To hell with mass media. Journalism, properly conceived, is a service, not a content factory. As such, news must be built on relationships with individuals a...
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To hell with mass media. Journalism, properly conceived, is a service, not a content factory. As such, news must be built on relationships with individuals a...
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🤯 Quel(s) outils pour mener des activités de #veille et d’analyse stratégique ?
Nous rêvons (tous) de l’outil parfait qui nous permettrait de tout…
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Nathan Heller on the Order of the Third Bird, a secret society that includes writers and artists, many of whom have spawned new initiatives like the Strother School of Radical Attention, which offers an education against the distractions of apps, digital ads, and shorter attention spans.
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Si vous êtes à la recherche d’outils pratiques et gratuits pour créer des vidéos et les partager avec les élèves, vous pouvez essayer neetoRecord. C’est
Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Les outils du Web 2.0 |
Découvrez Pairdrop, un outil gratuit open source pour transférer des fichiers facilement entre appareils. Simple, rapide et sécurisé, sans installation.
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By Sarah Cummings PhD, Elisa Morgera PhD, Josefina Ashipala, and Angus Mackay. I've been using the learning resources to be able to empower my communi
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🌳 🤩 Magnifique ! L'ONF (Office National des Forêts) a publié une carte interactive avec une sélection de 30 forêts exceptionnelles à découvrir en France…
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Aujourd'hui, je vous parle d'une application de l'intelligence artificielle et plus spécifiquement, des modèles de langues et de l'IA générative, qui est en train de prendre pas mal d'essor en ce moment : le RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation). Vous n'en avez jamais entendu parler ? Restez branchés, car le RAG pourrait bien rentrer rapidement dans…
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Découvrez Jami, une solution open-source de visioconférence. Une alternative fiable à Zoom et autres Teams.
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Cet atlas vous présente des observations réalisées dans le cadre de différents protocoles scientifiques. Il ne s'agit pas d'un inventaire exhaustif ni d'une répartition complète des espèces sur le territoire.
Fiches espèces
Retrouvez la fiche de chaque espèce avec leur carte des observations, leur répartition altitudinale et mensuelle, ainsi que des descriptions, photos, vidéos, audios et liens complémentaires
Fiches communes
Découvrez les espèces observées sur chaque commune du parc national et affichez leurs observations sur la carte de la commune.
Galerie photos
Découvrez les photographies des différentes espèces, réalisées principalement par les agents du Parc national lors de leurs missions sur le terrain.
Faune
Une biodiversité pléthorique !
La faune du Parc national est extrêmement diversifiée. Plus de 2 400 espèces ont été répertoriées. On y trouve des espèces aussi bien méditerranéennes que continentales ou alpines ; forestières, steppiques, rupestres ou liées aux milieux humides.
La richesse de la faune du Parc national est caractérisée par la présence de 70 espèces de mammifères (sur 135 en France), 195 espèces d’oiseaux (dont 135 nicheuses), 16 espèces d’amphibiens, 15 espèces de reptiles, 23 espèces de poissons et plus de 2 000 espèces d’invertébrés (dont 1 824 d’insectes).
62 748
observations
2 503
espèces
240
observateurs
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Le Parc national des Cévennes, en collaboration avec ses partenaires, a mené deux études pour évaluer l'impact de la pollution lumineuse sur les insectes nocturnes.
La première étude, menée sur le causse Méjean, a comparé l’effet de deux types de luminaires LED : 1 800 K (température de couleur chaude) et 3 000 K (température de couleur froide) sur les insectes nocturnes. Les résultats indiquent une nette différence d’attractivité entre les deux types de luminaires : les lampes 1 800 K attirent en moyenne 30 % d’insectes en moins que les 3 000 K.
La seconde étude, réalisée en milieu urbain dans la « Capitale » des Cévennes, à Alès, a comparé l’impact de l’extinction de l’éclairage public en cœur de nuit (entre minuit et 6h) à une simple diminution de l’intensité lumineuse. Les résultats sont sans appel : l’extinction permet de réduire de 83 % le nombre d’insectes capturés.
