I'm sat here exactly one week after the 5th Plymouth e-Learning Conference - #PeLC10 - ended, and reflecting on another great event which everyone seemed to enjoy and learn from. As part of my reflection on the event I have been looking at the digital footprint the conference has left on the Web. There are blogposts, images, videos, and a huge Twitter stream searchable through the #pelc10 hashtag.
I'm sure there will be more accounts, images and videos posted (including the official videos of the two great keynote speeches by Josie Fraser (see the Video here) and Dave White (see the Video here) links of which will also appear soon on the conference website.
Here are just a few of the blogposts and other remnants of the event for you to revisit if you were there, or get a flavour of, if you were not able to attend this year...
Privacy has gone by James Clay
Don't feed the Pelicans by James Clay (includes a podcast and interviews)
Keep calm and carry on by James Clay (Podcast of debate)
Taking a step back by Fleur Corfield
Twitter is dead... Really? by David Hopkins
Learning without limits by Malinka Ivanova
PeLC10 e-learning debate by Bex Lewis
The view from our window by Our Lesson
5th Plymouth e-Learning Conference by Zak Mensah
Mypelc10 - Day 1 by Flea Palmer
Mypecl10 - Day 2 by Flea Palmer
5th Plymouth e-Learning Conference by Mark Pannell
Busy month ahead by Pat Parslow
Make sure you see the Pelican (Part 1) by Dan Roberts
Images of PeLC10 on Flickr by Dawn Wheeler
Community, privacy and identity by Steve Wheeler
Pushing all the right buttons by Steve Wheeler
Angels in the architecture by Steve Wheeler
There is also an aggregation of #pelc10 Delicious tags, Flickr images and Tweets here. And finally, here is an interesting statistical breakown of all the tweets that were tagged #pelc10 during the conference, courtesy of Andy Powell from Eduserv. It's a clever little application you can use to compare the #pelc10 statistics against those of other recent conference tags such as #jisc10 and #mootuk10. It is interesting reading indeed. If you know of any other pelc10 artefacts that are out there on the Web, please post a link in the comments box below.
PeLC10 final plenary session photo courtesy of Dawn Wheeler (from L to R: Steve Wheeler, Thomas Fischer, Josie Fraser, Dave White). The link to the uStream video of the final plenary session is here.
PeLC's digital footprint by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
I'm sure there will be more accounts, images and videos posted (including the official videos of the two great keynote speeches by Josie Fraser (see the Video here) and Dave White (see the Video here) links of which will also appear soon on the conference website.
Here are just a few of the blogposts and other remnants of the event for you to revisit if you were there, or get a flavour of, if you were not able to attend this year...
Privacy has gone by James Clay
Don't feed the Pelicans by James Clay (includes a podcast and interviews)
Keep calm and carry on by James Clay (Podcast of debate)
Taking a step back by Fleur Corfield
Twitter is dead... Really? by David Hopkins
Learning without limits by Malinka Ivanova
PeLC10 e-learning debate by Bex Lewis
The view from our window by Our Lesson
5th Plymouth e-Learning Conference by Zak Mensah
Mypelc10 - Day 1 by Flea Palmer
Mypecl10 - Day 2 by Flea Palmer
5th Plymouth e-Learning Conference by Mark Pannell
Busy month ahead by Pat Parslow
Make sure you see the Pelican (Part 1) by Dan Roberts
Images of PeLC10 on Flickr by Dawn Wheeler
Community, privacy and identity by Steve Wheeler
Pushing all the right buttons by Steve Wheeler
Angels in the architecture by Steve Wheeler
There is also an aggregation of #pelc10 Delicious tags, Flickr images and Tweets here. And finally, here is an interesting statistical breakown of all the tweets that were tagged #pelc10 during the conference, courtesy of Andy Powell from Eduserv. It's a clever little application you can use to compare the #pelc10 statistics against those of other recent conference tags such as #jisc10 and #mootuk10. It is interesting reading indeed. If you know of any other pelc10 artefacts that are out there on the Web, please post a link in the comments box below.
PeLC10 final plenary session photo courtesy of Dawn Wheeler (from L to R: Steve Wheeler, Thomas Fischer, Josie Fraser, Dave White). The link to the uStream video of the final plenary session is here.
PeLC's digital footprint by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
PeLC's digital footprint
Reviewed by MCH
on
April 16, 2010
Rating:
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