Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Infrastructures
1. Infrastructures in Virtual Learning New Media Consortium, June 13, 2008 Holly Willis Institute for Multimedia Literacy University of Southern California
2. Overview 1) introduction to the presentation 2) conceptual framework 3) getting real: IML island development - classroom extensions - research - learning objects - projects 4) conclusion(s) 5) discussion
3. “ Will there by condominiums in data space?” – Bill Viola, 1980
6. Remediation? (Jay David Bolter, Richard Grusin) Domesticating? Question: As we reckon with the changes affecting learners and as we rethink teaching practices, what can the design of virtual spaces do to enhance that rethinking?
7. Remediation? (Jay David Bolter, Richard Grusin) Domesticating? Question: As we reckon with the changes affecting learners and as we rethink teaching practices, what can the design of virtual spaces do to enhance that rethinking? “ Residents become engines of creation themselves, working as the producers of content in world, designing and reshaping the space around their own ideas and interests.” Cory Ondrejka, “ Education Unleashed: Participatory Culture and Innovation in Second Life.”
8. Background – Institute for Multimedia Literacy School of Cinematic Arts – Honors in Multimedia Scholarship – Multimedia in the Core
22. Starting Points – questions about new literacies, new learning and new teaching – two programs dedicated to scholarly multimedia, plus a journal – faculty members with diverse interests and abilities – desire to push the boundaries of pedagogy within the needs and abilities of our programs
23. Other issues: - SL doesn’t exist in a vacuum - coextensive with high information density learning environments - one among many commercial social software applications we use - one among many possible MUVE platforms - lacks appeal for gamers
24. Part Two: Conceptual Framework – “ The Infrastructure of Experience and the Experience of Infrastructure: Meaning and Structure in Everyday Encounters With Space,” Genevieve Bell and Paul Dourish – “ From Interaction to Participation: Configuring Space Through Embodied Interaction,” Amanda Williams, Eric Kabisch, Paul Dourish
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26. Part Two: Conceptual Framework Infrastructures: – frame our experience of the world – operate invisibly until breakdown – are “relational” – are embedded into social structures, but are part of that structuring mechanism
27. “ As a number of commentators have observed, despite the revolutionary and transformational rhetorics surrounding the development of networked information infrastructures, in practice they are as likely to reinforce as to destabilize existing institutional arrangements,” (Bell and Dourish, 3).
28. Part Two: Conceptual Framework Trialectics: – Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, 1971 (translated in 1991) – Ed Soja, Thirdspace – Kevin Leander, “Reading the Spatial Histories of Positioning,” in Spatializing Literacy Research and Practices, 2008
29. Part Two: Conceptual Framework Trialectics: – perceived space – conceived space – imagined space - also: sociality, historicality and spatiality…
31. Brad Kligerman’s Ars Virtua Project, 2006 “ Avatars trace a path through the exhibition space, composing content in their wake.” http://transition.turbulence.org/AVAIR/
32. Metaverse Territories, Blog by Brad Kligerman – attempt to disrupt connections between real world architecturalpractices and those in the virtual realm – “ constuct a platform from which inworld physical and social patterns can generate the symobology of immaterial architecture” – build foundation for new media forms emerging from collective intelligence as they become manifest in 3-D space http://metaverseterritories.com
33. “ The concept of Reflexive Architecture is only one of may branches of opportunity for a new language of virtual architecture to emerge, from from the habit of pure physical replication.” – Jon Brouchaud
35. “ The result is we get a continually moving and evolving liquid/crystallized architectural body whose form is derived from avatar movement and inhabitation.” – Michael Ditullio
41. “ We have created a social vocabulary for the space that lets people communicate based not just on text chat but by the movement of their avatar around the space.” – Drew Harry
42. Drew Harry’s meeting space: where your avatar stands denotes your position relative to issues in the discussion. “ Unreal Meetings,” Erica Naone, Technology Review , July 11, 2007
43. Drew Harry’s meeting space: a cylinder above your avatar indicates when you have held a position for a long time.
87. Part Four: Conclusions - abstractions versus the concrete - new literacies - allow for the unexpected
88. Part Five: Discussion - other models? - other conceptual notions? – exemplary spaces? practices?
89. Works Cited Genevieve Bell and Paul Dourish, “The Infrastructure of Experience and the Experience of Infrastructure: Meaning and Structure in Everyday Encounters With Space.” Jon Brouchoud, “Toward a New Virtual Architecture” <http://archsl.wordpres.com/2007/07/12/toward-a-new-virtual-architecture> Drew Harry, Socialable Media Group, MIT, < http://web.media.mit.edu/~dharry > Brad Kligerman, “Building With (Im)materials: When Actual Materiality Surpasses Even Real Virtuality,” Metaverse Territories blog. Kevin Leander, “Reading the Spatial Histories of Positioning,” in Spatializing Literacy Research and Practices (New York: Peter Lang, 2008). Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space (London: Blackwell, 1991). Erica Naone, “Unreal Meetings,” Technology Review, July 11, 2007. <http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/19035/?a=f> Cory Ondrejka, “Education Unleashed: Participatory Culture, Education and Innovation in Second Life,” in The Ecology of Games: Youth, Games and Learning, Katie Salen, ed. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008). Ed Soja, Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and Other Real-and-Imagined Places (London: Wiley Blackwell, 1996). Bill Viola, “Will There Be Condominiums in Data Space?” in Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality (NY: W.W. Norton & Company, 2001). Amanda Williams, Eric Kabisch, Paul Dourish, “From Interaction to Participation: Configuring Space Through Embodied Interaction.”
90. Works Cited Images: Brad Kligerman, http://transition.turbulence.org/AVAIR Princeton University Second Life Campus: < http://www.3pointd.com > Case Western Reserve Campus: < http://blog.case.edu/ > Spaces: Gallery of Reflexive Architecture, SL space, Jon Brouchoud NikkeiBP+NikkeiBP sim, Archidemo IML Island: 103 / 189 / 52