CMN

// This page contains the syllabi and course schedule for Dr. Montgomery's Span 672/SLAT 610 course. //

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https://clivesir.wikispaces.com/Ed+Blog+Collection

=Key Concepts= //(Do this as a Wordle)//


 * Notes:**

//appearance, functions, overall specifications//

//Mainstream v. cutting edge// //Pros/cons of adoption// //How is technology being leveraged (policies, procedures, not necessarily in the technology)// //Simplicity// //Watch IT// //Strategies for how to leverage your media - for example: posting videos on YouTube instead of FB (don't use FB as a repository for your media, use it to send people to your media)// //Adequacy of mobile devices to move your studies or professional endeavors forward// They don't have to sell you based on connectivity or compatibility, they only have to sell you based on appearance.

//They want to get as much from those other services//

"At the heart of technology are protocols, algorithms, etc." "You don't have to be a computer engineer to be involved in high level development of a project"

"In our personal lives, we don't have a staging environment, we don't have a development server, we don't have a sandbox."

If you want people to install a browser, get them to do it in an environment where there is no risks, where their friends, their boss, even their co-workers won't see them make mistakes. People have to allow themselves to make mistakes if they're going to progress."

The 150 rule is relevant based on how much information those relationships generate/push on you. It doesn't matter if they go out on their front porch and yell what they ate for breakfast, but if you get a status update from 150 people telling you what they ate for breakfast, what does that do for your morning? It takes away from what matters.

People can broadcast all they want, but it's what comes in your view that is going to be annoying, relevant, or entertaining.

Are we going to let the market, the mainstream, dictate to us what technology and what devices are relevant for us? Are we going to let T-mobile and Verizon tell us we don't need a real camera? Do we need to think about our goals critically and make decisions about what devices are going to get us there.

Are we going to let Adobe and Microsoft tell us that we don't need to hire a web developer? Are we going to let our local culture tell us that our nephew that goes to BYU who will do your website for 8-bucks an hour will be a good choice for the objectives of our project? Trade-offs

What do you think people's biggest barrier to the adoption of technology is?

Institutional barriers: Access, relevance, policy Personal barriers: Fear and inconvenience, comfortable with old, don't know what it's going to do to their system, their workflow, etc.


 * Authenticity**


 * Change**


 * Cognition**
 * Cognitive Overload
 * Distributed Cognition


 * Convergence & Synergy**


 * Adaptability
 * Functional fixedness


 * Creativity & Innovation**
 * Disruption/Disruptive Innovation


 * Design**
 * Customization
 * Functional fixedness
 * Personalization
 * Separating technology from design


 * Digital Citizenship**


 * Collaboration
 * Cybersafety
 * Ethics
 * Participation


 * Embodiment**


 * Surface computing
 * Touch screens


 * Literacy**


 * Transliteracy
 * Transmedia storytelling


 * Motivation**


 * Autonomy
 * Competence
 * Flow


 * Movement**


 * Networks/Networking**


 * Open Source**
 * Generosity


 * Pedagogy**


 * Social**
 * Capital
 * Distributed Cognition
 * Expertise
 * Media


 * Transfer**

//The inner ring// //Gospel-based principles// //2 gospel-based tech readings// //Be Safe @ BYU//

//The Outsiders, The Inner Ring, Loneliness, Bursting to Tell Stories, Speaker for the Dead, Neverending Story//