Showing posts with label jane hart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jane hart. Show all posts

Monday, 16 January 2012

The Pelecon flies again

We have enjoyed 6 successful e-learning conferences in Plymouth over the past decade. In recent years, the Plymouth e-Learning Conference (or PeLC) has grown from a small local one day teacher conference, into a large, international 3 day event which showcases the very best and latest in digital pedagogies. Over the years, we have welcomed a galaxy of world class keynote speakers, such as Stephen Molyneaux, Gilly Salmon, Josie Fraser, Stephen Heppell, Sherry Terrell, David White, John Davitt, Graham Attwell, Mike Blamires, Jane Seale and Mark Stiles.

Other who have presented papers and workshops at the event over the years have included James Clay, Miles Berry, Shirley Williams, Pat Parslow, Helen Keegan, Malinka Ivanova, Neil Witt, Carmen Holotescu, Mike Phillips, Doug Dickinson, Craig Taylor, Matt Lingard, Lyndsay Jordan, Bex Lewis, Andy Ramsden, Dan Roberts, Thomas Fischer, Doug Belshaw, Catherine Cronin, Richard Hall, Sharon Flynn, Mark Childs, Fiona Concannon, Thomas Kretschmer and far too many others to list here on this blog. We have also welcomed many student presenters over the years, and showcased our own Plymouth University robotic football team and vision immersion theatre. Most delegates who have attended will tell you that Pelecon is an exciting and inspiring conference at many levels.


The 2012 Plymouth Enhanced Learning Conference (yes we replaced 'electronic' for 'enhanced' last year to reflect the shift in emphasis from tools to pedagogies) is number 7 in the series, and has been rebranded with a new logo and new website. This year's lineup of invited speakers is bigger than ever, as you can see from the picture above. Our four keynotes are Jane Hart, Alec Couros, Keri Facer and Simon Finch, and for the first time this year we also have 3 spotlight speakers in Leigh Graves Wolf, David Mitchell and Helen Keegan. Once again we are planning an evening Teachmeet, Student Voice Showcase and other shows that run parallel with the conference. One of our new ideas is to have a 'Failure Confessional' where we talk about what went wrong, and all learn from our mistakes. We also take over exclusive occupancy of the famous Glassblowing House restaurant on Plymouth's historic Barbican seafront for our social event on the second night of the conference. Many people have said that Pelecon is one of the friendliest conferences of its type, and this year's event will be no exception. With its idyllic setting 'twixt moorland and sea, wonderful weather (we have excellent connections) and the famous Devon cream tea (calorie free), what better place could you spend your time between 18-20 April this year? Full cost for the entire three day event is just £200. We hope to see you at Pelecon this year!

Visit the Pelecon website for further details.

Fishing boat image by Jose Luis Garcia


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The Pelecon flies again by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Many encounters

I had a very busy, and slightly bizarre day today filled with encounters. Started the morning off having breakfast with Informal Learning guru Jay Cross in the lounge of the K-West hotel, in Kensington, West London. On the way back to get my bags along the gloomy, strangely lit corridors of the hotel, I encountered one of the Jedward twins. Don't ask me which one it was, they both look and sound exactly the same to me. His big hair, glowing in the gloom like a strangely luminescent toilet brush, gave me a bit of a funny turn, I can tell you.

Made it across to Olympia 2 with Jay with the good offices of a friendly taxi driver, and met up with Donald H Taylor and his team. The one day Learning Skills Group conference (#lsg10uk) this year attracted 450 delegates, mainly from the corporate training sector. I bumped into several Twitter buddies face to face for the first time, including Karyn Romeis and Phil Green, and others I had met before including Barry Sampson and Jane Hart. I sadly missed Jay Cross's keynote, because I had to travel across town to Oxford Circus to meet up with Ali Hughes and Derek Wenmoth (Core Ed team) who wanted to discuss the content of my upcoming keynote in Christchurch for the uLearn Conference in October. I spent a very pleasant hour with them both in Caffe Nero, before we all had to depart for our next meetings.

Back again at Olympia, I enjoyed a pleasant buffet lunch and a chat with a number of delegates, before doing my own workshop session entitled: Collaborative and Co-operative Learning: The How and the Why, in which I covered a whole range of ideas with about 85 delegates on competition, collaboration and cooperation (I used the analogy of the London marathon for this), creativity, Web 2.0 tools (I demonstrated the wisdom of crowds, folksonomies and social tagging through a number of 'get out of your seat' activities which seemed to go down well) and problem based learning. As usual, there was not enough time toget through all the materials I had planned, and then it was a quick dash by taxi, across London and down to West Sussex, where I managed to get my Gatwick flight to Valencia.

On the plane I encountered my old friend Paul Clarke and his wife, who are also here in the Barcelo Hotel in Valencia for the EDEN Conference (the picture above is of the stunningly designed centre for arts and sciences complex, which is just across the road from the hotel). We arrived together (I have shared taxi cabs with Jay Cross and Paul Clarke on the same day and in two separate European cities - how about that?) and then in the hotel lobby as we were checking in, along came Michael Moore to greet us. I also bumped into Morten Flate Paulsen in a cafe this evening.

Tomorrow is the reception evening for the 3 day EDEN Conference which I will be reporting on in this blog. Stay tuned - or whatever they say, in this web enabled world...

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Many encounters by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 3.0 International License.
Based on a work at steve-wheeler.blogspot.com.

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Lost in translation (again)

Travelling up on the National Express bus from Plymouth to London was rather tedious. I had a guy sat behind me who insisted on speaking very loudly into his mobile phone for most of the 6 hour journey. It couldn't have been an iPhone because the battery wouldn't have lasted. What was worse, I couldn't even listen in to the gossip, because he was gabbling away in some far Eastern language...

