Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-02-17

  • Making bacon and eggs watching very large snowflakes outside. #
  • Making bacon and eggs watching very large snowflakes outside. #
  • Limited connectivity with my BLackBerry when is stormy outside. #
  • Cleaned the house and now reading and watching dvd’s for the rest of the day. I like these long weekends. #
  • Freezing rain outside. Everything is frozen. So much for the predictions of 40 degrees and rain. #
  • Freezing rain outside. Everything is frozen. So much for the predictions of 40 degrees and rain. #

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Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-02-16

  • Just finished Gene Smith’s book on Tagging. Will blog about it now. #
  • Just bought a trance song I have heard but could never locate – Moan (Trentemøller Dub Remix). Sweet. #
  • People complain about Starbucks putting local places out of business. Perhaps, but they are also the few places open early on weekends. #
  • In the Catskills. 16 degrees now. #
  • The fews clouds in the sky are spectacular through the sunroof. Pale shades of green and red and blue and yellow. #
  • Bought a variety of cheeses to make #fondue tonight. The #NYTimes recently had an article with a number of cheese fondue recipes. #
  • Where did that cheese fondue recipe go . . . #

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Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2008-02-15

  • In my blog post today, I both defined instructional design and gave my elevator speech. #
  • @PaulPam2 I wish Twitter were around when I taught high school years ago! Ahh, the increased opportunities for learning. #
  • @macboyx Of course! When will that be? #
  • Cold and cloudy outside. The winter stuff is starting to get to me. #
  • @betsyweber What is that new heart symbol next to your name regarding @callkathy? I have not noticed Twitter symbols before. #
  • @PaulPam2 I know what you mean about websites blocked. Facebook is blocked here, but LinkedIn is available. Twitter is ok, but not SL, etc. #
  • What an insane day! #

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A Useful New Tagging Book

As I me mentioned in one of my recent posts, I just read Gene Smith’s book: Tagging: People-Powered Metadata for the Social Web. Great overview of tagging for both practice as well as some more detailed professional work. Lots of good stuff in the book, including a discussion about tags (of course), taxonomies, folksonomies, metadata, controlled vocabulary, and countless examples to illustrate his work. Speaking at times in the voice of a teacher and at other times as a software developer, I feel I have a better understanding of tag clouds and how useful these features can be from a personal as well as social media perspective. In the process of reading this, I decided to begin using the tagging feature built-into WordPress, as now I think in the long-term this will be useful for me as well as my colleagues. Score one for Gene’s persuasion.

One of the topics Gene mentioned involved using capital letters, abbreviations, and underscores / hyphens. His suggestion that the decision about how to handle this issue should be addressed at the beginning. I thought this was good advice, but for my own use I wish he would have suggested what he recommends in this case (in the teacher voice, not the developer voice). taggingI understand the differences between various formats, such as: New York, new york, NY, ny, New_York, new-york, etc., but I am not sure which option(s) I should use. I could have used some end-user guidance here as opposed to be left to discern all my options. In this case, I find myself being inconsistent in how I tag my own blog posts and Flickr images, as I tend to second-guess how others may search for and use the tags.

This is one of the questions I will ask him when I listen to his presentation at Northern Voice next week. I just learned that Gene will be presenting at Internet Bootcamp as well, so it will be nice to meet him so close to my finishing his book.

I think this book will do well, as I can only imagine tagging options and needs to increase in the future. As much as consistent tags seem like a good idea, I often find myself thinking about terms and usage in different ways from other people. No wonder I am a qualitative researcher!

Instructional Design – Where Is It Today?

The Big Question - Instructional DesignThe Learning Circuits Blog, an online forum from Learning Circuits / ASTD, recently began a discussion about the role of instructional designers and when / how they should enter projects. They asked their monthly Big Question:

For a given project, how do you determine if, when and how much an instructional designer and instructional design is needed?

I have been an instructional designer (or rather, a Sr. Instructional Designer, thank you), for a number of years, and am not interested in explaining what the field is all about beyond stating that instructional designers systematically determine learning needs and create learning interventions to meet them (my definition). This is a broad definition because there are such a variety of learning needs within different organizations. I do not formally create eLearning in my organization because we have a department that serves that function; my time is spent doing more internal consulting and project management of the learning initiatives than anything else.

My internal consulting is somewhat Socratic, and is intended to save everybody time later on as well as clearly understand what expectations are upon me if I take the project:

  • Why do you believe you need that training?
  • How have you determined those people need to learn that?
  • In what ways will the budget and person-power be used to evaluate the program as you are describing?

My project management of the learning initiatives is all around managing the steps in the instructional design process as they are worked on by a team. I often work with technical health content, and rather than expect me to be proficient in a field where I am not formally trained and certified, I work with experts who I move through the project and help them remain focused on the goals.

I have been following the discussions raised by the Learning Circuits blog with great interest. Cammy Bean’s blog, Learning Visions, really sparked my interest as she discussed many shades in instructional design. Yes, as she mentioned, I do create classes and specific training materials and methods at times, but that is a narrow view of the scope of my abilities (partly due to my fascination with so many items in and around organizational learning and culture). My organization prefers for me to use my skills and experiences and education to influence evidence-based learning design on a project level.

As a project manager, I always focus on meeting the needs of the end-user, rather than just the check-off list of tasks and deliverables. This is my way of responding to Tony Karrer’s discussion about the models–they are all fine, but they all fit within larger projects (that in turn fit within departmental goals toward meeting organizational strategic objectives which fulfill the vision and mission).

Carefully read the instructions of Ambien Without a Prescription, during the treatment you can not drive a car, work where you need to be attentive, drink alcohol.

So where is instructional design today? I think of this within the context of the elevator speech I use to answer the question “What do you do as an instructional designer?”:

I am an instructional designer. I am an internal learning consultant who manages educational projects.

The rest of the world does not need to know how I do it with this or that model. All they care about is that the project to teach X to learn Y is done and now we have more learning that positively impacts our meeting of our organizational objectives.