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John Spooner Revisioning iCommons

In 2005, iCommons was established as an outgrowth of Creative Commons with an objective to ‘advance the wider dissemination of non-commercial sharing of scientific, creative and other intellectual works by the general public’. Creative Commons was the sole member, guarantor and sponsor of the charity, providing organisational and financial support.

Today, iCommons has a small,... more

 
Speed Geeking!
1
Steve Foerster · Grand Savanne, Salisbury (Dominica) · Jun 16th, 2007 7:13 pm · 48 votes · 4 comments
 
And they're off!, Thomas Hawk via Flickr, CC BY-NC 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
And they're off!, by Thomas Hawk via Flickr
I’ll admit it: I actually don’t like public speaking very much. I’m always afraid I’ll forget half of what I’m supposed to say and spend half my time slack jawed from having run out of things to say. That whole thing about imagining the audience naked doesn’t work. (Ladies, in case you didn’t realize this: guys do that all the time anyway.) It’s just something that makes me a bit nervous, and while I don’t let it stop me, it’s a reality I have to face.

But now I’ve found a really fun exception: Speed geeking. It’s a cross between speed dating and geeking out that involves giving the same incredibly short presentation to rotating small groups of listeners. In today’s Open Educational Project Showcase, the second session of the Summit’s Education track, I was one of ten presenters who gave the same brief presentation to small groups ten times in a row. It was like practicing and presenting rolled into one! And with the groups being small, it wasn’t intimidating even though the overall effect was to speak to the same number of people the same amount of time.

The first time I gave my spiel, sure it was a bit rough. But I was certainly able to fill three minutes with ease, and answer those few questions my listeners had the chance to get out.

Hi, I’m Steve Foerster, and I’m with WikiEducator. We’re a project sponsored by the Commonwealth of Learning, which is an international NGO funded by member states of the Commonwealth of Nations. Essentially, if the Commonwealth of Nations had a Ministry of Education, it would be the Commonwealth of Learning.

WikiEducator is, as the name suggests, a wiki that is used to create and modify open educational resources, or “OERs”. We use the same wiki software as Wikipedia, but our implementation is slightly different.


Et cetera. It was also nice that my tendency to speak too quickly when nervous translated into an advantage in the speedgeeking format.

By the third go around I had it down pat. The only time I had a serious brain stoppage was when one of the other participants was recording me. In fact I think my jet lagged brain shut down in mid-sentence. Ah well. At least it picked back up after a short time. I suppose those few seconds meant that one less question was able to be asked, but that just comes with the speed geeking territory.

By the end I was left with a dry mouth and the last group had a sort of glazed expression, as if to say, “We don’t care, but it’s not you, it’s that we just hear nine other rapid fire presentations.” But I’ll admit it, I finally had fun with public speaking

tags: dubrovnik croatia education summit07


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Go Steve! Can't wait to see the video :)
Heather Ford · Johannesburg (South Africa) · Jun 17th, 2007 5:19 pm
2 out of 2 people believe this is useful
your take: useful lame

This was a fun format, and it was great that we had time to go up to individual projects that were interesting afterwards and ask more questions etc. In general, I think there ought to be more "hooking up" of people at the conference, even outside the education sphere. It would be cool if one afternoon could be having every project in the hemisphere hanging up some posters, having some brochures (or CDs for sale etc), and one could go around and talk to people, exchange ideas and maybe get involved... whether it's Loftwork in Japan, Overmundo, OER Commons or open source pictures of cats falling down stairs (.com)... ;)

thanks for sacrificing your throat for us
Stian · Hamar (Norway) · Jun 18th, 2007 11:07 pm
1 out of 1 person believes this is useful
your take: useful lame

Heather, wait no longer: here's one of us practicing in the courtyard. I'd love to get the one of us actually doing it, like with sound and everything.
Steve Foerster · Grand Savanne, Salisbury (Dominica) · Jun 19th, 2007 5:59 am
1 out of 1 person believes this is useful
your take: useful lame

I LOVE the concept of speedgeeking! We've played with pecha kucha to huge success.. the audience loves it because it is so engaging and as a speaker the endorphin/adrenalin rush makes it dizzingly good and a little addictive
max kaizen · Cape Town (South Africa) · Jul 27th, 2007 7:59 am
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame
 


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