Learn By Doing

A Lifelong Learner Shares Thoughts About Education

  • Centre for Teaching Excellence
    Loving to Learn Day: February 15, 2008

    Loving to Learn Day is an opportunity for everyone and anyone to share their reflections about their love of learning.

    First established at the University of Waterloo in 2006, Loving to Learn Day quickly caught on at other institutions such as the University of Manitoba.

    This year, the organizers of Loving to Learn Day (which occurs on February 15, the day after Valentine’s) invite you to write a paragraph describing the one thing you’ve been most glad to learn over the past year, and why. It might relate to a class you’ve taken, a book you’ve read, a kernel of wisdom you’ve acquired from a grandparent, a hard-won insight into yourself or a relationship, something you noticed or realized as you were walking down the street – anything is valid, as long as you loved to learn it, and as long as you explain why.

    Your paragraph can be as short as 75 words or as long as 300. We’ll read them all, publish a bunch of them on this website on February 15, and award a book prize to the best submission in four different categories.

    The categories are as follows:

    1. Submissions written by members of a university or college community (that is, anyone who studies, teaches, or works at a post-secondary institution);
    2. Submissions written by anyone in the community at large (that is, any adult not currently connected with a post-secondary institution);
    3. Submissions written by high school students;
    4. Submissions written by students in elementary school or junior high.

    Email your entry by Wednesday, February 13 to mmorton@uwaterloo.ca . Be sure to include your full name and the category to which you belong.

    Prizes have been sponsored in part by the University of Waterloo Bookstore.

  • Steven Poole: Goodbye, cruel Word

  • Department of Health Services: Student Development
    Workshop Information
    Purpose:
    The HServ Student Development Workshop program offers short workshops to assist students in developing the computer and Internet skills required for many classes in their programs.

    Workshops are offered at various times during the school year. These workshops cannot substitute for in-depth study or experience but serve as introductions to skills students can further develop.

  • 20+ Tools For Creating Your Own Games

    January 4, 2008 — 05:36 AM PST — by Sean P. Aune — From Mashable.com

    We all play games, but not many of us have tried to actually create
    games. Have you been scared due to all the programming knowledge you
    think it takes? Well, thanks to the wonders of the web, now there are
    numerous tools that enable almost anyone to create a video game. You
    can give it a try using the 20+ tools we gathered!

    Flash Based

      sploder.com

    AlbinoBlackSheep.com – Hosts lots of games and videos, features tutorials on working with Flash.

    FlashKit.com – Numerous tutorials for working with Flash including step-by-step guides for certain types of games.

    Kirupa.com – Extensive collection of tutorials for Flash including guides for specific types of games such as shooters.

    Lassie Adventure Studio – A 2d creation image with the feel of the old style Lucasarts games.

    Sploder.com – Create a Flash game from a wide range of objects and then embed it into your MySpace, Blogger, and more sites.

    General Sites & Resources

      YoYoGames

    Anim8or.com – A 3d modeling animation system.

    byond.com – Create your own games with their tools, host them on the site, let thousands of people play.

    GameDiscovery.com – Everything you need to create a game including a pool of ideas submitted by users.

    Martin Piecyk’s Website – A guide to learning how to make games with links to numerous resources.

    VGMusic.com – A gigantic
    archive of video game midi files that, after asking permission from the
    people who made the files, you could possibly use in your own freeware
    games.

    Visionaire2d.net – An engine to make 2d adventure games with no programming language knowledge required.

    YoYoGames.com – Provides game making tools, beta testing, downloads, works in progress, a community and more.

    RPG Makers

      Eclipse

    Charas-Project.net – A character generator for use with RPG Maker.

    CrankEye.com – Lots of resources for RPG Maker including character editors, soundfiles and more.

    DualSolace.com – Home of the RealFeel 2D MMORPG making software.

    FreeMMORPGMaker.com – Home of the Eclipse MMORPG software and also includes many resources for your games such as sprites and sounds.

    PhanxGames.com – RPG making resources such as graphics, midis, and wave files. Able to upload games up to 50mb in size.

    PlayerWorlds.com – A popular system for crating MMORPGs.

    RPG Maker – Home of the series of the RPG Maker series of programs.

    RPGCrisis.net – Downloads and tools for various RPG engines.

    RPGRevolution.com – Tools and utilities for 13 different game making engines.

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  • Top 10 Obscure Google Search Tricks

    googletricks-header.png
    When it comes to the Google search box, you already know the tricks: finding exact phrases matches using quotes like "so say we all" or searching a single site using site:lifehacker.com gmail.
    But there are many more oblique, clever, and lesser-known search
    recipes and operators that work from that unassuming little input box.
    Dozens of Google search guides detail the tips you already know, but
    today we’re skipping the obvious and highlighting our favorite obscure
    Google web search tricks.

