Archive for the 'Presentation' Category

#CETIS12 Social Network Analysis & Data Visualisation: Past, Present and Future #ukoer #infovis Presentation

This week I’ll be at the CETIS Conference in Nottingham presenting some of the work done as part of the OER Visualisation Project. Here are my OER Visualisation slides (embedded below)

To add some context, there were a couple of things floating in my head when I put this together. First, you’ll see the influence of Data Driven Journalism (DDJ). Tapping in to DDJ is useful because it’s still an emerging discipline and I feel there is a rice vein of innovation and exploration around distilling data into stories so there is a lot to learn/borrow from this area. Second, David Sherlock (CETIS) kindly blogged about the conference session which includes some questions he would like answered (most of these questions were asked at Tony Hirst’s Visualisation session at Dev8D). Third, Tony’s session also highlighted that the type of visualisations used is very dependant on the audience using them (you may want something shiny to impress which removes a lot of the data or something more practical).

The presentation is in two parts, communication and data.

Communicate

Slides 4-9 are designed to show how the same base data can be rendered in different ways:

  • It starts with the snowflake video (slide 4), which is visually impressive but at the cost of removing detailed information. For example, it’s hard to see which subjects are getting the post deposits or a sense of who is making the most deposits.
  • Slide 5 tries to address the ‘who is making deposits’ question with an interactive map of Jorum submissions reconciled to location.
  • Next, (slide 6) removes the element of time, condensing over 9,000 individual records into one image (as this was generated in NodeXL there is an opportunity to highlight that there is an interactive version).
  • In slide 7, the dimension of time is reintroduced with an interactive bubble diagram. There’s an opportunity to highlight some ‘glance-ability’ features of this graph, but also raise concerns about information overload. 
  • Slide 8 is a heatmap of the data in Google Spreadsheets. At this point we are moving away from the visually impressive focusing on situated practical information.
  • Slide 9 shows how this information can be shown in a different way. This slide is also an opportunity to highlight the continual struggle between representing whilst not diluting the information
  • In slide 10 is the New York Times ‘The Jobless Rate for People Like You’ example which is included as an example of a way to win this battle. The caveat to this is visuals like this are still very bespoke needing an amount of focused development (also remembering to highlight that there are a number of libraries that can help towards getting the job done).

Communication rules

Slide 11 – Whilst I recognise there are ‘rules’ and guidance with graphics and typesetting and perhaps I would be a better person if I took time to understand them, for now I am happy in my ignorance the payback hopefully being to think differently about the problems.

Damn that dirty data

The second part of the presentation is the story behind how the data used in part one was compiled, cleaned, contextualised and combined. It’ll be a whilst stop tour of consuming OAI-PMH data in Google Refine, the issues of reconciling records to institutions, and the delights of Google Refine to clean and combine data. 

Other things

Opportunity to flag other things done as part of the project.

Summary

Mainly just to highlight the range of free/open source tools and libraries out there. May mention some others. Finally just to remind the folks that data use is a great way to validate data. There were a number of examples from the project where using the data turned up unexpected results which were traced back to issues with the datasets. 

What do you think?

So this is your opportunity to feedback on the presentation. Do you want a different focus? Are there other tools used in the project you’d like more information on? Should I have included ‘101 ways Google Spreadsheets can annoy you’?  

JISC Winter Fayre: Festive Tweets Material

A couple of weeks ago we held our postponed JISC Winter Fayre (regional showcase of the best of local practice and the JISCy goodness). Below are my slides and a recording of the Livestream accenttally deleted it – no undo, no backup :(

It was the first time I had used Livestream to broadcast what I was doing. I think it worked reasonably well apart from when I forgot to pause a video being played in the browser, hence the double audio. I also need to invest in a better mic. The cheap bluetooth headset I used wasn’t great

eAssessment Scotland 2010: Twitter workshop reflections

Last Friday I ran a Twitter workshop as part of ‘eAssessment Scotland 2010: Marking the decade’. In the programme I described the session as:

What’s happening? Twitter for Assessment, Feedback and Communication

Twitter is a social networking site which continues to divide personal opinion. Some believe that the micro-blogging service is just an opportunity celebrities to boost their ego with millions of followers or just full of people ‘tweeting’ what they had for lunch. Whilst some users do use Twitter for this purpose a number of academics are now discovering that Twitter has the potential to support teaching and learning, providing a means to enable students to discuss and share within their personal learning network. Before you dismiss Twitter there are some basics worth considering: the service is free to register, status updates can be made from the most basic mobile phone, and users can monitor conversations through multiple means including, for some users, sending free SMS updates.