I was in London to speak at the Learning Technologies Conference at Olympia. I was invited to speak by the urbane and witty Donald Taylor, who really does know how to organise a smart and glittering event. In the speaker's lounge (yes they have one) Don introduced me to a smiling grey haired, bearded man who turned out to be Lord David Puttnam, our first keynote speaker. His Lordship looked into my eyes and it was as if we were old friends. He has that effect on people. Some may remember him as the force behind some of the greatest movies in the British cinema, producing such classics as The Mission, Local Hero and Chariots of Fire. And here we were talking about how he had recently been down to Plymouth to speak at a prizegiving at one of our local primary schools. He really has a way of putting you at your ease.

Lord Puttnam's keynote speech will no doubt be covered much more eruditely elsewhere on the web, but I want to capture just the essence of his talk here. He argued for education as the answer to all the world's needs, including climate change, and gave the example of climate change simulation games where the first thing children do is destroy the world. Later they learn how to save it. He said that no education system can be better than the professionals it employs. My favourite soundbite was that 'good teachers should be able to walk into your head and turn on the lights'. The bottom line for Lord Puttnam was this - only through engaging with digital media are we likely to nurture a generation of smart learners, who are agile and flexible enough to cope with the world's changes.

The first day of LT10UK was mainly about technology used in corporate training and development contexts, and it had a distinctly HR feel about it. My own session on smart technologies was in the main auditorium, complete with stage, large screen, coloured theatre lighting, and a video camera that captured everything for playout later. There were around 200 in my audience, and boy, were they polite! I braced myself for a barrage of 'what ifs?' and 'so whats?' - the type of feedback you get from a savvy academic audience. But no, this lot were on their best behaviour and the discussion was very placid indeed. It was almost as if we were talking in two different languages. I suspect that the worlds of training and education (which collided a few times at the conference) are not converging as fast as many think they are, and LT10UK really was dominated by training and development - and of course that's why most people were there. After my presentation, I had several approaches from people who wanted to quiz me more about my talk, most blown away by the idea that handheld devices could be used in the ways I had described in my slideshow. I had to convince some over coffee by doing some live demos on my iPhone of Navigator and other GPS based tools.

I paid a brief visit downstairs to the main exhibition where 200 stands reached out and tried to grab 5 minutes of your time. Most appeared to be VLE vendors. Many were chancing it, in a market that is probably burgeoning for corporate training, but which in my opinion, is already 10 years out of date for schools, colleges and universities. Again, the VLE companies were speaking in another language - this one more akin to Latin or ancient Greek, so I quickly left the arena.

The conference party that evening over at the Kensington public bar was outrageous. All the drinks were free, plates of food kept circulating, as did a team of street magicians, doing card tricks and close up illusions. I withdrew politely at just before midnight after an excellent Italian style meal, but some of the hardier souls went on to other venues and stayed out as late as 4 am. They may be a placid lot at Learning Technologies, but they certainly know how to party.

Day 2 was interesting simply because so many of the corporate speakers seemed to be reading from the same script. Social learning is a good thing, they said. Do collaborative stuff and your employees will learn better, they advised. It sounded suspiciously like lip service though. I suspect that many are 'on the verge of beginning to think about considering it', but haven't yet taken the plunge. After all, user generated content seems a little risky for those businesses who want to protect their secrets from their competitors and maintain their unique branding. One of the more vocal delegates did manage to ask a sticky question of one of the presenters in the mobile learning session. The response was: 'Why do you ask? Are you one of our competitors?'

On Day 2 I enjoyed a very interesting 30 minutes over lunch with Professor Stephen Heppell, whom I had never had the pleasure of talking with before. I had heard him speak several times at events such as Handheld Learning and ALT-C, but this was a real opportunity to speak to him on a one-to-one basis and hear his ideas. We covered everything from MPENSA, to schooling in post-conflict areas, to disaster relief, and one of his most recent ideas - to take over vacated highstreet store spaces of the likes of Burger King and Marks and Spencer and turn them into learning centres. 'They're already DDA compliant' Stephen said, and convinced me it is an opportunity too good to miss. I said to him, 'Stephen, you're a busy man.' His reply, with a twinkle in his eye was 'I'm having the time of my life!'

All too soon the conference was over. I got to meet several people I had only ever met on Twitter, including Barry Sampson and Jane Hart, and had several very interesting conversations with a number of the delegates, mainly from Scotland, for some reason... The bus trip back home was horrendous, as Chiswick flyover was closed and we were diverted across town in heavy traffic. A man behind me was talking loudly and incessantly into a mobile phone for most of the journey home. And guess what? It was in a far-eastern language and I didn't understand a word...

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Thursday, 5 November 2009

Smart talk

I'm an invited speaker at the Learning Technologies Conference at London's Olympia in January. It promises to be quite an interesting two days in the capital with keynotes from Lord David Puttnam (remember Chariots of Fire?) and Stephen Heppell, as well as a host of other social media experts including my Twitter buddies Jane Hart, Donald Clark, Barry Sampson and Mark Oehlert.

My own presentation is scheduled for Day two, where I will tackle the subject of 'New Smart Devices for Learning'. Here's the blurb from the conference website:

Smart phones are now proving themselves for learning, but what happens next with smart devices? Join Steve Wheeler as he explores how existing technologies such as GPS, cameras, light-weight projection and bar code scanning can be combined with new software to extraordinary effect. In the next few years, individual's interactions with the world, and how they learn in it, may be transformed. Steve will explore:


  • Augmented reality: the short-cut to information
  • The power of smart devices combined with semantic search
  • Wearable learning devices - pipe dream or practical reality?
  • Devices already altering how people learn: from Kindle to the TouchTable
  • The challenge for L&D: adopt and understand now, or play catch up later

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