Archive for May, 2009

Cool protein folding game

May 12, 2009

Protein folding is such a complex, amazing, and beautiful phenomena. I have often wondered why someone didn’t come up with a program where you can visually play with the globs and get a sense of how the pieces attract and fold. Well, someone has! Last year!

Foldit is a game using distributed computing a la SETI@home, and crowdsourcing. Too cool!

Introducing or teaching social media to newbs

May 11, 2009

I think the big takeaway message from the last class (which really just reiterated previous class discussions) is that when you’re teaching people how to use social media, you need to make sure that your learners understand that they have to take responsibility for their actions. They need to be taught how to use proper ‘netiquette, understand ‘nethics, and how to protect (or kinda protect) themselves.

spreading the word

May 7, 2009

Well, I’m sure that you all know that today, 5/7/09, is odd day. But just in case, I thought I’d pass it on!

Final project revisited

May 6, 2009

Well, I realized that my interest in Second Life might have clobbered me. What I thought I wanted to do is way too vast given the time and resources at hand. I mean, people do Ph.D. dissertations on this stuff!

So, I backed up a little and gave it a little more thought. I’m working on a project for my 801 class on eating out healthily and I can’t really build any of the main instruction out for it until I get more skills under my belt, but I can certainly work on the Web 2.0 aspects of it. That would be really rewarding and I can get that project at least a couple of inches off the ground. Whew! Aside from the Facebook page, and cheat sheets (that hopefully will be read on an eReader as well as printable) I’ve been told that WordPress allows users to build web apps for the iPhone. While that’s not really an iPhone app, a web app is still OK in my book! So we’ll see what happens…

last 830 class for instruction

May 6, 2009

Last week’s class was a lot of fun. It’s always fun, but we got to get into our little groups and brainstorm about Web 2.0 and education. Everyone designed their maps differently, and each one brought something different to the experience. While I am biased and thought my group’s was really great, I admit that none of us are confident artists — so it didn’t look cool.

I was really impressed with the Web 2.0 learning cycle map — the one that’s like the nitrogen or carbon cycle in biology books. The names they came up with and the ideas that they attached to the land, sea, and clouds was really fun and FUNNY. Lastly, I think Ty’s description that the information has to be filtered before being pumped to the individuals is like municipal water filtration was very thought provoking.