the Yoga with Vito - Let's Move Together By events.tufts.edu Published On :: 13 Nov 2024 22:00:00 GMT Nov 13, 2024, 5pm EST Yoga with Vito - Let's Move TogetherBeginner-FriendlyJoin returning Yoga Instructor Vito for a beginner-friendly yoga class for some weekly movement.November 13th (Wednesday)Evening Classes 5:00pmSign up here Each student must sign up ahead of time to secure their spot in class. For lunchtime classes, students are asked to indicate whether they would like to reserve a mat. For evening classes, mats will not be provided. Building: Posner Hall Campus Location: Boston Health Sciences campus City: Boston, MA 02111 Campus: Boston Health Sciences campus Location Details: Posner Lounge (200 Harrison Ave) Open to Public: No Subject: Health/Wellness Event Contact Email: studentwellnessadvising@tufts.edu RSVP Information: docs.google.com… More info: docs.google.com… Full Article 2024/11/13 (Wed)
the Creation Of the IWMW 2006 Web site By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: The IWMW 2006 Web site was created. [2005-06-28] Full Article
the IWMW2006 theme Quality Matters By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: The Workshop theme name 'Quality Matters' is added to the Web site. [2005-12-22] Full Article
the Search Page added to the IWMW 2006 Web site. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: A search Page for searching all the Institutional Web Management Workshops has been added to the IWMW 2006 Web site. [2006-01-16] Full Article
the Nedstat launch their Sector Stats programme to be presented at IWMW 2006. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Nedstat launch their Sector Stats programme, collating industry wide statistics about Institutional Web site activity, to be presented at IWMW 2006. [2006-02-17] Full Article
the Messages were sent to web-support and website-info-mgt JISCMail lists informing people that the online booking form is now live. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: The online booking form for IWMW is now available. [2006-04-05] Full Article
the Details of the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006 Social Events are added to the site. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Details of the IWMW2006 Social Events and pub and restaurant listings are added to the site. [2006-04-07] Full Article
the Use of RSS and OPML at the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: This year we are syndicating much of the content of the Web site. A page on RSS and OPML technologies is now available. [2006-05-05] Full Article
the Brian the Brain, the Institutional Web Management Workshop's very own Chatbot, is now available to people to talk to. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Chatbots are software applications designed to provide a conversational speech based interface to Web sites and services. Brian will be able to answer questions on the Workshop and this year's Workshop location, Bath. [2006-05-12] Full Article
the Bookings are now closed for the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006. By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Due to high demand bookings are now closed for the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006. [2006-05-22] Full Article
the Let’s Talk AI: Building Awareness and Understanding Together By events.tufts.edu Published On :: 22 Nov 2024 17:00:00 GMT Nov 22, 2024, 12pm EST Tufts AI Literacy Forums Fall 2024Has Perplexity become a secret friend you love to pester? Does ChatGPT feel like an evil robot overlord you’re not sure you can trust?Are you curious about how others at Tufts are using AI? Do you ever wonder if you’re the only one with mixed feelings about it?Over the past two years, generative AI tools have found their way into the spaces where we learn, teach, and work. This series creates an opportunity to discuss the ethical and effective uses of AI and how we can define AI literacy in a way that supports our shared values.Join a forum where students, faculty, and staff come together to discuss how generative AI is shaping life at Tufts—both inside and outside the classroom.Online forum: Thursday, November 21, 2024, 12-1:30 p.m. via ZoomIn-person forum: Friday, November 22, 12-2 p.m. on the Medford/Somerville campus (with a lunch buffet) Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Open to Public: Yes Primary Audience(s): Faculty, Postdoctoral Fellows, Staff, Students (Graduate), Students (Postdoctoral), Students (Undergraduate) Event Type: Conference/Panel Event/Symposium, Lecture/Presentation/Seminar/Talk Subject: Education Event Sponsor Details: Tufts University Event Contact Name: Carie Noel Cardamone Event Contact Email: Carie.Cardamone@tufts.edu Event Contact Phone: 6176270562 RSVP Information: forms.gle… More info: forms.gle… Full Article 2024/11/22 (Fri)
the 'Soft' launch of the workshop booking form By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: There was a 'soft' launch of the workshop booking form, which was linked to from the navigational bar, but not announced on lists. [2005-04-15] Full Article
the Announcement of the opening for bookings By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Announcement of the opening for bookings was sent to the web-support and website-info-mgt JISCMail lists. [2005-04-18] Full Article
