Staring at my whiteboard
Friday, March 28, 2008
My mind is not working today. Actually it has been on a strike for a few days now. It must be the easter holidays. :)
I am trying to take a step forward in the project I am working in. So far I have recorded a few video clips from staff and students in the school. Yeah I think I have a good number now. I have done some myself. The videos are short, an average of 5 minutes each. I am also getting other kind of material, like for example a PowerPoint presentation an ex-PhD student sent me, or an essay a second year student is writing. I have also been working on Sakai. I focused my exploration on the blogger feature, but also on the wiki, forum, podcast and resources tools. As I think those will hold the core of the material I am collecting. Of course I will also use the schedule, annoucements and messaging tools, but I think those will form part of the peripheral of the site.
I feel like stuck now. I sort of guess what I should do next but do not know how to do it. I think my next step should be organising all the material I've got so far and try to build a map of themes. This map would help me to:
1. Know the gaps I need to fill regarding areas of research in the school I need to cover
2. Create sort of groups of themes to which the video clips and other material can be classified
3. Then I can use these groups to create a series of blog posts within one or more sites in Sakai.
(I am not sure yet if I will need more than one site in Sakai. I can probably have 2 sites, for example, and name these sites as my two highest level groups of themes. If I have more groups at the highest level I will need more sites).
4. Relate or draw links between groups of material. I could then use these links to connect material between them. For example I can say "If you want to know more see this other podcast ....".
There might be other benefits of drawing a map but at the moment my brain is just starting to warm up. Maybe 20% functional. I have written a list of themes on my whiteboard (see picture) and I hope I can get ideas about how to organise them soon. Sometimes staring at the whiteboard helps, so that is what I've been doing this morning, before I decided to write this post :)
The blogger feature in Sakai, allows each member of the site (that will be staff and students in the school) to create their own "blog". So a site can have as many blogs as there are members in the site. Each "blog" will hold a list of posts. A post is basically an article containing text, pictures, embeded files, like videos or PDFs, etc. When a member access the blogger tool s/he sees a list of all the posts uploaded by everyone in the site. There are ways of filtering this buy author though.( Each site member could have their own PhD/Research diary in their blog as someone proposed in a comment in my previous post.)
Because I am the only one working on this project everything I will upload will come under my name. I have filmed the videos, edited them, I am editing PowerPoints, etc. I will write and upload instructions and introductory texts to each material. Will organise them and make connections between them. But in reality the owner of the "message" withing each material is every single person who has volunteered to help me. So I think I should publish their material under their names. What do you think? I am not sure though about how to do that. Would I require access to everyone's Sakai account?
Having each material under different names will help the site to build a sense of community. New comers will see that other people have posted things and would think about uploading more material themselves (hopefully!). Some members could ask questions in their blogs or in the forums (as someone else commented in my previous post) and other members could create posts to answer those questions.
What I am doing now is just building the foundations of a site that should start feeding itself with the material that staff and students will upload in the future.
hmmm I think this site will need one or more moderators in the future, just to keep it organised.
I am also thinking on a couple of suggestions that a friend of mine made. He said it could be useful to use the google search engine within the site. That can help students to find the material they are looking for. I am not sure about using the actual "google" search engine. Sakai is a password protected environment and all its content should be kept confidential. (or could I embed a google search engine in Sakai?) The blogger in Sakai comes with a very basic search option which searches within all posts in all blogs in the site. I hope that should be enough. Only problem I find is that there will be other material posted in the forums for example and that search engine woudln't find them. One would have to go to the forum search engine to look for things in the forums... and so on.
My friend also suggested using tags in "del.icio.us" or "technorati" but again I am not sure because of the confidenciality and security issues. The blogger in Sakai allows the creation of "keywords" for each post, so I guess I can use them. I could use the theme groups' names as keywords for example. Finally my friend suggested RSS feeds. Some students could use RSS
feeds to keep them updated on new posts or comments on posts within the VGS site. I use RSS feeds in my cellphone to read the news sometimes. I use the RSS option in google sidebar to keep me updated with posts in some blogs, on Hi5 and on Facebook. I like them. Some people may not.
Now I will go back to staring at my whiteboard.
I am trying to take a step forward in the project I am working in. So far I have recorded a few video clips from staff and students in the school. Yeah I think I have a good number now. I have done some myself. The videos are short, an average of 5 minutes each. I am also getting other kind of material, like for example a PowerPoint presentation an ex-PhD student sent me, or an essay a second year student is writing. I have also been working on Sakai. I focused my exploration on the blogger feature, but also on the wiki, forum, podcast and resources tools. As I think those will hold the core of the material I am collecting. Of course I will also use the schedule, annoucements and messaging tools, but I think those will form part of the peripheral of the site.
