Tuesday, April 27, 2010

mLearnCon Showcases Abilene Christian University's mLearning Innovation with iPhones/iPads


Abilene Christian University
mLearnCon is fast approaching - June 15-17, San Diego, CA.  When I first started working on the eLearning Guild's first event devoted to mobile learning I did what every 21st century researcher does...I googled it.  Of course I had already been following the mobile learning industry for several years, but never with a focused objective.  My search turned up Abilene Christian University over and over again.  They were IT! Surely there were other schools dabbling with the idea of handing out ipods to incoming freshman, etc.  But none of the others put themselves out there the way ACU did.  That's BOLD!  And I LIKE THAT!

Dr. Bill Rankin
Director of Educational Innovation
Abilene Christian Univ.
I'm thrilled to have ACU as part of mLearnCon.  Dr. Bill Rankin is on our Advisory Board and brings many years of mobile learning experience to the event. In the spring of 2007, Rankin and a team of colleagues began work on the initiative that became "ACU Connected," ACU's ground-breaking iPhone and iPod touch-based mobile-learning initiative. Along with the other members of the ACU Connected team, he was named an "Innovator of the Year" for 2008 in the mobile learning category by Campus Technology magazine, and ACU's initiative continues to garner awards, most recently from ACUTA and Alcatel-Lucent. In 2009, Rankin was named ACU's first Director of Educational Innovation, an academic technology imagineering position designed to explore and develop new educational technologies and pedagogies. In 2009, he was also recognized by Apple Inc. as an Apple Distinguished Educator.

Kyle Dickson
Director, Digital Media Center
Abilene Christian Univ.
I am also very excited to have Kyle Dickson on the program.  Kyle is the Director of the Digital Media Center at ACU.  Kyle will be presenting session 203 - Building a Mobile Vision: From Content to Collaboration.

Before the iPad was even official introduced (but the world knew it was coming), ACU was hard at work engaging its students on an iPad project.  You've GOT to check out this video (and YES, it plays on the iPad)

What ACU is doing with mLearning puts every other university way behind the curve.  Because its not just "having an iPhone app".  Yea, sure, there's an app for that.  But engaging the student body in defining the project is what I think higher ed is all about.  And the level at which the students were involved is truly impressive.  No wonder U.S. News & World Report lists ACU as one of America's Best Colleges.

mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo - June 15-17 - San Diego, CA
DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November 3-5 - San Francisco, CA

[Guest Post] How One Neuroscience Principle Can Make or Break Your Training Program

Not too long ago, our company president returned from facilitating an off-site strategy session. He was helping negotiate a multi-million dollar deal in which our company had a stake. One look at his face and we knew that he was completely exhausted. Although he spent his entire day sitting on his butt in some conference room, by the end of the day he looked like he had run two marathons.

Maybe you know what that feels like‚ you return home completely exhausted after a full workday, but you don't know why. You never moved away from your desk. You never pulled your eyes away from the computer screen. If you exercised at all, it was during the walk from your cubicle to the water cooler. Yet for some reason, you're wiped. Well, here's how a neuroscientist might explain it:
The brain, despite being just ~2% of our body's mass, actually accounts for ~20% of our body's total energy consumption.
What is 20%? To put that in perspective, that's like having a 20-watt light bulb burning in our heads. And that's when we're doing nothing. In other words, our brains are burning 20% of our body's energy while we're in our resting state.

Imagine how much more energy we'd be burning if we were trying to close a multi-million dollar deal.

As a result, because our brain demands so much energy, our brain also works to become very efficient. Have you ever seen those Energy Star stickers on new refrigerators? If our brain were a fridge, it'd feature that sticker too. It was a matter of survival, and here's what I mean by that.

How the Energy Star Brain Came to Be

Think back to our early ancestors, to a time before Starbucks and McDonald's. If they wanted food, they had to search for it, and there weren't any guarantees that they'd find something edible for days at a time. In such an unpredictable environment, our bodies adapted to conserve energy. It was a matter of survival.

Although a lot of time has passed since our early ancestors, many scientists will tell us that our bodies still behave in much the same way, conserving energy whenever possible. Hence, the Energy Star sticker.

When I was a young associate at S. L. Robbins & Associates—the management consultancy founded by Dr. Steve Robbins that trains multinational organizations (NASA, Boeing, PepsiCo, etc.) on the neuroscience of creativity—I quickly realized that the Energy Star brain had everything to do with how we learn.

And it means everything for how we approach training and development.

How the Brain Works in the 21st Century

As some of you already know, many organizations are idea-driven in the 21st-century knowledge economy. Compared to the 20th-century industrial economy where many workers were valued for what was below the shoulders, 21st-century knowledge workers are usually valued for what's above the shoulders. In such organizations, performance isn't measured by how many widgets you can assemble in eight hours, but by how many innovative ideas you bring to the brainstorming session.

As a result, many of today's workers rely on their brains more and more for day-to-day tasks. Their cognitive light bulbs are shining bright from eight to five.