the Further information about the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester now available By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Further information about the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester, where the reception on day 2 of the workshop will take place, is now available. [2005-05-24] Full Article
the 3D Panoramic View Of Lecture Theatre By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: If you would like to view a 3D panoramic view of the lecture theatre to be used at the event see the conference venue's "Virtual Tours page". [2005-06-07] Full Article
the Discussion group for the south east region By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Delegates from the south east region should note that their discussion group session will be the largest. In order to provide sufficient time for everyone from this region to give their views on the topic (which is Content Management Systems) we invite delegates from this region to go to the discussion group page for the South East region and use the Wikalong annotation tool to give their thoughts on the most important issues related to CMSs prior to the event. Full Article
the Birds Of A Feathers Sessions By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: Workshop delegates may wish to arrange their own Birds of a Feather (BoF) session. We hope that the WiFi network will help delegates to find others with similar interests. [2005-07-04] Full Article
the B7: What's the Point of Having Developers in a Web 2.0 World? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2008-07-23 With the ever-increasing quality of third-party tools lowering the barriers for enthusiasts to provide Web-based services for their teams and departments, what's the point in having an insitutional Web development team? Can they provide anything that someone with the time, motivation and a decent tool can't? Should Web Services just be innovating on top of these services (and if so, how?), or should they be disbanded in favour of outsourcing? A short introductory presentation will be followed by a roundtable discussion with sweets on offer to keep our energy up! The session was facilitated by Phil Wilson and Tom Natt, University of Bath. Full Article
the B3: The Real Information Environment By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2008-07-23 The workshop is an opportunity to consider the implications for university-based Web sites of the use of external, embeddable commercial services. As embeddable services and communities increasingly dominate, Web sites are evolving into Web presences, with implications for marketing, functionality and evaluation. We will look at some examples from Higher Education Academy Subject Centres' use of services such as YouTube, Google Books and PBwiki, consider some risks and benefits and invite participants to share their own attitudes towards these services, whether pro or con. The session was facilitated by Dr Martin L Poulter, University of Bristol and Kwansuree Jiamton, King's College London. Full Article
the B2: Web CMS and University Web Teams Part II - the Never Ending Story? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2008-07-23 The University of Bradford Web CMS project began in October 2005 and by the time IWMW 2008 happens we will have purchased our Web CMS and have a new University Web Team in place (just!). "Crumbs - that's taken a long time," you may say! Well, yes - but we know that by the end of the project we will have a Web CMS that suits our organisational needs and is welcomed and accepted by the users, as well as a new resource to assist the University of Bradford in taking its Web presence forward - the University Web Team. So how did we do it? Following on from last year's IWMW 2007 session (People, Processes and Projects - How the Culture of an Organisation can Impact on Technical System Implementation) we will give some insight into why we think our project has continued to be successful - detailing the hurdles we met along the way and how we overcame them - and imparting the knowledge that we have learnt during the project which can help you take your organisation with you and enable you to implement a huge change management project successfully. Hint - it's all about the people! The session was facilitated by Claire Gibbons and Russell Allen, University of Bradford. Full Article
the A5: The 'other' Accessibility Guidelines - the Importance of Authoring Tool Accessibility Evaluation in a Web 2.0 World By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2008-07-22 Web content is increasingly produced by authors without extensive web design skills - whether by staff using CMSs, VLEs and courseware or by students publishing their coursework online. The challenge of making sure this content is as accessible as possible becomes much more significant, and inevitably a burden on the individual or institution. The quality of the authoring tool in supporting accessible content creation becomes critical - however support for the W3C's Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG) by authoring tool vendors seems to be seen as a specific (and usually low priority) customer request rather than a fundamental quality of the tool. For institutions considering selecting a VLE, CMS or other tool that supports web content publication, how can they best express accessibility requirements so that the tool takes its share of responsibility for accessible output? And if existing tools fall short of ATAG conformance, how can the effect of this on the accessibility of content best be managed? The session was facilitated by David Sloan, University of Dundee. Full Article
