Career
21st Century Skills
This is more a drive home thought than a full blown post. I was thinking about what it takes for career success in today’s work environment, two contrasting skills came to me: self-directed and collaborative. Self-directed, the ability to see a need, take ownership (or proceed with minimal supervision) and solve the problem. Self-directed in your learning about the problem or learning of additional skills to solve the problem. Collaborative, reaching out to others to develop the best ideas, for support in areas where you are not the expert, bringing together the right mixture of people to provide insights. For career success today one must be both self-directed and collaborative. What other 21st century skills…
Instructional Message Design
Visual Language – Blogs of Note
These blogs contain lots of examples of visual thinking in the design of messaging. Found them from an eLearning group on Ning (didn’t join?@$!).Marilyn Martin’s blog. Futher link to information designer and graphic thinker, Sunni Brown’s blog. One with a data focus, Cool Infographics…all seem to have Vizthink references (site with Nancy Duarte video conference).
Brain Rules
“Brain Rules” is the name given to the book and multimedia presentations of Dr. John Medina. Engaging is the best description of his writings on the brain. Accessible and humorous presentation of research on the brain is accompanied by applications of the research that should help teachers. Some of the take aways were:Attention:http://bubbl.us/view.php?sid=148246&pw=yaVWC.w6Lr12UMzJ5VTkxRWRNTUo3SQMemory:http://bubbl.us/view.php?sid=148253&pw=yaVWC.w6Lr12UMzI3VDA5M3JraVp1cwSensory Integration:http://bubbl.us/view.php?sid=148264&pw=yaVWC.w6Lr12UMzJWdE9pOTZCQCan’t wait to see where this is going next….
Tufte Essay Part II
Favorite take aways from this part of reading: Don’t victimize data by slicing and dicing. Put data in context. Use text to elaborate for technical and analysis – text preparation before presentation, during “to make smarter presentations, try smarter tools….”p.182 …..I wonder if Tufte would rebel at my use of bullet points here?!
Throwing The Baby Out With The Bathwater?
I don’t know why so many academic articles come down to these rather extreme sides. I think it has to do with dialectics in teaching. But, this is my first impression of the essay “Beautiful Evidence” by Edward Tufte. His analysis of slideography (a.k.a. power point) made me laugh and think. The laughter may be inappropriate. His major example against the use of .ppt was the Columbia shuttle mission that blew up and killed all the crew members. But some of his statements struck me as over the top. Laughing part first. “…the pushy pp style tends to set up a dominance relationship between speaker and audience, as the speaker makes the power points with…