Yet at the same time, our Energy Star brains are fighting back more and more, encouraging us to conserve energy. We may sense that in the temptation to take a nap, or the urge to take an extended vacation because we feel burnt out. The 21st-century workplace is a cognitive battleground, and if training and development professionals want to do battle there with their workshops and PowerPoint slides, be ready to face a lot of opposition.

For some organizations, knowledge workers simply aren't ready to learn in the workplace. Their Energy Star brains are burning like a 100-watt light bulb and they are more interested in a nap than they are interested in formal training. And can you really blame them for being disinterested? I don't know about you, but I'm terrible at memorizing things, and I need to dedicate real effort into understanding and remembering any kind of information. Even if you've got the most engaging training program ever in the history of the world, if I'm exhausted, I'll have a hard time focusing on anything but the back of my eyelids.

Smart training professionals (all readers of this blog, of course) would figure out a way to introduce learning outside the workplace. Instead of doing battle in the cognitive battleground, simply take the battle elsewhere.

People Learn When They're Ready to Learn

It can be when they're sitting on the train, commuting to work. When I'm on a long commute, it almost always feels wrong to be without a book. You know why newspaper companies often sell or give away newspapers at the train station? Because they fill a need, the need to feel productive when you're on a long commute.

Or maybe when I'm sitting on the can. Don't give me that weird look—I know you've done it before too, especially if you own a smart phone. I'm not the first person to do business when I'm doing my business; it could be catching up on industry news, watching a Standford lecture on iTunes U, or cranking through several emails. You know how iPhones and Blackberries leave that promotional signature on the bottom of your emails? Well, a bunch of my emails should probably end with: "Sent from my iPhone while I was doing my business."

TMI (Too Much Information)? I'll risk it to make this key point stick.

Harvard Business Professor, acclaimed author of The Innovator's Dilemma, and one of our company's advisors, Dr. Clayton M. Christensen, once said:
People learn when they are ready to learn, not when we are ready to teach them.
What he means is that even if we've got the workshop scheduled, flash module created, or the consultant hired, our learners may not be ready to learn. You can probably tell that he's a fan of on-demand training, a principle that our company has built itself around.

This is why I believe mobile computing can completely revolutionize training and development. It's less about the accelerometer, hardware-accelerated graphics, or the user-facing camera that's eventually going to be on the 5th generation iPhone (when it happens, remember that I called it), but it's more about providing on-demand learning at the exact moment when learners sit on the train. Or the can.

Smart training might mean pulling out of the cognitive battleground—the workplace. Instead, simply meet them when they're ready to learn. Be there for them on their mobile devices.

About the Author
Nemo Chu is the Ambassador for Bloomfire, an online software company where anyone can start a collaborative learning community and have employees teach and learn from one another for only $99 per month. He is also the senior editor of Bloomfire's Blog, which is currently featuring a series of interviews with training & development professionals, including this popular one with Scott Sutker, the SVP of Global HR at Bank of America.


mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Monday, April 26, 2010

5 Tips for Submitting a DevLearn 2010 Session Proposal


The DEADLINE for submitting a proposal for DevLearn10 is this Friday.  Late submissions are a huge bummer.  Some times the late proposals are AWESOME, but because they were late there is no place left on program to put them.  So don't be THAT guy/gal!

Basic Submission tips:
1) Be clear and convincing.  1 or 2 sentences just doesn't cut it.  Give me the details!  There is a reason why the form is designed the way it is.  Short and unclear is just as bad as long and boring.  Sell me.  Tell me why you (your project) ROCK!

2) Titles should be clear AND creative.  But most importantly no more than 8 words.  If you can't tell us what the gist is in 8 words or less, then you should rethink the topic.  The rest is handled in #1 (see above)

3) Co-presenters need a reason to be there (and yes, co-presenters pay to attend).  Tell me why.  A good example of a pairing is having both the project manager and the technical developer.

There is a lot more too it, but I hope that helps a little.  I'm hoping our past presenters will add some tips in the comments below...wink, wink ;-)

Advanced Submission tips:

1) Record a YouTube video so I can see you and hear about the session topic you are proposing.  Once you post it to YouTube then just past the link into one of the description fields on the submission form.


2) Post your slides to Slideshare.com - Even if the presentation is not completely designed, go ahead and use the same tool to propose as you would to present.

Its not rocket surgery! Put yourself in my shoes.  Write a proposal that YOU would want to read and make sure the content is something YOU would want to attend.

Hey veteran DevLearn speakers!  Comment your favorite tips about presenting at DevLearn.  Thanks!  Without y'all we couldn't make DevLearn happen.  You ROCK!

mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Friday, April 23, 2010

99yr Old Writes Limericks on iPad [video]

Here's the deal:  For millions of people a big iTouch is EXACTLY what they need!!!  You don't need to buy one if you are happy with your little iTouch.  So, to all the naysayers out there I give you Virginia Campbell.  She is 99yrs old with glaucoma and now she is reading and writing again thanks to the "big iTouch".  You can read one of Virginia's limericks at "The Unofficial Apple Weblog".


mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Viking Training - Objective 1 - DON'T DIE

I love movies, but I don't see them as much as I would like too.  I took my kids to see "How to Train Your Dragon" over the weekend.  It was great fun!  Great animation! Great story! And of course, something I can blog about.