the A1: Embracing Web 2.0 Technologies to Grease the Wheels of Team Cohesion By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2008-07-22 This session will review how a number of Web 2.0 technologies that are both internally and externally hosted and can be used to future proof the way that teams in institutions can work effectively together. The session was facilitated by Andy Ramsden and Marieke Guy, University of Bath. Full Article
the B9: Implementing a Content Management System: Can you Avoid the Pain? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Dan Smith, The University of Southampton will use his experience of rolling out a successful Web CMS to help attendees with potential problems. Full Article
the B8: Building The Web Management Community By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Brian Kelly, UKOLN, University of Bath and Steven Warburton, Kings College London will consider community. Members of institutional Web management teams have helped to develop a sustainable community through use of mailing lists, such as the web-support and website-info-mgt JISCMail lists (which are very successful in sharing tips and receiving advice on problems) and participation at the IWMW series of workshops (which provide an opportunity for members of the community to meet, hear about new trends and best practices and to share concerns). Full Article
the B7: Thieves in the Night: Hidden Problems in Web site Redesign By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Matt Thrower, UKOLN, University of Bath will talk about UKOLN's Web site redesign and the problems involved. Come along and discuss how we solved these and other problems and what lessons could be learned for your institution. Full Article
the B6: XCRI: Syndicating the Online Prospectus By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Scott Wilson, CETIS, Ben Ryan, KaiNao, Manchester Metropolitan University and Vashti Zarach, CETIS will invite attendees to critique the XCRI concept and comment in particular on the challenges and opportunities for implementing XCRI in their own organisations. Full Article
the B2: People, Processes and Projects - How the Culture of an Organisation can Impact on Technical System Implementation By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 Claire Gibbons, Web Officer (Marketing and Communications), University of Bradford and Russell Allen, Project Manager (Portal and CMS), Management Information Services, University of Bradford will help delegates gain an understanding of 'organisational culture' and the effect this can have on change management and/or system implementation. Full Article
the A9: The Eternal Beta - Can it Work in an Institution? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 Phil Wilson, University of Bath will consider how Google's famous for it, Flickr's moved to Gamma, Moo are on an eternal 1.0 - yet still in institutions we plod on with a tired, slow-moving and opaque process for developing and enhancing applications. From our closed support lines to official notices on unread Web sites and applications mysteriously changing in front of a user's very eyes we look staid and tedious. But it doesn't have to be like that, we could be fast faced and interactive - but at what cost? Continuity? Uptime? Full Article
the A7: Usability Testing for the WWW By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 In a follow-up to last year's session, User testing on a shoestring budget, Emma Tonkin, UKOLN, demonstrates two methods of user testing. One, the cognitive walkthrough, an be carried out by a single evaluator. The second, the think-aloud protocol, is all about observing the way Web visitors interact with your Web site. Full Article
the A4: Web Usage Statistics in the University Environment By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 Paul Kelly and William Mackintosh, University of York will discuss various web usage statistics packages. Full Article
the A1: Athens, Shibboleth, the UK Access Management Federation, OpenID, CardSpace and all that - single sign-on for your Web site By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 Andrew Cormack, Richard Dunning and Andy Powell, Eduserv will investigate the relationships between institutional single sign-on, Athens, Shibboleth, the UK Access Management Federation and more recent developments like OpenID and CardSpace and will give participants an opportunity to ask questions of a panel of experts from the community. Full Article
the Details about sponsorship for the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2007 are now available By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: A sponsors page containing details of the sponsorship packages available has now been set up. Interested parties should contact the organisers. [2006-08-24] Full Article
the Bookings are now closed for the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2007 By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-06-01 Bookings are now closed for the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2007. If you would like to put your details on a mailing list please contact events@ukoln.ac.uk or a member of the organising committee [2007-06-01] Full Article
the Guest Blog Post: Let The Students Do The Talking By ukwebfocus.wordpress.com Published On :: 2007-06-01 Alison Wildish has written a guest blog post for Brian Kelly's "UK Web Focus: Reflections On The Web" blog [2007-06-01] Full Article