    10. Get the local time anywhere

    goog-whattimeisit.png
    What time is it in Bangkok right now? Ask Google. Enter simply what time is it to get the local time in big cities around the world, or add the locale at the end of your query, like what time is it hong kong to get the local time there.

    9. Track flight status


    Enter the airline and flight number into the Google search box and get
    back the arrival and departure times right inside Google’s search
    results.

    8. Convert currency, metrics, bytes, and more

    goog-currencyconvert.png
    Google’s powerful built-in converter calculator can help you out
    whether you’re cooking dinner, traveling abroad, or building a PC. Find
    out how many teaspoons are in a quarter cup (quarter cup in teaspoons) or how many seconds there are in a year (seconds in a year) or how many euros there are to five dollars (5 USD in Euro). For the geekier set, bits in kilobytes (155473 bytes in kilobytes) and numbers in hex or binary (19 in binary) are also pretty useful.

    7. Compare items with “better than” and find similar items with “reminds me of”

    goog-betterthan.png Reader Adam taps the wisdom of the crowds by searching for like items using key phrases. He writes in:

    Simply search for, in quotes: “better than _keyword_”

    Some example results:

    Results 1 – 100 of about 550 English pages for ” better than WinAmp”.

    Results 1 – 57 of 57 English pages for ” better than mIRC”.

    Results 1 – 100 of about 17,500 English pages for ” better than Digg”. (Wow. Poor Digg.)

    The results will almost always lead you to discovering alternatives
    to whatever it is you’re searching for. Using the same concept, you can
    use this trick to discover new music or movies. For example, ” reminds
    me of _someband_” or “sounds like _someband_” will pull up artists
    people have thought sounded similar to the one you typed in. This is
    also a great way to find good, no-name musicians you’d probably never
    know of otherwise.

    Examples:

    Results 1 – 88 of 88 English pages for ” reminds me of Metallica”.

    Results 1 – 36 of 36 English pages for ” similar to Garden State”.

    Results 1 – 66 of 66 English pages for ” sounds like The Shins”.

    Just get creative and you’ll, without a doubt, find cool new stuff you probably never knew existed.

    6. Use Google as a free proxy

    goog-cache.png What, your company blocks that hip new web site
    just because it drops the F bomb occasionally? Use Google’s cache to
    take a peek even when the originating site’s being blocked, with cache:example.com.

    5. Remove affiliate links from product searches

    When you’re sick of seeing duplicate product search results from the
    likes of eBay, Bizrate, Pricerunner, and Shopping.com, clear ’em out by
    stacking up the -site:ebay.com -site:bizrate.com -site:shopping.com operator. Alternately, check out Give Me Back My Google (original post), a service that does all that known reseller cleaning up for you when you search for products. Compare this GMBMG search for a Cruzer 1GB flash drive to the regular Google results.

    4. Find related terms and documents

    Ok, this one’s direct from any straight-up advanced search operator cheat sheet, but it’s still one of the lesser-used tricks in the book. Adding a tilde (~) to a search term will return related terms. For example, Googling ~nutrition returns results with the words nutrition, food, and health in them.

    3. Find music and comic books

    google-napster.png
    Using a combination of advanced search operators that specify music
    files available in an Apache directory listing, you can turn Google
    into your personal Napster. Go ahead, try this search for Nirvana
    tracks: -inurl:(htm|html|php) intitle:"index of" +"last modified" +"parent directory" +description +size +(wma|mp3) "Nirvana".
    (Sub out Nirvana for the band you’re interested in; use this one in
    conjunction with number 7 to find new music, too.) The same type of
    search recipe can find comic books as well.

    2. ID people, objects, and foreign language words and phrases with Google Image Search

    google-img-search.png
    Google Image search results show you instead of tell you about a word.
    Don’t know what jicama looks like? Not sure if the person named “Priti”
    who you’re emailing with is a woman or a man? Spanish rusty and you
    forgot what “corazon” is? Pop your term into Google Image Search (or type image jicama into the regular search box) to see what your term’s about.

    1. Make Google recognize faces

    google-face-recogniton_sm.png
    If you’re doing an image search for Paris Hilton and don’t want any of
    the French city, a special URL parameter in Google’s Image search will
    do the trick. Add &imgtype=face to the end of your image search to just get images of faces, without any inanimate objects. Try it out with a search for rose (which returns many photos of flowers) versus rose with the face parameter.

    What’s your favorite ninja Google search technique? Tell us about it in the comments.

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