Today, if you’re not staying current with Web 2.0 technologies’ impact on business, then you’re just not staying current. Period.
I think the same rule applies to teaching as well. What do you think?
The Official Website of Laremy Lee (李庭辉)
Today, if you’re not staying current with Web 2.0 technologies’ impact on business, then you’re just not staying current. Period.
I think the same rule applies to teaching as well. What do you think?
Also, I’ve realised from this:
…the fact that they don’t think of gameplay as training is crucial. Once the experience is explicitly educational, it becomes about developing compartmentalized skills and loses its power to permeate the player’s behavior patterns and worldview. (Brown and Thomas, 2006)
that it’d be good to start thinking about how to get students to similarly stop thinking about curriculum lessons as ‘training’, but rather, as something they enjoy, much like ‘gameplay’, in order that they may also learn at the same rate as game players.
I checked my mobile phone after coming out from the shower, and was very surprised to see that I had received two text messages.
Who would text me at this hour, I wondered. (More accurately, Is it from a secret admirer! was my more hopeful but ultimately wishful thought.)
Nevertheless, I was curious so I opened the first message. To my amazement, it read:
In between two podiums. Near to (sic) the gal’s podium. -jun liang.
Huh! I exclaimed to myself, while Leon ruminated thoughtfully over math questions. Who is this Jun Liang, and why is he texting me!
My curiosity piqued, I opened the second text message, which to my amusement this time, read:
We’re at the bar next to the toilet
Because I am so intelligent and clever, I very quickly put two and two together – while Leon algebrated his math problems – and deduced that: Ah ha! It’s Wed nite/Thu morning, so Jun Liang is Mambo-ing at Zouk, and he is texting someone his location so that said someone will know where to find him.
However, I don’t know Jun Liang, and I don’t think Jun Liang knows me – I don’t have his number in my phone book, and I don’t know (m)any Jun Liangs anyway, so I suspect he typed the number out in a drunken (not violet) but very frenzied haze and sent the messages to me, the unintended recipient.
Because I am so easily amused, I laughed to myself (not out loud, mind you, because Leon was busy numerating the denominator) at the absurdity of the situation.
But because I am also very imaginative, I immediately started worrying: Oh no! What if Jun Liang (my new-found friend) intended the text message for a GIRL? And what if she doesn’t receive the messages? Will she ever be able to find him?
Quickly, because I am a quick person, I typed out this reply to Jun Liang:
You’re msging the wrong person dude! But I hope you get some tonight! Don’t be scared, just whack, if you don’t try you’ll never know!
Satisfied that I had managed to avert yet another national disaster, I walked over to Leon and very proudly told him what I had done.
However, he grunted at me and asked me to help him with his math problem.
Silence.
I hope Jun Liang gets some tonight.
P.S. If you are Jun Liang and you read this, please let me know if you got some and I will declare the next day a public holiday for everyone!