JISC Innovating e-Learning 2010 Online Conference - #jiscel10
This was my first foray into the world of online conferences and, overall, I think it was facilitated well: I was able to pick and choose the sessions I was interested in and schedule my regular work around it. On the other hand, with an online conference you don't tend to get to 'meet' new people. Or at least I didn't - I tended to pay attention to, and talk to, those I already knew.
I attended the following sessions:- Learning to live in interesting times – what are educational institutions for? Keri Facer (Manchester Metropolitan University)
- Developing a culture of blended learning innovation Graham Galbraith (University of Hertfordshire) and Jon Alltree (University of Hertfordshire)
- How to get your innovations adopted (and change the world) Anne Miller (The Creativity Partnership)
- Is the future mobile? Graham Brown-Martin (Learning Without Frontiers)
- Transforming assessment for learning in a digital age David Boud (University of Technology, Sydney)
- What do students really want? Usman Ali (NUS)
- Shaping our learning futures Elliott Masie (the Masie Center) shares his thoughts on this with the conference.
- Improvements in Elluminate so that messages in the text chat appear (if you want them to) on Twitter and vice-versa.
- A focus on the UK - the two speakers I heard from outside the UK were poor, to my mind, and symbolically it's better to celebrate what's going on here.
- Some other software running the back end of the conference - for example the Crowdvine, used at the ALT-C conference was a lot more intuitive, open and sociable.
- The solid introductions by facilitators, showing participants how to engage using Elluminate.
- Timings of the session were, by and large, spot-on for my needs at least.
- Bringing in provocateurs and people outside the establishment to mix things up a bit.

