Oct 15 2007
Surveys and Conversation Starters
Two more great videos from the Digital Ethnography crew at Kansas State University . . .
A Vision of Students Today
Oct 15 2007
Two more great videos from the Digital Ethnography crew at Kansas State University . . .
[...] been challenged to think different by Tim O’Reilly. I found two new kickass videos by the Digital Ethnography crew at Kansas State. Got 20 search engine marketing tools. And a whole [...]
[...] what it means to be a student now, vs. 40 years ago when they were in school. I thought this video (found via Scobleizer) was fantastic at addressing what it means to be a college [...]
[...] become technical enough to figure out how to post videos on my blog – in the meantime, click here and watch both of these videos. Really sweet videos, as well as thought provoking content. Jack [...]
Astonishing and inspiring and saddening stuff, Andy. Thanks very much for posting it. You’ve inspired Gene Roche to blog again, always a good thing, and now we know that Scoble reads your blog too. As the kids would say, awesome!
I have a challenge for you. We need what Scoble would call a “kick-###” video showing all the stuff we’re doing at UMW, from UMWBlogs to candid closeups of all our sandboxes to Ravendesk to well EVERYTHING. And I’m thinking the DTLT student wonders are just the folks to do it….
Learning 2.0…
If you’re interested in the evolution of the modern student, this video is worth three minutes of your time. Michael Wesch and his cultural anthropology students at Kansas State University just set the educational blogosphere on fire with thei…
[...] Wesch and his Digital Ethnography class at Kansas State University a couple times in the past (here, and here). His class, and especially the videos that have been produced as a result are a wonder. [...]
[...] Wesch and his Digital Ethnography class at Kansas State University a couple times in the past (here, and here). His class, and especially the videos that have been produced as a result are a wonder. [...]
[...] is a site of millions of sucky videos.” I have, in the past, argued against that statement here, here, here, and here. Until recently, a valid argument for YouTube’s suckiness would have been [...]