Monthly Archives: June 2013

Teaching horses to talk

I am reading William Bowen’s neat (in a number of senses) new book on the economics of elearning: Higher Education in the Digital Age. It is a highly accessible book on a very opaque subject – sometimes you feel the … Continue reading

Posted in digital scholarship, elearning, the economics of things, the trouble with technology | Leave a comment

Celebration of deeds not words

The centenary of the death of Emily Wilding Davison, who was fatally injured apparently trying to attach a suffrage banner to the Kings horse running  the Darby at Epsom, seems to have captured the imagination of the press this year … Continue reading

Posted in blogademia, education policy, techno-feminist perspectives | Leave a comment