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Album art + mp3 = flash card? The Duke iPod ExperienceCreated by Michelle Chua (The University of British Columbia) on October 27, 2005
The most interesting session I attended at EDUCAUSE was the Duke iPod First Year Experience. Speakers Ginny and Lynne gave an interesting discussion, not only on the outcomes of the project, but also on the surprises that they encountered during their iPod experiment. I enjoyed this session partly because of my bias towards Apple gadgets, but also because of my bias towards experiments involving iPods. I couldn’t help wondering if my DiSCORDER iPod experiment would take off in an environment where everyone had iPods, files, and media to share (oooh, would that be awesome or what). The other thing about Duke’s iPod experiment that struck me as very wholesome for campus culture in general was the fact that the success of the project was largely “student driven.” Students started using them in classes, and profs had to respond. As a result, they somehow got a lot of professors who had been doing the same thing year after year to change their lecture formats and be a bit more creative. They’re cutting back on the iPods (iirc), but hopefully that doesn’t stop students from using their personal mp3 players for these kinds of things. Notes from the Duke iPod Experience Session (read on...) Different evaluation strategies
What did they find out about iPod use?
pushing the digital agenda and changing the culture of the campus = Duke Digital Initiative upgrading the iPod - how does the affect how students use it? student-driven
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