The Spoken Word Project proposes to transform undergraduate learning and
teaching through integrating the rich media resources of digital audio
repositories into undergraduate courses in history, political science
and cognate disciplines in the U.S. and Britain. The project will take
full advantage of the flexibility inherent in digital repositories and
build processes for learning that will fundamentally expand the way students
and teachers understand knowledge, knowledge resources, and their own
complementary roles in higher education. Michigan State University, in
collaboration with Northwestern University and the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA), and Glasgow Caledonian University,
in collaboration with the BBC — Information & Archives, will develop
and implement this vision. These partners bring to this project an outstanding
combination of institutional leadership, commitment to innovative and
effective teaching, strong experience developing state-of-the-art digital
repositories and educational technology, as well as a proven history
of effective professional collaboration.
Starting with a rich collection of digitized audio resources, associated
texts and images, and a set of integrated online annotation tools, this
work will promote the usability and integration of digital spoken word
repositories to improve undergraduate teaching. The project will test
whether and with what effect the integration of digital audio resources
into university courses achieves four major project outcomes: (1) improving
student learning and retention, (2) developing aural literacy in our
students, (3) augmenting student competence to write on —and for —
the Internet, and, (4) enhancing digital libraries through a focus on
learning.
The intellectual merit of The Spoken Word Project lies in its advancement
of both teaching and learning with digital repository sources and on
its innovation for advancing the utility and value of digital libraries.
Project activities will greatly enhance digital libraries by redirecting
the challenges of research toward higher-level analysis and data sifting
and away from lengthy search-and-browse routines that vast and growing
data libraries can require.
The project will achieve this by reducing the search for relevance, expanding
the metadata with user-specific annotation, and tying the libraries’
content directly to course materials. The project will re-purpose existing
educational technology into a suite of easy-to-use online annotation
tools that will be deployed in online learning environments in order
to access digital library resources. The tools will enable users to identify
and save start- and stop-points in a streamed media file and to add commentary
and descriptive data for their own use or to be shared with others. As
students and teachers use the archive, the resulting media selections
and annotations will be stored in a repository for subsequent use and
shared among user communities.
The
broader impacts of The Spoken Word
project includes the advancement of teaching
and learning in areas of enduring concern
across the humanities and social sciences.
Digital Library collections will be correlated
directly to mainstream course materials in
history, politics and cognate disciplines
in the US and Britain. Collections of special
interest include: World War Two and Its Aftermath,
Public Debates in the History of Twentieth
Century Science, Oral Advocacy
in the U.S. Supreme Court, the Studs Terkel
Collection, and The White House Tapes of Lyndon
B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon. Working together,
the partners in this collaboration shall bring thousands of hours of authoritative
spoken-word materials into classrooms and virtual learning environments
in the United States and United Kingdom. The resulting evidence, obtained
from large sample fully crossed experimental design, will
determine whether or not project outcomes have been achieved.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Spoken Word Project was an educational research project based in Britain and the United States which ran from 2003 to 2008.
The multi-million dollar project is part of the JISC/NSF funded Digital Libraries in the Classroom Programme[1] and aimed to provide tools appropriate for the digital classroom by exploiting the educational potential of the interests and activities of the social networking generation.
Partners[edit]
The project was a partnership between Glasgow Caledonian University, Northwestern University, Michigan State University and BBC Information and Archives.
[2]
The lead British institution was Glasgow Caledonian University, with the team based at the Saltire Centre.[3]
The project had a unique ‘legal deposit’ agreement[4] with the BBC that allows access to the BBC archives «for educational uses only». Television and radio programmes from the BBC archives and other sources were then made available in a digital form through the website to educational users across the UK, the EU, the US and beyond. These digitised materials were put to varying educational uses.
Inception[edit]
The foundations for the project were first laid down in the early 1990s when the eventual Principal Investigator of the project, David Donald, met Professor Jerry Goldman of Northwestern University through what was eventually incarnated as the Internet in the form that we are presently familiar with.
References[edit]
- ^ «Digital libraries in the classroom programme : JISC». Jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
- ^ Longmuir, Anne (March 2004). «The Spoken Word: New Resources to Transform Teaching and Learning». D-Lib Magazine.
- ^ «The University: University Facilities: The Saltire Centre». Glasgow Caledonian University. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
- ^ [1] Archived May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
External links[edit]
- Historical voices website
Проект разговорного слова — The Spoken Word Project
В Разговорный проект Word был образовательные исследования проект, основанный в Британия и Соединенные Штаты который работал с 2003-2008 гг.
Этот многомиллионный проект является частью JISC /NSF финансируется Электронные библиотеки в учебной программе[1] и была направлена на предоставление инструментов, подходящих для цифрового класса, путем использования образовательного потенциала интересов и деятельности поколения социальных сетей.
Партнеры
Проект был партнерством между Каледонский университет Глазго, Северо-Западный университет, Университет штата Мичиган и информация и архивы BBC.[2]
Ведущее британское учреждение было Каледонский университет Глазго, с командой, базирующейся в Центре Saltire.[3]
У проекта было уникальное соглашение об «обязательном экземпляре»[4] с BBC, которая разрешает доступ к архивам BBC «только для образовательных целей». Затем телевизионные и радиопрограммы из архивов BBC и других источников стали доступны в цифровой форме через веб-сайт для образовательных пользователей в Великобритании, ЕС, США и за их пределами. Эти оцифрованные материалы использовались в различных образовательных целях.
Зарождение
Основы проекта были впервые заложены в начале 1990-х годов, когда главный исследователь проекта Дэвид Дональд встретился с профессором Джерри Голдманом. Северо-Западный университет через то, что в конечном итоге воплотилось как Интернет в той форме, с которой мы сейчас знакомы.
Рекомендации
- ^ «Электронные библиотеки в учебной программе: JISC». Jisc.ac.uk. Получено 2016-01-06.
- ^ Лонгмюр, Энн (март 2004 г.). «Разговорное слово: новые ресурсы для преобразования преподавания и обучения». Журнал D-Lib.
- ^ «Университет: Университетские возможности: Центр Saltire». Каледонский университет Глазго. Получено 2016-01-06.
- ^ [1] В архиве 16 мая 2008 г. Wayback Machine
внешняя ссылка
- Сайт исторических голосов
Excerpts from The Spoken Word Project «Suicide Survivor Stories». A series of monologues based on actual commentary of parents whose children died by suicide. The purpose of this video is to attract those interested in supporting a theater production of the complete play for the stage. Our hope is that the play represents the survivor experience in a way that honors those beloved and lost, while enhancing awareness, understanding and grass roots action on this issue.
Writer/Producer — Ann Woodly
Video Producer — Howard Bashew
-
4
Suicide Survivor Stories
from MultiVision InterGlobal Media
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Suicide remains one of the least discussed and understood public health crisis. The Spoken Word Project «Suicide Survivor Stories» is a series of monologues based on actual commentary of parents whose children died by suicide.
This video is a short preview…
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Suicide remains one of the least discussed and understood public health crisis. The Spoken Word Project «Suicide Survivor Stories» is a series of monologues based on actual commentary of parents whose children died by suicide.
This video is a short preview containing excerpts from the play. It’s purpose is to attract those interested in supporting a stage production of the entire play.
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