A student has raised with us the point that our being able to see who in
teaching group has accessed a module-dedicated blackboard site is an
infringement of personal freedom etc.
Has anyone a view on this?
Maria
--
Maria-Christiana Papaefthimiou
Learning Technology Officer
Centre for the Development of Teaching and Learning
Room 3, HASS
University of Reading
[log in to unmask]
Tel: 0118 378 7141
Fax: 0118 931 6248
-----Original Message-----
From: MLE Blackboard/Courseinfo userslist
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Kylie Baxter
Sent: 07 May 2002 11:45 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: POWERPOINT and Blackboard (or intranet)
At 13:03 26/04/2002 +0100, Andy Ramsden wrote:>Secondly, does anybody
know of any alternative methods of reducing the
>size of powerpoint file for distribution through Blackboard? It appears
>that some academics do like to develop large powerpoint presentations
>to support their lectures.
Switch to a monochrome colour scheme? Huge sizes are often because
lecturers use the high-colour, high-bandwith templates that come with
PowerPoint. It's pretty easy to switch colour schemes and produce
something that's smaller and easier to print out. Pale text on dark b/g
works best onscreen, but dark text on pale b/g works better for print.
I
also know a lecturer who just pastes the ppt outline into word and
uploads
that to Blackboard, which makes for a much smaller file size and easier
to
print for students.
Kylie Baxter, Information Officer
University of Hull Law School
>On Fri, 26 Apr 2002 11:46:44 +0100 "Kennedy, Lilian"
><[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> > I saw an interesting piece of software at the eLearning conference
> > in Manchester on Wednesday. It's called Impatica ( www.impatica.com
> > <http://www.impatica.com> ). Taken from the brochure:
> > "Launch the Impatica program and select the PowerPoint file you want
to
> > impaticize. In seconds, it will create a corresponding Impatica
file,
> > and
> > you're ready to go. Without hassle or additional software, you can
add
> > the
> > Impatica presentation to your web site and email. ...When the
> > presentation
> > is accessed from a web page, a small Java applet streams the content
and
> > dynamically shows the narrated, animated presentation. " File sizes
are
> > very
> > small, apparently.
> > You can download an evaluation copy. I think it's £299 per copy if
you
> > buy
> > it.
> >
> > L i l i a n K e n n e d y
> > ILT Co-ordinator
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
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> >
> >
>
>----------------------
>Andy Ramsden
>Research Officer - Biz/ed
>Learning Technologies Adviser - LTSS
>
>Institute of Learning and Research Technology
>Bristol University
>8-10 Berkeley Square
>Bristol
>BS8 1HH
>
>[log in to unmask]
>telephone: +44 (0) 117 928 7124
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