Category Archives: Education

My Adventure As A Wishfarmer Begins

Teleport to Strengths Island

So I promised that I would start blogging more — about everything, but in particular about the projects I’ve been working on these days, which are mainly in Second Life.

Well, I’ll finally start making good on that promise today, and I’m really excited about keeping you more in the loop on what I’m working on, so you can help me make it better.

The Second Life learning curve is a brutal one, but I know that soon, if I keep at it 24-7, I’ll eventually absorb all the necessary data to effectively mesh with the grid.

Until then, I’m taking as many notes as I can about all my experiences during this precious time, when I still feel like a “Noob” (a SL new user), so I can incorporate them into my writings and teachings accordingly.

It’s been a while since I’ve really taken on the mission of mastering something new like this. In 1996, although I knew very little about computer programming at the time, I decided I wanted to learn everything about Web Standards — especially HTML and XML. Thanks to several members of the W3C’s staff and its original XML Working Group (who spent countless hours on the phone and writing emails to help me learn all the details), in just a few years, I was teaching XML for UC Berkeley Extension Online.

Then, in 2001, I decided to ramp up on Copyright Law in the hopes that it might somehow combine with my technical skills to perhaps play a role in helping to turn the copyright situation around. That time, although I wasn’t even sure myself where my research would take me (and again, as a result of countless individuals taking me under their wing, to help me learn quickly), I found myself a co-founder of Creative Commons, working with Lawrence Lessig.

So, as you can see, these leaps into the void seem to pay off for me, generally, in both the short and long term. I consider this to be another such leap.

This latest endeavor also ties in nicely with the graduate and undergraduate level teaching on social networking and virtual worlds I’ve been doing for Prof. Michelle Wolf and Prof. Marie Drennan at SF State’s Broadcast Electronic Communications Arts Department (BECA). I’m having a blast learning these new interactive education concepts and technologies from The Wishfarmers, and I am eagerly incorporating them into my own bevy of teaching knowledge and materials.

I guess by now it’s pretty obvious that I truly believe virtual worlds have the potential to help shape and improve our lives. And not just the lives of those online, but also the those out in regular old “meatspace.” It seems clear to me that virtual worlds are no more a fad or passing phase than the Internet itself.

But now I’m getting ahead of myself, and it’s usually best to start at the beginning…

Contribute To My Online Music Distribution Guide

The other project that’s taking a lot of my time lately (besides all the cool stuff I’ve been working on at Wide Hive) is my Masters Thesis for SFSU’s BECA Department:
A Guide To Online Music Distribution.
So if you know of a good service, assume I know nothing about it, and send me the scoop!
If you are personally affiliated with a particular system, so much the better. (Then I can get the inside scoop:) I won’t get mad at you for trying to sell me something. I’m starting from scratch here, and I really want to create a comprehensive directory.
Let me know what systems you don’t like too. That’s just as helpful.
In a few months, I’ll need a group of testers to implement my tutorials on the subject. Now would be a good time to sign up for that too, if you’re interested.
Thanks in advance for all the great leads and info guys. You’re the best.
lisa

Great Video Tutorials On Video/Animation/Graphics Software From Lynda.com

One of you suggested that I check out the $25 a month video tutorials at to ramp up on my Final Cut Pro.
That’s the best $25 I’ve spent in a long time. I’ll probably keep my subscription up to help support (not to mention that there are other titles of stuff I want to learn).
It took about a lesson and a half for me to get off and running on my project. (About 30 min of instruction at most.) I’m pretty impressed.
The way the courses are organized, I can move ahead to find out what I need to know, and go back to learn more of the introductory stuff, as needed. There are little 15 minute movies for everything. You can just pick what you need from the index.
Leave it to you guys to hook me up with another great resource!
Thanks again for all the great advice.
(What would I do without cha? 🙂

Help Me Write My Term Paper On The FCC’s Process and New Media Ownership Rules

I’m writing a term paper for my Ethics class on whether Michael Powell followed all the correct procedures when he pushed through the New Media Ownership rules last June. I’m guessing that he followed everything to the letter of the law, but writing the paper will help me learn about what “the process” actually is and know for sure.
Please email me at lisarein@finetuning.com with any links or relevant articles you know of about this subject that you think would be useful to my research. I’ll be publishing the finished product here when I’m done.
Thanks!

Neato Student Blogs From My First Blogging Class At SFSU


I taught my first class in blogging at San Francisco State last week. I’m HTML-ing the tutorial and will have it up in a bit.

It was so incredible teaching blogging! The students seemed to pick up on it very quickly. Within two hours after my lecture, the first blog came to life. Then all the others started to pour in. Check them out for yourself.

One of the things that was so cool is that many of the students are going to keep their blogs going. (They originally were only creating them because I had given it to them as an assignment.)

Help My Students Test Out Their Senior Project

I’m assisting with the Senior Projects for USF’s Computer Science Department this semester as sort of a warm up before I teach my own XML class next semester. (Yippie!)
We’re creating a little application that creates a little “personal web space” from the bookmarks and documents on your hard drive, and we could sure use some help testing out our client application.
It’s Windows-only right now, and only works with Internet Explorer 6. (I know it’s lame that it only works on IE6 on Windows, but this is only the first rev. So bear with me.)
Email me directly at lisarein@finetuning.com if you’d like to participate in our beta program. We’ll be needing testers from now until the end of the semester.
Thanks!

An Update On MIT’s Free Open Source Courseware


MIT Everyware

Every lecture, every handout, every quiz. All online. For free. Meet the global geeks getting an MIT education, open source-style.
By David Diamond for Wired News.
(via Boingboing.)

When MIT announced to the world in April 2001 that it would be posting the content of some 2,000 classes on the Web, it hoped the program – dubbed OpenCourseWare – would spur a worldwide movement among educators to share knowledge and improve teaching methods. No institution of higher learning had ever proposed anything as revolutionary, or as daunting. MIT would make everything, from video lectures and class notes to tests and course outlines, available to any joker with a browser. The academic world was shocked by MIT’s audacity – and skeptical of the experiment. At a time when most enterprises were racing to profit from the Internet and universities were peddling every conceivable variant of distance learning, here was the pinnacle of technology and science education ready to give it away. Not the degrees, which now cost about $41,000 a year, but the content. No registration required…
And MIT will learn a few things, too, just as it did during OpenCourseWare’s first year. One lesson of the beta test revolved around access, which in some parts of the world is costly and slow. A second issue: lack of assistance to Web-based students. Even the most brilliant university course can falter without the kind of intensive teaching support provided at a school like MIT. Then there are the nagging intellectual property headaches. How, for example, do you police Third World scam artists from hawking MIT degrees as if they were Calvin Klein knockoffs?

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XML, P2P, and Semantic Web Related Terms

Just realized I never linked to this glossary from my blog yet. I’m gearing up for teaching at University of San Francisco this semester and realized I hadn’t linked to it or updated it for quite some time.
I’m also looking for other great glossaries to add to this category, so please, send them along.
I also need a lot more “semantic web” terms in this puppy too — so send them along so we can argue about them 🙂

XML, P2P and Semantic Web-related Terms