This workshop uses some of the features of Twitter highlighted above to let participants experience and use this service as a free electronic voting system (EVS), for classroom administration (assessment notification/reminders) and to monitor real-time student evaluation. As this technology is relatively new the workshop will begin with an overview of basic Twitter interaction making it suitable for novice and expert users.

I was perhaps too ambitious to include ‘novice’ users and it would have been better if I either focused on beginners or intermediate/advance users. The workshop I delivered was probably more beneficial for the later, but hopefully novice users were tantalised by the utility of twitter.

During the workshop I really missed having Timo Elliott’s PowerPoint AutoTweet tool (which is broken because of authentication changes at Twitter). This would have been really useful to send out links during the presentation (this example shows how I used it for another presentation).

As a number of participants had only just created Twitter accounts the week before it looks like Twitter quarantines their tweets preventing them from appearing in search results (I guess they wait until you hit some threshold in terms of following/followers/tweets to make sure the account isn’t being used from spam).

In the sides you’ll noticed I’ve revived the Twitter voting tool (TwEVS). Previously this solution relied on using Yahoo Pipes to manipulate results from Twitter, which meant graphs didn’t always have the latest results because of caching. To get around this I’ve created a script which can be run from a webserver. Here is the new TwEVS interface (you can also download the code).

Presentation: Twitter for in-class voting and more for ESTICT SIG

Today I presented some of my work on twitter voting to the Engaging Students Through In-Class Technology (ESTICT) special interest group. This group “is a UK network of education practitioners and learning technologists interested in promoting good practice with classroom technologies that can enhance face-to-face teaching.”

I used this slot as an opportunity to try out some some presentation techniques. The first was using Timo Elliott’s PowerPoint auto-tweet plugin which allows you to automatically tweet notes as you work through the slide deck. The plan was that this would provide ready made links and snippets for re-tweeting, favouring or just copying into a users personal notes. I also did this to generate information to twitter subtitle my presentation. An unforeseen benefit was that the tweets provided a stimulus for further discussion after the presentation.

The other technique I picked up from was from a presentation by Tony Hirst in which he included links to secondary resources by only displaying the end of a shortened url. This is demonstrated in the presentation (with twitter subtitles of course ;-) (the link also contains a recipe for lecture capture enhancement):

ESTiCT Presentation link

JISC Winter Fayre: Voting and Google Wave Presentations

Things have been quite on the blogging front as we dug out the tinsel to celebrate all things JISC at our Winter Fayre. We managed to squeeze almost 30 different keynotes, workshops and sessions into the day, including two by yours truly.

I had the honour of presenting a short overview of electronic voting present and future in ‘Ask the Audience’ and an opportunity to showcase, what has become a highly honed, Google Wave intro and overview.

I’ve attached both PowerPoints I used below which you are free to pick over and reuse if you like. Just to remind our supported institutions I am available for weddings, birthdays and staff development events (if you are not supported directly by us we are open to offers particularly if they require going to warmer climes ;)

[Both these presentations embed Flash into PowerPoint. To view when prompted you need to enable the content]

image
Ask The Audience *.ppt (3Mb)
image
Google Wave 101 *.ppt (1.4Mb)

TwEVS – Presentation (using twitter for electronic voting)

Yesterday I presented TwEVS to the e-Learning Alliance FE/HE SIG held at University of St. Andrews. My presentation (including audio) is below:

The day included presentations on remote teaching using video conferencing, electronic voting systems and an introduction to twitter, so finishing on TwEVS seemed to round the day off nicely.

When I get a chance I would like to post some reflections on the other presentations …

About

This blog is authored by Martin Hawksey+ JISC CETIS Learning Technology Advisor (OER Programme Support)
jisc cetis logo

The MASHezine (tabloid)

It's back! A tabloid edition of the latest posts in PDF format (complete with QR Codes). Click here to view the MASHezine

Preview powered by:
Bluga.net Webthumb

The MASHebook

You can also download this post as:

Subscribe to monthly email digest of posts

Loading...Loading...


Subscribe to per post email updates

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Creative Commons Licence
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. CC-BY mhawksey