the Guest Blog Post: The Promise of Information Architecture By ukwebfocus.wordpress.com Published On :: 2007-06-05 Keith Doyle has written a guest blog post for "Brian Kelly's UK Web Focus: Reflections On The Web" blog [2007-06-05] Full Article
the Panel 1: Dealing with the Commercial World: Saviour or Satan? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-18 With the introduction of variable fees Universities have entered what education secretary Ruth Kelly called "a new era". Financial departments have had to find more creative ways to meet the sector's growing competitive demands and those working within universities have had to take a more business-like, customer-focused approach to many aspects of their work as they compete for students. Full Article
the Plenary Talk 5: The Promise of Information Architecture By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-17 During Keith Doyle, Salford University talk, delegates will discover how, by taking the information architecture approach as their next step, they can improve the user experience and business benefits. Information architecture gives delegates a framework and benchmarks for managing web provision at an institutional level. This should be an engaging and entertaining talk which would help delegates decide whether a formal IA role is appropriate to their organisation. Helping delegates consider their institutional strategic approach: What is IA? How is the role covered at the moment? Should it be a specific post rather than something that's squeezed in with everything else we do? Full Article
the Plenary Talk 2: Let the Students do the Talking... By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2007-07-16 Alison Wildish, Head of Web Services, Edge Hill University will talk about how Students are asking each other for help and advice rather than coming direct to our staff. These same students are advising our applicant community about University life and they're all doing it in an "informal" environment. These are all positive developments but it does mean we start to ask the question... if we're moving towards developing and nurturing students in these online communities and empowering them to help themselves, will we still need a "corporate" Web site in the future? Furthermore with the increase in "free" tools available such as email, file storage, blogs etc. - will Institutional systems be a thing of the past? Full Article
the B8: Exposing yourself on the Web with Microformats! By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-15 Philip Wilson, University of Bath will ask how do people make use of the data you publish on the Web? If you publish a staff directory, how do people currently add contact details to their address books? Copy and paste has had its day, Microformats are a way of making the data you already publish not only useful, but re-usable and re-purposable for relatively little effort. This session considers how these data formats can help you solve specific data problems on your site. Full Article
the B5: Archiving the Web: What can Institutions learn from National and International Web Archiving Initiatives By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-15 This session will be run by Michael Day, DCC, UKOLN, Maureen Pennock, DCC, UKOLN and Lizzie Richmond, University Archivist, University of Bath. Institutional Web sites have become an increasingly important tool for disseminating key institutional information to and between staff, students, researchers and the general public. They are widely recognised as key front-office mechanisms for the communication of important information, but the long-term survival of Web site resources and data with non-transient or enduring value is often overridden by the short-term benefits of on-the-fly Web site management. As a result, even institutions with Web site archiving policies can find themselves falling victim to the so-called digital dark ages and fail to preserve valuable information. Full Article
the B4: Search Technology within the University Environment By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-15 William Mackintosh, Web Manager, University of York and Damon Querry, Senior Web Development Officer, University of Newcastle upon Tyne will be looking at Search Technology within the University Environmen. The University of Newcastle upon Tyne has implemented a Google Search Appliance. The University of York is committed to the purchase of the Google Mini. The session will discuss the reasons for selecting these products and how they add value to an institution's Web site. Full Article
the B2: FOUND IT! Using Information Architecture and Web Management to Help the User Succeed By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-15 Duncan Davidson, Information Manager, University of Abertay Dundee and Donna Wilkinson, Information Specialist, University of Abertay Dundeed will look at their University's development plans, the related projects - University Portal and Information Architecture, where we have been, current work and the road ahead. Full Article
the A6: Writing for the Web By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-14 Tim Matschak, Cass Business School, City University, will consider writing for the Web - is it so difficult? Which models for success should those involved in institutional Web management follow? This session looks at accessible language, using the expertise of professional writers from other media areas such as newspaper journalism. Full Article
