Thursday
Blog for week 12
Wednesday
Blog for week 11
Week 11's lecture was all about data, information and knowledge. Data meaning a fact or proposition, the information being a collection of data or facts that can relate to one another in some way and knowledge being what you have learnt, discovered, or percieve to know. Throughout the lecture we learnt that to be knowledgeable in an area so you have to start off with a good amount of solid data then build your way up.
Tutorial Summary:
Based on your research, define data, information, knowledge and wisdom.
Data is like research that you have collected. Once you know what it is you are after then the data searching can begin, such as facts, figuers etc. This will then give you grounds on which you can back your arguement up or findings. Information is when you have collected significant amounts of data and begin to bring it all together so that everything makes sense. From this structure will emerge and conclusion/s can be drawn. Knowledge is when you make your own judgements based from the reasearch you have done and the conlusions that have been made from this. Data is interpreted differently and you are able to develop you own understanding of the topic at hand. Wisdom is at the top of the peak and is when from your own reasearch and understanding of the topic you can then draw up your own data for people to understand and look off.
How can the understanding of the relationship between data, information and knowledge assist your university study?
The relationship between the three can assist in univeristy study because of the fact that you can not just have one and not the others. To have good data you need information and kowledge. To have good knowledge you need data and information.
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List 5 organizations that collect information from their clients or the public. Why do they collect this information?
- Edith Cown University
- Various companies that have many people who work for them
- Restaraunts
- Toystores
- Car manufacture's
They collect this data so they can get feedback on what can be improved and what changes should be made, if any at all.
Reading 1 Summary: http://www.systems-thinking.org/dikw/dikw.htm
This reading explains and goes through the understandings of data, information, knowledge, understanding, and wisdom. These three are essential to the making up of knowledge management. Information answers the "who", "what", "when", and "where" where as knowledge answers the "how" in questions. The understanding part is interpreted as "why" and then once all known, then this equates to wisdom.
Reading 2 Summary: http://otec.uoregon.edu/data-wisdom.htm
This reading is an instructional resource designed to assist students comprehend information literacy skills. The tests up on this website will help students assess their knowledge before beginning one of the tutorials on the website. There is a quiz for each lesson looked at which will test your understanding of the information which is presented to the students. The website focuses alot on knowledge and the production of it and organization of knowledge.
Blog for week 10
Week ten's lecture is all about managing the information you aqquire and sources you have referenced. Managing your information is easy but knowing where to find it again and where to store it can beomce a problem. When trying to locate a file on your computer using the search files function in the start menu is once of the easiest ways. It enables you to narrow your search down to which drive you saved it on or what name you saved it under. Having a desktop saerch engine such as Google is also another helpful way in which you can locate files.
Tutorial Summary:
Do you think Negroponte’s ideas are still relevant? Why?
I believe that Negroponte’s ideas are still relevant today because we still have sources of information such as newspaper’s, books and reports which are classified by Negroponte as Atom based information formats. A few pros about these types of information formats are:
- They are easily concealed, easy to hide from others
- Easily protected
- Difficult to change and copy
On the other hand there are some cons about atom based information formats, for example:
- Bulky, books pile up
- Costly, could include shipping
- Difficult to edit
Negroponte also talks about Bit based information formats such as information that has digital/electronic content and digital reproductions. Some products that are now updated were once Atom based information formats like snail mail and music which have now become e-mails and Mp3’s. Pros for Bit based formats are:
- Flexibility, can move between formats
- Cheap
- Easily eidted
A few cons for bit based information formats are:
- Privacy issues, can be stolen quite easily
- Authenticity of the document
- SPAM
Negroponte’s ideas stay relevant because every type of information or source of information can still be classified as either atom based or bit based information formats.
Reading 1 Summary: ‘Grazing the Net’
This reading is about getting students or young people ready to use the internet and them being able to distinguish between articles that are a credible source to take noted from and others that are not. The reading talks about raising "free range students" meaning this is a student that has adapted to the internet by finding the "grains" of information needed or by using the library to gather information.
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Tuesday
Blog for week 9
Todays lecture is all about communication and how it has changed in the past twenty years and also how this has helped society. The introduction of ICT (Information and Communication Technology) has enabled us to share resources and communicate with people on the otherside of the world. Four types of communication explained in the lecture were chat rooms, bullentin boards, MSN messenger and by e-mail.
Summary of tutorial:
In todays tutorial we invesitigated the different ways people can communicate through using ICT (Information and Communication Technology). We were asked to visit the google website and enter a search term, in the tab groups section, on what interests us. Then we were to record our finding on what came up and look through some of the bullentin's posted. The same was done for podcasts.
What term did you enter and what did you find?
I entered "AFL Football" in the search bar for groups. Search results came back as people advertising jobs for AFL writers, the orgin of AFL and general information about why these people play AFL. Many of the bullentins posted are from either passionate supporters of an AFL team or just people who love AFL and seem to know alot about it.
