1,682 research outputs found

    Peer Interview Script, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020

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    Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar

    In the Garden, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020

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    Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar

    Hall Street, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020

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    Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar

    Excerpts of Interviews with Peers, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020

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    Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar

    Developing flexible ecosystems for education that support student success:Project report

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    Part of the Collaborative Development Fund 2020-21, the Developing Flexible Ecosystems Project aims to examine whether the higher education sector is ready to operate as an eco-system of flexible learning opportunities. Led by Danielle Thibodeau and Janet De Wilde (Queen Mary Academy, Queen Mary, University of London), the project aims were to: - to review the higher education sector’s capacity for flexible provision. - to identify exemplars of the requisite infrastructure, strategies and enabling technologies that support equitable transitions through learning and work. - to identify priority areas to be addressed by Advance HE or providers

    How to write a novel - four fiction writers on Danielle Steel's insane working day

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    First paragraph: She might be the world’s most famous romance writer, nay the highest selling living author bar none, but there’s little room for flowers and chocolates in Danielle Steel’s writing regime. In a recent interview she laughed at the idea of young people insisting on a work-life balance, and has claimed she regularly writes for 20 to 22 hours a day, and sometimes 24. The result: 179 books in under 50 years, selling about 800m copies.https://theconversation.com/how-to-write-a-novel-four-fiction-writers-on-danielle-steels-insane-working-day-11715

    PKI Lab in the wild, Bolwell Edge Design Residency

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    BACKGROUND The work responds to calls for deeper understanding of critical design, and demonstrations of process that enable the crafting of open responsive research structures. It also responds to the challenge of illiciting authentic participant engagement when time is restrained. The research builds on previous research by Wilde, within the context of her doctorate, which won the Monash VC Medal for excellence in 2012, the inaugural Prime Minister's Australia Asia Endeavour Award, over 340,000worthoffundingawardsformAustraliaandinternationalscientificandculturalfundingagencies,aswellaswinninganepisodeoftheNewInventors.ItalsobuildsontheworkofDanielaRosner(UniversityofWashingtonTATLab):exploringtheintersectionofcraftandHCI,TonyDunneandFionaRaby(RCADesignInteractions;andDunneandRaby.co.uk):criticalandspeculativedesign,andBillGaver(GoldsmithsInteractionResearch):ambiguityandplayfulnessCONTRIBUTIONTheprojectdemonstratestheusefulnessofacoreprovocativequestiontoensuresaliencyofcriticaldesigns;thevalueofunresolvedprototypesinelicitingparticipantengagement;andcraftasmethod,techniqueandtooltoscaffoldanopen,responsiveresearchstructure.SIGNIFICANCEArtsVicCreativeDevelopmentfunding(340,000 worth of funding awards form Australia and international scientific and cultural funding agencies, as well as winning an episode of the New Inventors. It also builds on the work of Daniela Rosner (University of Washington TAT Lab): exploring the intersection of craft and HCI, Tony Dunne and Fiona Raby (RCA Design Interactions; and Dunne and Raby.co.uk): critical and speculative design, and Bill Gaver (Goldsmith's Interaction Research): ambiguity and playfulness CONTRIBUTION The project demonstrates the usefulness of a core provocative question to ensure saliency of critical designs; the value of unresolved prototypes in eliciting participant engagement; and craft as method, technique and tool to scaffold an open, responsive research structure. SIGNIFICANCE ArtsVic Creative Development funding (15,000, auspiced by Moriarty's Inc.) and Besen Family Foundation Creative Development Funding ($7,000 auspiced by Creative Partnerships Australia) both awarded to Danielle Wilde. In-kind support from Deakin University Motion.Lab, Wollmark Australia, Hong Kong, and others. Associated peer reviewed paper subsequently published at DIS, Designing Interactive Systems conference in June 2014 Curated by Simone Le Amon for inclusion in the Bolwell Edge Design Residency series for Melbourne Now, at the NGV International, 30/01/2014 - 2/02/2014 + an artist researcher talk delivered at NGVi, by Danielle Wilde on Wednesday 26/02/2014, also part of the NGV Melbourne Now Exhibitio

    Conversations with Danielle Cronin, Philip Howard and Julian Thomas

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    This chapter focuses on the expanding civic role and challenges for investigative journalists using digital and social media. The chapter includes conversations with Danielle Cronin (national deputy editor of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation), as well as Professor Philip Howard (director of the Oxford Internet Institute), along with Distinguished Professor Julian Thomas (director of the ARC Centre of Excellence at RMIT University). They share their insights into setting an agenda of priorities for research and practice about public interest journalism. This chapter is an edited transcription of their conversations with the author, Dr Caryn Coatney, for a panel session sponsored by the Australian and New Zealand Communication Association. - This chapter provides new material about the impact of social media, online audiences and automation on investigative journalism

    Adding Spice to the Slog: Humanities in Medical Training.

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    Writing from personal experience, physician and author Danielle Ofri asks what evidence is needed to justify trying to humanize medical training via the power of literature

    Exploring aesthetic enhancement of wearable technologies for deaf women

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    The Quietude project uses making, participation and co-design to collectively imagine a more sustainable, aesthetically enriched future for deaf women, by developing wearables that respond to the women's needs and desires: those that are well known, and those that may be only dimly glimpsed. We present our motivation and process, and describe our first workshop that brought together deaf women, ethicists, makers, designers and technology experts. The workshop led to the design and development of an ecology of jewellery products: fashionable accessories that enhance the experience of deaf women by translating sounds into vibration, light patterns and shape change. We reflect on the opportunities and challenges of developing aesthetically rich wearables for deaf women, using experimental participatory design methods, and the value of considering disability as an opportunity for wearables design, rather than as an issue that needs to be addressed or solved
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