KMi Publications

External Publications

6 publications | Chris Valentine


Publications | Visit External Site for Details

Dovrolis, N., Stefanut, T., Dietze, S., Yu, H.Q., Valentine, C. and Kaldoudi, E. (2011) Semantic Annotation and Linking of Medical Educational Resources, 5th European Conference of the International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering (IFMBE MBEC), Budapest, Hungary

Publications | Visit External Site for Details

Kelley, P., Tindle, D., Anand, D., Whalley, P., Hogan, P., Valentine, C., Pillinger, P., Gibson, E. and Schwenzer, S. (2011) The Open University-NASA Apollo Virtual Microscope - a tool for Education and Outreach, Poster at 42nd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, The Woodlands, Texas, USA

Publications | Visit External Site for Details Publications | Visit External Site for Details

Wild, F., Valentine, C. and Scott, P. (2010) Shifting Interests: Changes in the Lexical Semantics of ED-MEDIA, International Journal on E-Learning, Chesapeake, VA, 9, 4, pp. 549-562, AACE

Publications | Visit External Site for Details

Davies, S., Collins, T., Gaved, M., , J., Valentine, C. and McCann, L. (2010) Enabling remote activity: using mobile technology for remote participation in geoscience fieldwork, Proc. European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2010 (EGU 2010), Vienna, Austria

Publications | Visit External Site for Details Publications | Visit External Site for Details Publications | doi

Comas-Quinn, A., Mardomingo, R. and Valentine, C. (2009) Mobile blogs in language learning: making the most of informal and situated learning opportunities, ReCALL, 21, 1, pp. 96-112, European Association for Computer Assisted Language Learning

Publications | Visit External Site for Details

Gaved, M., Collins, T., Bartlett, J., Davies, S., Valentine, C., McCann, L. and Wright, M. (2008) ERA: On-the-fly networking for collaborative geology fieldwork, The Proceedings of the 7th World Conference on Mobile and Contextual Learning (mLearn-2008), Telford, Shropshire, UK

 
 
 

New Media Systems is...


Our New Media Systems research theme aims to show how new media devices, standards, architectures and concepts can change the nature of learning.

Our work involves the development of short life-cycle working prototypes of innovative technologies or concepts that we believe will influence the future of open learning within a 3-5 year timescale. Each new media concept is built into a working prototype of how the innovation may change a target community. The working prototypes are all available (in some form) from this website.

Our prototypes themselves are not designed solely for traditional Open Learning, but include a remit to show how that innovation can and will change learning at all levels and in all forms; in education, at work and play.