Wednesday 29 February 2012

Fwd: Ebooks and Elearning


E-books and E-content 2012

Ebooks and Elearning. University College London, 10 May 2012, 10.00 to 17.00

This is the next event in the series, which has been held under the auspices of University College London Department of Information Studies for the last three years. The theme in 2012 will be supporting learning and e-learning.


Student expectations of their education are increasing worldwide, in line with their own increasing investment, and this is especially true of the learning resources needed to support and complete a course; so that students not only expect that material will be easily and cheaply available, but that it will also fit into their digital world of IPads, e-readers, and laptops. The ambition of students, publishers and universities alike is the delivery of ebooks and econtent to a proliferation of mobile devices to suit the user. It serves to ensure that all students have access to the same learning content at the same time and at their convenience rather than having to depend on the vagaries of library lending or availability of second hand copies. But there are many barriers to this perfect world: it begs many questions. Who is responsible for delivering for this process? Who builds and manages the platforms on which the econtent resides? How should the content be structured and is it always the best way to deliver all content. Where does the source material come from and who pays? Should it be free or paid for by the students or the library?


There have been a number of pilot programmes examining these models such as the global initiatives funded by Elsevier, the development of new technologies to support learning on screen, the development of course and content databanks and emerging standards such as Epub3 to support new multi media developments.


Ebooks 2012 will explore the questions behind the increasing uptake of econtent to support learning and through a mix of experts, educationalists and others with an interest in the topic. It will be of keen interest to librarians trying to understand their role in the processes which apply to learning support staff, to learning technologists who need a better understanding of econtent and how it can be deployed and academics interested in what undoubtedly will be a key component in the future education.


The final programme  will include keynotes from David Ball Head of Academic Development Services at Bournemouth University and Aine Rice of Ebook Supplier Ebrary whilst Jill Taylor-Rowe of the University of Newcastle, Avtar Natt of BPP University College of Professional Studies Anne Worden of Portsmouth University and Dr Steven Warburton of University of London International Programmes will present case studies of their respective institutions. Publisher input will come from the European Director of innovative e-textbook supplier Coursesmart and Alan Nelson of elearning developer Nelson-Croom. Other agreed speakers include Graham Bell of Editeur who will address the new Epub 3 format and its applicability (or not) to elearning and multimedia and Kate Worlock of publishing consultants Outsell who will detail the emerging etextbook scene.

Sponsored by
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Registration fee: £110 per delegate

Registration form: click HERE to download the registration form.

Programme: click HERE to download the programme.

Venue: The JZ Young lecture theatre, with registration and reception in the Anatomy G04 Gavin de Beer lecture theatre. Both venues are in the Anatomy Building, Gower Street.
Map link: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/locations/ucl-maps/map2_low_res


Please click here to view previous presentations.


For further information, please email infostudies-conferences@ucl.ac.uk



 

David Andrew, 
Head of Academic Practice
Senior Tutor
 



The Learning Institute 
Queen Mary, University of London

Mile End, London E1 4NS



02078822803

02081446753

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Tuesday 28 February 2012

Fwd: SRHE: International Research and Researchers Network Seminar: 26 April 2012



 

 

 

The Orient Expressed: higher education policy and change in the Far East

 

Thursday 26 April 2012

Venue: SRHE Seminar Suite, 73 Collier Street, London N1 9BE

 

Registration and lunch: 13.00- 13.30

Programme 13.30 - 15.45

 

 

Higher education – who owns and who owes accountability in Korea?

A comparative critique on public-private binary ambivalence in higher education

 

Dr Terri Kim, Brunel University

 

This paper's focus is the policy and practices of restructuring higher education in South Korea in the light of the distinctive characteristics of Korean development and the (un)changing relationship between the state and higher education. Private universities are dominant: eight of Korea's top ten HEIs are private universities, and the direct involvement and investment of Chaebol [conglomerates] in the governance and management of universities has been notable. This trend has further intensified amid the process of neoliberal restructuring and global marketisation. There is a public rhetoric about neo-liberal public sector reforms and restructuring, and policy reforms are being made. The Korean example, with its changing but continuous triadic relationships between the state, the corporate and the university, implies a sharp contemporary question that is relevant to many countries including the UK: accountability for whom, in whose interests, and for what purposes, and what will be the long-term consequences?

 

 

Internationalisation and reform of China's higher education:

Beyond the expansion

 

Dr Qing Gu, University of Nottingham

 

This paper provides a critical analysis of the structures, policies and consequences of the recent expansion and change in China's higher education system. The analysis takes into account a range of ideological, social, cultural and historical factors and, through these, examines the major obstacles and achievements of the unprecedented expansion, diversification and internationalisation that Chinese higher education has experienced in the past three decades. The paper thus looks beyond the facts and numbers related to the articulated goals of the radical reforms over time. Rather, it looks into the history and context to understand in depth the nature and forms of the challenges and tensions that are embedded in the reform processes and their intended and unintended impact on individuals, institutions and society.