Did anyone else stop and think about the beautiful simplicity of the viking training program? I did.  Sure they had a manual on everything known about the different types of dragons.  But if I remember correctly the viking trainer didn't babble on about reading, and practicing skills before the DOING began.  No, if memory serves Objective 1 of Viking training is "DON'T DIE!".  Simple. Elegant. I like that.

Only AFTER the trainees had experienced the true reality and the CONTEXT of their challenge did the trainer introduce the book filled with all the dragon information.

Did anyone think about learning styles? I did...well...okay not until just now ;-)
Now I need to see the movie again and get all this right.  But anyways, the different characters excelled differently through the training.  The "nerdy" viking knew every last detail about every dragon.  He was what we might call "book smart".

Actually, now that I think about it.  The characters were more like high school stereotypes, but there must a learning style connection in there some where, right?  Can anyone help me out here?  Have you seen the movie?  Now you have a reason too.  Tell me what you think.

mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA
DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Friday, April 09, 2010

Keynote on the iPad iFailed Me

Okay so maybe FAILED is too strong.  Let's just say I had higher expectations for my beloved new little gadget.  I had a big presentation to deliver 5 days after getting my iPad and so having the opportunity to put the iPad into action was a very big deal for me.  I could go into all the things that I discovered about Keynote for the iPad, but the TUAW blog summed it all up perfectly for me HERE.

mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA
DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Friday, April 02, 2010

"Kids...Learn different from kids back then" - REALLY?

I wish our educators would stop with this nonsense...
"Kids nowadays, I think they learn different from kids back then. If they don't make it fun, kids don't want to learn."
As if kids "back then" learned because they were frustrated and angry?  C'mon people can we get the conversation to move on a little faster?

The quote above came from this article pointed out by my friend @rovybranon . Now, the article is good. And I'm happy to see teachers trying to improve their use of technology in the classroom.  Don't get me wrong.  I'm all for it.  It just makes our educators sound so, well, uneducated when they spout off about how "these kids" are SO much different from kids long ago.

Here's the deal.  Kids are kids.  Always have been. Always will be.  There is no secret genetic coding that triggered with "these kids" making them super smart, or able to learn by having fun.  Sitting in a chair lined up in neat little rows and columns staring at an underpaid "educator" all day long will have the same effect it had 50 years ago.

Education v Learning
I don't mind going through this again and again and again.

  1. Education is NOT about Learning.  
  2. Learning happens without education.  
  3. Education cannot exist without Learning.

See the scam here?  Learning is about the learner.  Education is about the system, the entities within that system, and efficiency above effectiveness: everything BUT the learner.

eLearning, and especially eLearning2.0 (Learning2.0) is about the learner.  Its about kids and adults now having the power to control their own learning journey.  We finally have the power to say, "I don't have to sit here any more! My butt does NOT need to be in YOUR seat in order for me to get the information I need to grow and succeed in this world.  I'm outta here!"

...or something like that ;-)


mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA
DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA

Thursday, April 01, 2010

iPad Fever

Yes.  I did call UPS today and ask if I may lend a hand by driving to the central hub and picking up my, um, "shipment from China" so my driver doesn't have to worry about stopping by my house.  Seriously! I'm just trying' to be helpful.  "That's not possible" she said.  I told her that I'm just a little excited to get my "shipment from China".  "I'm sure you are" she laughed as if she knew me.  We bonded.

My favorite writer and Mac fan boy, Andy Ihnatko, has had HIS iPad for a week already and is GUSHING about how AWESOME it is.  All the other high profile writers have theirs as well and are writing like crazy.  Here's a good blog post with the run down. http://www.publicola.net/2010/04/01/early-reviews-of-the-apple-ipad-hit/

And yes, plenty of my eLearning peeps have been blogging about it.  The only difference being that they have not actually used, or even seen one yet. 

Honestly, I don't think their's much to talk about really.  Its all just too obvious.  The iPad is all the awesomesauce of the iPhone in a larger form factor for doing the things I CAN do, but DON'T LIKE to do, on my iPhone.  

Let's start with playing music.  No, not playing songs in iTunes.  I'm talking about replacing paper sheet music with the iPad.  I can't read a score…even a one-pager on my iPhone while jamming with the band.  but an iPad will sit nicely on the music stand and be easily readable.  Not only that, I can actually make annotations right on the music during practice with one band leader and then start from scratch when rehearsing with the next leader.  And OH SO MUCH more.  This alone is worth the price.  Wait!  Is this app even available?  Maybe I'm just hoping.

I have a long flight to Philadelphia on Thursday which I'm actually looking forward too…and I hate cross-country flights.  I may upgrade to first class for this trip just to experience 5 hours of uninterrupted iPad time in style ;-) I hope Keynote works as advertised because that's the purpose of the trip.  It will be fun to put the iPad through its paces and see how we do.

mLearnCon - Mobile Learning Conference and Expo- June - San Diego, CA
DevLearn 2010 Conference and Expo - November - San Francisco, CA