Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Peace to me!

In a letter to a friend, I mentioned that most of the people use the phrase "Peace Upon You", "Shalom" and "Salamu Alaykoum" (which all mean Peace) without knowing what the Peace really means.

Then a friend of mine statused his facebook with the phrase: "Kindness is to love others even if they do not deserve it".

Then it came to me. I commented on his status with "Peace is to love others without thinking if they deserve it or not". What an epiphany!

This matches Jesus wisdom: Love Thy Enemy. I need to find reference in other religions!

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Fool on a Hill

I just finished watching Dinner with Schmucks. And this resonated with me‬‏.




McCartney said the song relates to Maharishi Mahesh Yogi:

'Fool on the Hill' was mine and I think I was writing about someone like Maharishi. His detractors called him a fool. Because of his giggle he wasn't taken too seriously ... I was sitting at the piano at my father's house in Liverpool hitting a D 6th chord, and I made up 'Fool on the Hill.'[r]


Detect language » Arabic

Monday, June 6, 2011

A Read: Getting a message from God in the Internet age

Nice read on Edmontonn Journal. I like to capture the following qoutes:
"Social media has challenged today’s Catholic Church to fit 2,000 years of belief into a 140-word tweet", says Edmonton Archbishop Richard Smith.

"Technologies focus on quick reads instead of deeper thought"

and
"The church needs the way to reach the heart, but must go through the distractions of the head to do so, the archbishop said"

visit his blog: http://archbishopsmith.blogspot.com/

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Definitions of Mobile Learning

Definitions



  • Mobile learning (or m-learning) is the combination of e-learning and mobile computing that promises the access to applications which support learning at anytime and anywhere [Holzinger, A., Nischelwitzer, A., Meisenberger, M. (2005). Lifelong-Learning Support by M-learning: Example Scenarios. ACM eLearn Magazine, 2005(11)]

  • Mobile education is learning delivered or supported solely or mainly by handheld and mobile technologies such as personal digital assistants (PDAs), smartphones or wireless laptop PCs.  [Source: Current State of Mobile Learning, www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/346/875.].

  • Personalized learning is learning that recognises diversity, difference, and individuality in the ways that learning is developed, delivered, and supported.

  • Situated learning isl earning that takes place in the course of activity, in appropriate and meaningful contexts (Lave and Wenger 1991).

  • Authentic learning is learning that involves real-world problems and projects that are relevant and interesting to the learner.


Tips:


From: http://elearningslam.blogspot.com/2008/11/designing-mobile-elearning-courses.html [bit old, but has some values]

  • The rule of thumb, is to provide about twice the amount of content that can be viewed on the screen: If an average mobile screen supports 300 characters, limit your pages to 600 characters.

  • Avoid placing important text inside graphics. The mobile browser may shrink graphics so that they fit on the small display size. Any text that is in the graphic will also be shrunk, potentially to a size that is illegible.

  • Avoid rich/multimedia content until a new standard is universally adopted.

  • Have two different style sheets, with the appropriate one loading at run time based on the device. One for desktop and the other one for mobile device.

  • Use small or unobtrusive graphics and logos

  • Avoid navigation bars that may take up a large percentage of the screen.

  • If you want to include complex navigation, place these at the end of the page content so that learners have access first to the primary content.

  • Avoid background graphics.

  • Pull-down menus don't necessarily work on mobile devices (because of uneven JavaScript support), so consider using arrows to take learners through a tour of your course.

  • Graphic navigation icons should be simple arrows or a descriptive word such as “next” or “back”.

  • Navigation frames work well on some devices, make sure your content can be downloaded quickly.


Stats


[Source: ITU World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators database, 2010]

  • By the end of 2010, there will be an estimated 5.3 billion mobile cellular subscriptions worldwide, including 940 million subscriptions to 3G services.

  • Access to mobile networks is now available to 90% of the world population and 80% of the population living in rural areas.

  • People are moving rapidly from 2G to 3G platforms, in both developed and developing countries. In 2010, 143 countries were off ering 3G services commercially, compared to 95 in 2007.

  • Towards 4G: a number of countries have started to off er services at even higher broadband speeds, moving to next generation wireless platforms – they include Sweden, Norway, Ukraine and the United States.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Learning: Sir Ken, Theatre, Education and Personalized Curriculum

The Link: http://blip.tv/learning-without-frontiers/sir-ken-robinson-march-2011-learning-without-frontiers-4928095

Some quotes:



  • A person graduating from an educational experience must have his confidence improved.

  • Human Resources is like Natural Resources... Individuals have deep talents that are buried deep within their surface, educators need to mine them like other resources.

  • 3 Purposes to education: Personal (connect people to their own sense of possibility, give them sense of creativity, and give them self confidence), Cultural (enable identity, share the identity of other and tolerance) and Economic (must address economic needs and prepare for evolution, prepare ourselves to the challenges of economy.)

  • TV Program to watch: How Many People Can Live on Earth: if everybody consume food and water like a person in Botswana, Earth can handle a population of 15B, if we consume like someone in North America: 1.2B only.

  • HG Wells: civilization is a race between education and catastrophe.