and others specific to particular ones. The following is a list of example skills that badges could be used to expose and ‘certify’, and how they might benefit students and staff:
- A nursing student is required to learn particular clinical skills, but on completion of the module the specifics skills learned become clouded by the grade for the assessments. With badges, it would be possible for the student to build a public profile that showcases the specific skills he acquired during the module.
- A mechanical engineering student needs to have undertaken general safety training and a specific training session prior to being able to use a particular piece of equipment, and needs a refresher every year. With badges, it becomes possible to check whether a student has completed the necessary training before allowing them on the equipment. The badges would automatically expire each year and so the badges would always be current.
- Two computing students are on the same programme. One takes elective modules in advanced programming and the other takes electives on systems analysis. On completion of their modules the students are awarded badges that highlight their chosen specialism.
- A student is elected president of one of the student union societies. On completion of her term of office she is awarded a badge to ‘certify’ this fact.
- A supervisor uses badges to help identify whether a particular student has the necessary skills to undertake a proposed final project.
One institution that has already implemented a badge-based recognition system is Purdue University in the US. There, students can earn badges and then produce profiles which show of different combinations of them, so that employers can see the ones that are relevant to them.
There is growing interest in the use of badges to recognise informal learning and skills acquisition, and this project should allow City to make an informed decision about whether they are right for us. So please add any comments you may have below.
Augmented Reality in Education Event Reflections
Oct 26th
Last Friday (19th October), City hosted a free event intended to highlight the possibilities of Augmented Reality (AR) as an aid for learning. This free event was a spin-off of from a JISC-funded project by Farzana Latif in the School of Health Sciences. I was involved quite a bit in the event, from helping to plan it and contact speakers through to taking photographs on the day and giving the closing remarks at the end, and so was happy to see that it was a great success.
Around 50 delegates from all parts of the UK and Ireland attended (with many more on the waiting list) to find out how AR is currently being used to supplement learning and how the area might develop in the near future. More >
Augmented Reality at the London Science Museum
Sep 24th
Last week I went to the Science Museum to take a look at their recent Augmented Reality ‘tour’. This received a reasonably high-profile launch in the spring, mainly due to the ‘tour guide’ being Top Gear’s James May. It was a very underwhelming experience, though.
The Good bits
The technology is actually quite good and allows the user to view the ‘augmentation’ from 360 degrees, i.e. if you go behind the projected James May, you’ll see his back. This is impressive and could be useful in many disciplines, especially Engineering and Health, where it would allow artifacts to be viewed from any angle. For example, placing a virtual engine into a real engine bay and seeing where it sticks out or would interrupt aerodynamic performance from any angle, or seeing whether an artificial organ would come into contact with any other organs in the body.
The main selling point is that James May is the ‘guide’. This is great if you like James May and his presenting style – personally I find him and his strange cadence and emphases to be Jeremy Clarkson-lite, so this isn’t a selling point for me.
That’s all the good bits!
The Bad bits More >
EdX eXpands
Aug 20th
The EdX initiative was started in 2011 by MIT and aims to provide free, certified, online education to anyone who is interested and motivated enough to take part in the programme. It is different from a typical MOOC (Massive Online Open Course) programme in that the tutors and the materials are the same as those on the equivalent on-campus course, rather than simply volunteers, and students will receive a certificate from the institution upon successful completion.
Following a highly successful test run last year with the Circuits and Electronics from MIT, the programme has been expanded to include the following modules from MIT, Harvard and UC Berkley:
Dev8D – Linked Data Trend in Learning Technology
Mar 12th
I was recently at the JISC-supported Dev8D conference for software/web developers working in UK Higher Education. It was a very useful experience for me because it was an opportunity find out what is happening on the ‘Bleeding Edge’ of Learning Technology and its related fields. Much of the work that I do is necessarily operational (e.g. supporting Moodle, looking into issues, assisting people with Learning Technology questions) and when it isn’t operational it tends to be tied to specific needs, so it was good to go and see what people at other institutions are doing.
The sessions were a mix of introductions and in-depth hands-on sessions and the main theme that came out was Open Linked Data. This is the idea that open data sets can be made available for people to use in innovative ways beyond those conceived by the original author. It is what makes it possible More >



