Report: Seminar: “Social Exclusion and information technologies. Challenges and opportunities”

This is the report on the Seminar: “Social Exclusion and information technologies. Challenges and opportunities”.

My presentation was entitled “Acci

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III Seminar on 4th world and social exclusion

On 12/03/2003, Wednesday, I will be speaking at the III Seminar on 4th world and social exclusion [site in Catalan]

I’m having fun preparing my speech as I won’t recycle some other speech but do it brand new. I’m planning something under the title of “Bringing the voice back to the main actors: ICT appropriation by the civil society experiences or the social impact of ICT”

Though I’m just setting up a little abstract and a draft table of contents, I guess it’ll be that way (unsorted, undebugged ;)
Introduction on the internet: no boundaries of time nor space
Experiences: a concept, an example, a site

  • The web as a communication media (the web editorial process)
  • Groups and discussion lists (the working web)
  • The campaigns
  • Blogs
  • Wikis
  • Free software
  • Free content
  • The intranet (the closed web)
  • E-learning
  • E-volunteering

The whole seminar goes like this:

11/19/2003
Longlife Education permanent and social participation
M. Mar Galceran, pedagogue

11/26/2003
Democracy innovation and citizenship participation
Joan Font, Political Science professor (UAB)

12/03/2003
Social impact of ICT
Ismael Peña, manager of the Campus for Peace (UOC)

12/10/2003
Round table of experiences: Digital literacy
Mr. Antonio Collado, Mithra
Mrs. Olivia Ortega, Punt Omnia. CPSFP
Mr. Miguel Prieto, Cibercast. Ajuntament de Castelldefels. GATS

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On-line teaching: new paradigm?

I come to Seb Schmoller’s link to e-learning guides at the Learning and Teaching Support Network through e-learnspace.

I after get to his own article “Embedding the skills to teach online – is it technical or personality skills that are needed?” at OLDaily.

All 6 documents (the article and the guides for Senior Managers, Heads of Departments, Teachers, Learning Technologists and Support Staff) offer a reflection about the change of paradigm lying underneath e-teaching. Ok, you might not see it that way, as a change of paradigm, but at least consider e-learning is not presencial learning “technologyfied”. I’m sure the first step on going into e-learning, long before infrastructure, is this required change of mind.

For those having little (or no) resources to spoil, such as NGOs or other non-profit or for development organizations this is a must: corporations still can do accountancy engineering and consider it as losses or less benefit. Developing countries cannot afford this concept.

Nice reading.

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Applications and content roaming

For those who can read Spanish, I hearty encourage you to read César Córcoles entry Cambiar de lector de RSS hace pensar [RSS feeds syndicator shifting makes me think].

In his post he explains that he gave up Sharpreader because he had to maintain two different blogrolls (home and work) and that he’s moving to Bloglines, which is not a local application but a server application. Conclusion: “roaming in applications is something that should be considered more seriously” and that “all applications should access all data all the time”.

Right. I completely agree. Thinking in my “ICTlogy own terms”, one of the advantages of on-line learning is just this: you can follow your training wherever and whenever you want: content (and teachers!) are always there, at your keyboard’s reach. And this is specially important to people with random access to the internet, be it because you surf at work and at home (developed countries) but also because you have to go to some cyber cafe or (public) telecenter (developing countries).

Some months ago someone (cannot remember: I guess it was my colleague Genís Berbel) told me that desktops, laptops, PDAs, cellulars, etc. would, in the future, have just an operating system and no storage drives: all content would be in the Net (in your internet server), even your own profile and preferences, and that you’d access it from the desired device/interface.

Well, we’re not that far from it: the major part of our money is in the bank and we get to it through on-line banking, credit cards or cash street dispensers. It is just a matter of time.

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Rich nations flunk in educating poor

“Rich nations flunk in educating poor”, at CNN.com.

Well, mmm…: so sad!!!

My highlight is “how rich countries have performed on promises made during a conference in Dakar in 2000 to supply funds needed to give the world’s children a basic education”. Damned promises. All in all it is always the same: Rio de Janeiro, Kyoto, Dakar… We’re running out of city names to testify the greatest lies of the world. It just makes me sick.

I guess I should go back to bed…

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NetAid Online Volunteering

Today I added NetAid to my links selection. I surely might have it done before.

Instead of pointing to their home page, I pointed directly the online volunteering page.

The main reason of this post is not making news of this simple update, but focus attention on how they explain what online volunteering is about and what does this mean to non-profits. I usually try and think of the pros and cons of e-volunteers: well, it’s nice to see there’s someone else on it :)

Sorry for digressing. Here come my highlighted pages of their site:

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