Giving lectures on code is pretty tedious for both students and staff and it occured to me that more interactivity is required. So I wondered if I could liven up my JavaScript lectures by using Firebug’s JavaScript console. As you can see from this quick “proof of concept” video that I made with Screenr, it might just work (and will require little extra effort on my part). I’ll blog again about how it went!
About Me
Swansea University lecturer. Web enthusiast; dabbler in software engineering and control systems; PLENK2010 ds106 and cck11 participant; EG-353 coordinator. Squirrel and meerkat.
Archives
Categories
- 366 things (1)
- bbc (18)
- blog (14)
- blogging (10)
- cck11 (2)
- courses (9)
- e-learning (5)
- eg-153 (2)
- eg-253 (1)
- eg-259 (3)
- free time (2)
- history (3)
- ideas (1)
- inspiration (3)
- learning (2)
- music (1)
- personal development (1)
- photography (1)
- plenk2010 (17)
- podcasts (9)
- programming (9)
- research (10)
- screencasting (5)
- social media (2)
- social networks (7)
- teaching (24)
- tools (15)
- Uncategorized (147)
- web applications (12)
- webapp (1)
Tags
bbc blackboard blogging blogs ds106 e-learning education firefox google Google I/O guardian heroes history html5 java javascript jvm learning technology mathematics mobile mylifeonline news open source photography ple plenk2010 podcasts projects python recommendations reflection rss screencasting sharing social networking social networks tagging technology tips video videos web2.0 web applications wikis youtubeBlogroll
Links