the A5: 'Not blue, a bit random, and not too Scottish': Designing a Web site the hard way.....? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-14 Debbie Nicholson, Web Support Officer, University of Essex will show how putting quality measures in place can prevent getting a brief for a Web design job that reads "not blue, a bit random, and not too Scottish". Don't laugh, this actually happened! This hands on session will get participants thinking about how they can introduce quality assurance procedures within the web design process. It will cover establishing a 'quality loop', creating measurable standards and will introduce ways to enable clients to be better informed about what they want from their new Web site. Full Article
the A3: Chatting with Brian: What do Chatbots have to offer the Education Sector? By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-14 David Burden, Managing Director, DADENLIMITED and Marieke Guy, UKOLN will consider questions like: Can chatbots make sites more accessible or do they break fundamental usability rules? Do users like them, or find them irritating or even patronising? Are they the next best thing or a 5 minute wonder? Can they really benefit the education sector? Can a chatbot ever really learn? Full Article
the A2: Access Grid Node - the What, How, and Why By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-14 Rob Bristow, Information Services Manager, Graduate School of Education, University of Bristol and Mark Lydon, i2a Consulting will look at Access Grid Node (AGN), an exciting area of development in communication within the academic, research and commercial worlds. Using open standards to transmit video and audio using IP Multicast networking, it is a type of video collaboration that allows a rich and immediate means of communicating with remote sites, while also being able to share presentations, data, complex visualizations and video. AGN is a technology that scales; from a single user node running with a Webcam on a laptop, up to a lecture theatre with multiple cameras and projectors. It also scales from one-to-one conversations to multi-site meetings, seminars and conferences. Full Article
the A1: The Rise and Rise of Digital Repositories: Communication and Quality By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-14 Julie Allinson and Mahendra Mahey, UKOLN will give an overview of the current repository landscape, looking at the different types of repositories, their use within education and the range of issues relating to repositories, including cultural, social, legal, technical and policy considerations. Current JISC work in this area will be highlighted, focussing on how this work will contribute to raising quality standards in repository development, through interoperability and the use of open standards. Full Article
the Debate 1: CMS: Challenging the Consensus By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-16 In previous IWMWs sessions have focussed on issues such as: Should we buy or build our CMS? Which CMS should we implement? How do we implement our CMS? How can we measure the impact of our CMS Implementation? And how do we address The CMS Challenge? But last year it was claimed that "There is no such thing as a silver bullet" and that a CMS will not solve all your problems. Has the CMS bubble bust? Has content management become content mis-management? In the light of new approaches, such as Web 2.0, and new 'ways of doing things' is there a feeling of disillusionment with 'ye old CMS'? Or does a CMS remain the backbone of a good institutional Web site? In this debate you will hear the arguments for and against content management systems and will have an opportunity to express your views. Full Article
the Panel Session 1: Web 2.0: Behind the Hype By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-16 The Web is changing. It is no longer a phenomenon but has integrated itself within our culture. However for those creating Web services times are far from stable. A wide range of Web-based applications continue to be developed, such as blogs, wikis, podcasting, social networking software, RSS feeds etc. The Semantic Web is still on the cards and now we have Web 2.0, an opportunity for a more sharing, more participative Web? Is it just hype? Will these progressions make any difference to the way in which we go about our work? What does Web 2.0 mean to the Institutional Web? This panel session offered three different perspectives on the potential of Web 2.0 within learning activities - the library perspective, the commercial perspective and the HE/FE perspective. Full Article
the Plenary Talk 7: Reflections on 10 years of the Institutional Web By www.ukoln.ac.uk Published On :: 2006-06-16 Andy Powell gave a talk about how it goes without saying that the Web has changed significantly over the last 10 years and that institutional Web sites have changed with it - just use the Wayback Machine to look back at your own site in 1996 to see what I mean. Such changes have not simply been in terms of style and substance but also in terms of how we expect to interact with, use and re-use the content and services being made available to us. In short, the Web has changed us and the way we learn and work. This talk will look back over the last 10 years and highlight some of the key technical, social, political and legal changes that have taken place and the impact these have had on the institutional Web sites we deliver now and will deliver into the future. Full Article