I feel like stuck now. I sort of guess what I should do next but do not know how to do it. I think my next step should be organising all the material I've got so far and try to build a map of themes. This map would help me to:
2. Create sort of groups of themes to which the video clips and other material can be classified
3. Then I can use these groups to create a series of blog posts within one or more sites in Sakai.
(I am not sure yet if I will need more than one site in Sakai. I can probably have 2 sites, for example, and name these sites as my two highest level groups of themes. If I have more groups at the highest level I will need more sites).
4. Relate or draw links between groups of material. I could then use these links to connect material between them. For example I can say "If you want to know more see this other podcast ....".
There might be other benefits of drawing a map but at the moment my brain is just starting to warm up. Maybe 20% functional. I have written a list of themes on my whiteboard (see picture) and I hope I can get ideas about how to organise them soon. Sometimes staring at the whiteboard helps, so that is what I've been doing this morning, before I decided to write this post :)
The blogger feature in Sakai, allows each member of the site (that will be staff and students in the school) to create their own "blog". So a site can have as many blogs as there are members in the site. Each "blog" will hold a list of posts. A post is basically an article containing text, pictures, embeded files, like videos or PDFs, etc. When a member access the blogger tool s/he sees a list of all the posts uploaded by everyone in the site. There are ways of filtering this buy author though.( Each site member could have their own PhD/Research diary in their blog as someone proposed in a comment in my previous post.)
Because I am the only one working on this project everything I will upload will come under my name. I have filmed the videos, edited them, I am editing PowerPoints, etc. I will write and upload instructions and introductory texts to each material. Will organise them and make connections between them. But in reality the owner of the "message" withing each material is every single person who has volunteered to help me. So I think I should publish their material under their names. What do you think? I am not sure though about how to do that. Would I require access to everyone's Sakai account?
Having each material under different names will help the site to build a sense of community. New comers will see that other people have posted things and would think about uploading more material themselves (hopefully!). Some members could ask questions in their blogs or in the forums (as someone else commented in my previous post) and other members could create posts to answer those questions.What I am doing now is just building the foundations of a site that should start feeding itself with the material that staff and students will upload in the future.
hmmm I think this site will need one or more moderators in the future, just to keep it organised.
I am also thinking on a couple of suggestions that a friend of mine made. He said it could be useful to use the google search engine within the site. That can help students to find the material they are looking for. I am not sure about using the actual "google" search engine. Sakai is a password protected environment and all its content should be kept confidential. (or could I embed a google search engine in Sakai?) The blogger in Sakai comes with a very basic search option which searches within all posts in all blogs in the site. I hope that should be enough. Only problem I find is that there will be other material posted in the forums for example and that search engine woudln't find them. One would have to go to the forum search engine to look for things in the forums... and so on.
My friend also suggested using tags in "del.icio.us" or "technorati" but again I am not sure because of the confidenciality and security issues. The blogger in Sakai allows the creation of "keywords" for each post, so I guess I can use them. I could use the theme groups' names as keywords for example. Finally my friend suggested RSS feeds. Some students could use RSS
feeds to keep them updated on new posts or comments on posts within the VGS site. I use RSS feeds in my cellphone to read the news sometimes. I use the RSS option in google sidebar to keep me updated with posts in some blogs, on Hi5 and on Facebook. I like them. Some people may not.Now I will go back to staring at my whiteboard.
Labels:
blogs,
PhD students,
Sakai


The brain is draining, no doubt about that....
Remember, research is a very flexible process, and as soon as you try to 'structure' it, you start leaving things out.
People would need some structure or organisation of the material, but then they need to be allowed to venture themselves, and create their own structures.
Why don't you invite the people you have videoed or recorded to see what they have done, and create their own blogs? You could help them posting the material there as well. They can then add things to a kind of 'common' repository.
Once you do that, you could then start giving access to newcomers.
You will be the 'director' of the orchestra of the sakai environment, organising some material, and showing people the different resources, but also encouraging them to participate.
You will be the one bringing new things for them to look at, and asking them how their research has been influenced by resources.
This requires you to go a bit beyond the role of 'administrator', and assuming more the role of 'conductor'.
The themes you have are fine, I would suggest that you can also organise the site by individuals of a community.
All these are ideas to bring a community together. Hope you find them useful
El pato
You have been thinking....ALOT!
I only know what you have told me about Sakai......so I can't really say anything about how you should set things up technically (ie google search engine or not).....but
K
I
S
S
(Keep It Simple, Stupid!)
However you organise things make it simple.....and therefore user friendly.
PS
Good idea to name the contributers to the site!