 

Event booking details

 

To reserve a place at this seminar please register at www.eventdotorg.co.uk/events.asp or telephone +44 (0) 207 4472525.  SRHE events are open to all and free to SRHE members as part of their membership package. The delegate fee for non-members is £25 [full time students £20]. Non-members wishing to join the Society may do so at the time of registration and the delegate fee will be waived. Please note that places must be booked in advance and that a £25 for non-attendance will be charged if a place has been reserved but no notice of cancellation/non-attendance has been given in advance.

 

 

Yours sincerely

 

 

Francois Smit

SRHE Event Manager

Society for Research into Higher Education

73 Collier Street

London N1 9BE

Telephone 0207 427 2350

Fax number 0207 278 1135

srheoffice@srhe.ac.uk

http://www.srhe.ac.uk

 



 

David Andrew, 
Head of Academic Practice
Senior Tutor
 



The Learning Institute 
Queen Mary, University of London

Mile End, London E1 4NS



02078822803

02081446753

 Book an appointment with me at http://doodle.com/DavidAndrew

 

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Wednesday 22 February 2012

Re: HEA Workshop and Seminar Series 2012



On 22 February 2012 11:15, Chris Vincent <assessment@heacademy.ac.uk> wrote:
The Higher Education Academy are running two seminar series in the thematic area of assessment and feedback which will share institutions' learning on these important issues in higher education. Each seminar will be hosted and delivered by an HE institution and will focus on the learning and teaching aspects of the themes.
 
Details of all the events, including how to register can be found on the workshop and seminar series page: http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/seminars-themes
 
Details of the next assessment and feedback seminars can be found at the following links:


 

David Andrew, 
Head of Academic Practice
Senior Tutor
 



The Learning Institute 
Queen Mary, University of London

Mile End, London E1 4NS



02078822803

02081446753

 Book an appointment with me at http://doodle.com/DavidAndrew

 

My profiles: Twitter Google Plus
Twitter Latest tweet: new blog post Fwd: HEA STEM Free workshops http://t.co/r4edcVUl
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Twitter Latest tweet: March research seminar: Prof Lynn McAlpine of Oxford and McGill University, Canada on early career academic identities. http://t.co/rH3zFZqi
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Friday 17 February 2012

Fwd: HEA STEM Free workshops



Email header image

HEA STEM Newsletter

17 February 2012




Email logo

Dear Colleagues

HEA STEM has created this mailing list to keep you informed of the opportunities we are offering to the STEM community, both academics and students, in the upcoming weeks. This short newsletter will be sent every two weeks, if you would prefer not to receive it please click unsubscribe.




FREE WORKSHOPS

HEA TRAVEL FUNDS AVAILABLE TO STAFF & STUDENTS

1. HEA STEM: Writing for Publication

Date: 1 Mar 2012

Location/venue: University of Huddersfield

The aim of this workshop is to encourage and help Academics write for journals, submit their work for conferences and to improve chances of having papers accepted.


2. HEA STEM: Embedding Puzzle-based learning in STEM teaching

Date: 7 Mar 2012

Location/venue: University of Birmingham

The purpose of the proposed seminar and workshop is therefore is to present completed work on embedding puzzle-based learning in STEM subjects and to ask participants to consider how the puzzles might be adapted for specific STEM subjects and to provide examples of such adaption for wider dissemination.


3. HEA STEM: Enquiry Based Learning

Date: 14 Mar 2012

Location/venue: University of Liverpool

This workshop seeks to investigate some of the characteristics of EBL as follows:

  • Engagement – with a complex problem or scenario
  • Students directing the lines of enquiry and the methods employed.
  • Tasks that will stimulate curiosity in students, encouraging them explore/seek out new evidence.

PUBLICATIONS

4. Call for submissions to ITALICS (June 2012) and New Directions (issue 8)

 Hope to see you at some of our events

Karen




About the Higher Education Academy

The HEA is a national body for enhancing learning and teaching in higher education in the UK. We work with institutions across the HE system to help bring about change in learning and teaching to improve the outcomes for students. We do this by recognising and rewarding excellent teaching, bringing together people and resources to research and share best practice and by helping influence, shape and implement policy.

The HEA supports staff in higher education throughout their career from those who are new to teaching through to senior management. We offer services in 28 disciplines and throughout the UK, and have offices in England, Wales and Scotland. Through the partnership management team we work directly with institutions to understand individual circumstances and priorities and bring together resources to meet them.

Owned by Universities UK and Guild HE, the HEA is funded by the four national funding councils, institutional subscriptions and project income.

For more recent news, events and funding opportunities, subscribe to Academy Update.

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David Andrew, 
Head of Academic Practice
Senior Tutor
 



The Learning Institute 
Queen Mary, University of London

Mile End, London E1 4NS



02078822803

02081446753

 Book an appointment with me at http://doodle.com/DavidAndrew

 

My profiles: Twitter Google Plus
Twitter Latest tweet: new blog post Fwd: ASKe Event; New Perspectives on Feedback, 28 June http://t.co/Y3DnsaI9
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Twitter Latest tweet: March research seminar: Prof Lynn McAlpine of Oxford and McGill University, Canada on early career academic identities. http://t.co/rH3zFZqi
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