What are the benefits of podcasts for university students?
Benefits for univeristy students are that they can take a reading from the lecture with them anywhere they want and listen to it as many times as they want. This way they won't end up behind on their work if they miss a lecture and can listen to it repeatedly before an exam. AFL Football screen shot
Reading Summary 1: Guide to using e-mail
This reading teaches people using e-mails to get to the point right away instead of going on and on about something. The reading explains if typing up a quick e-mail to a co-worker be sure not to miss out any keywords because then the recipient may not know what it is you are telling them or asking them. When starting an e-mail off it is polite to adress the recipient in the correct way instead of just "hey man" or "what up homie".
Reading Summary 2: The problem with SPAM
SPAM or also known as UBE (Unsolicitated Bulk E-mail) is a way of advertising at no cost to the sender. Thus this is why so many people recieve large amounts of unwanted e-mails. One major problem with SPAM is that many people are beginning to abandon using their e-mail because of the amount of SPAM they recieve and then have to delete everyday. When recieving SPAM the user could ultimately end up recieving a virus if the e-mail has been accidently clicked on.
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Blog for week 8
- Practice your presentation before hand over and over so you know your work inside and out.
- Make sure your data in the presentation is correct, referenced and is reputable.
- When using slides during the presntation Keep It Simple Stupid (KISS). Don't put a whole essay on one slide limit it to 3 or 4 dot points per slide if you can.
- Interact with your audience or get them to interact with you. It is proven that the audience will remember more of your speech if they interactive during the presentation.
- Speak clearly and make eye contact with the audience.
Resource Summary: PowerPoint Tutorial
This website is a great guide for beginners on MS Power Point and even for people who know already how to use this program. The site goes through step by step how to create a slide, how to add motion and pictures to your presentation, and adding sound to it as well. It also explains how to create speaker notes which would be very helpful for any speaker and especially first time speakers at university.
Wednesday
Blog for week 7
The lecture today was pretty much all about endnote, what it is, what it does, and how to use endnote. Endnote is used for citing or quoting references. Endnote also serves as a bibliography maker. It was explained to the students during the lecture that endnote is available for download from the ECU website and also how to use it. Endnote does not just deal with the APA style which is the most commonly used, but various other referencing styles can be selected.
Tutorial Summary:
For todays tutorial we were explained how to use the program endnote and had to complete a few tasks on referencing with endnote. This is helpful for in the future when you're referencing because endnote makes it much easier and quicker, and also once a source has been referenced it will stay in the database for ever so it can be used again later if need be.
Resource 1 Summary- ‘Endnote’
This reading goes through just about everything on endnote. From using endnote to configuring it and to what applications it is good for. This reading is good for anybody who is using endnote because everything is explained in detail and is easy to follow along with. Endnote is compatible with all types of style formating but at ECU we will mostly be using the APA style.
Resource 2 Summary- ‘Some additional endnote help’
This website provides additional help on how to use endnote and has examples. There are many links on this webpage that lead to downloadable updates of endote. The website provides the user with requirements on what is needed to run endnote on a Macintosh or on a Windows compatible computer.
Tuesday
Blog for week 6
Today's lecture was about how authentic the world wide web is and how anyone can put anything on the internet. Sources found on the internet should always be evaluated to check that they are credible sources to get information from, even with sites that you have to pay to see the information it could still be very bias or incorrect. Just because a site free to view does not mean it is not trustworthy or bad. A very good website with references and that relates to what you are looking for can sometimes be like trying to find a needle in a hay stack.
Tutorial Summary:
In the tutorial today we were asked to evaluate two of the following websites. http://www.ithaca.edu/library/training/think.html, http://www.taftcollege.edu/newTC/Academic/INCO48/sec6-4.htm, and http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html.
When evaluating two of these websites the criteria that should be used to base whether these sites are authentic were accuracy, authorship, purpose, detail/design and the website's overall worth to the user. During the tutorial we were also placed into groups of three to four for our group assignment and begin discussing how we would approach the group assignment.
List and compare strategies for evaluating information found on websites using the following webpages: http://www.ithaca.edu/library/training/think.html http://www.taftcollege.edu/newTC/Academic/INCO48/sec6-4.htm
http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html
The first website offers general information about evaluating and criticalling reviewing sources found on the web but does not give an in depth look on tips evaluating web sources. The site is a good beginners guide on the fundamentals on what to look for on a web page in terms of authenticity.
Website two focuses more on the content, copyright laws, citations and the domain names. Different domain names mean the website is affliated with different groups or organizations. For example a URL with the ending .gov means a nonmilitary government entity website and a URL with .edu means it is an educational institution website.
Website three covers five main points on what to look for and evaluate for an online website. The list is authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and coverage. Under these headings the webpage has a few dot points on what the heading means. With this in mind I think that this site offers little information on evaluating web sources but is still useful. If all three websites were to be published into one website then this one website would offer the most information on how to evaluate a website.