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NDÉ
Réserve internationale de ciel étoilé
[Image] Petit Paon de nuit - Jean-Pierre Malafosse - PNC
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Google est si puissant qu’il nous « cache » les autres systèmes de recherche. Nous ne connaissons tout simplement pas l’existence de la plupart d’entre eux. Pendant ce temps, il existe encore dans le monde un grand nombre d’excellents chercheurs spécialisés dans les livres, la science et d’autres...
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Les affordances de l'intelligence artificielle en classe sont certes innombrables et discutables. Cependant, certaines suggestions de Ferlazzo
et Sypnieski…
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🎓 Step into the world of education modes with our latest video! From traditional regular classes to innovative online and blended learning, we unravel the intricacies of each mode. Discover the benefits and challenges of Regular, Open, Distance & Online, and Blended Learning approaches. Join us in exploring the future of education! 🌐 #EducationModes #OnlineLearning #BlendedLearning #DistanceEducation #OpenEducation #RegularEducation
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Thumbnail 1: Image showcasing students in a traditional classroom setting.
Thumbnail 2: Visual representation of various education modes with icons (e.g., classroom, computer, books).
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#EducationModes #OnlineLearning #BlendedLearning #DistanceEducation #OpenEducation #RegularEducation
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Modes of Education, Regular Education, Open Education, Distance Education, Online Learning, Blended Learning, Traditional Education, Innovative Learning, Educational Technology
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A Library Science Talk from 25 March 2024 featuring Dobrica Savić (former Head of the Nuclear Information Section, IAEA)
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Localtis : Une étude de France festivals met en lumière les caractéristiques des festivals organisés dans les territoires ruraux. Ils se distinguent par leur temporalité, leur budget mais aussi par les équipes qui les portent et leurs ambitions.
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Nick Covington & Michael Weingarth call for a moratorium on using "The Science of Learning" to describe one aspect of how the brain works in relation to the multiple goals of school. Published by Human Restoration Project, a 501(c)3 organization restoring humanity to education.
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Moteur de recherche des thèses françaises, theses.fr propose l’accès aux thèses de doctorat soutenues ou en préparation.
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I posted on social media about whether or not men feel seen, heard and supported. Or more to the poi
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Last year, 10,000 sham papers had to be retracted by academic journals, but experts think this is just the tip of the iceberg
At the recent International Journalism Festival in Perugia, Italy, Jeff Jarvis, Professor of Journalism at CUNY, gave a keynote speech that provides valuable insight and advice as to where the future of news and journalism are headed.
While the full keynote and the Q&A with the audience is recorded in full in this 55' mins long video, I have summarised here below his key points and takeaways, so that you can get at least a good basic idea of his viewpoints in under 3 mins.
The value of this keynote for content curators is the fact that Jeff Jarvis highlights and validates a process, mission and approach where the ability to collect, vet and curate information, resources and tools, to satisfy a specific need, is going to take a much more central and important role in the development of new forms journalism and in the evolution of the business models that will support it.
Jeff Jarvis' Key 15 Takeaways on the Future of Journalism:
1. Mass audiences don't exist.
This is just a way to look at people that served the mass media industry model.
2. Journalism is in the service business.
We must fundamentally rethink the way we produce the news, so that they actually serve specific people needs.
3. Journalism needs to specialise.
Do what you do best and link to the rest.
4. Relationships and listening
Need to listen and create relationships with their community
Need to understand what the problems and needs and intercept them
5. Journalists need to become community advocates
Need to change how we evaluate waht we do as journalists
Must help people to make sense
6. Community.
Move from media-centric to community-centric
Go to the community first, to observe, to ask and listen, before creating content that serve their needs
7. Membership.
This is not about subscriptions.
It is about collaboration and what we do with the community we serve.
People don't want to belong to a media organisation.
People want to be part of true passionate communities.
Community can contribute: Content, effort, marketing, resources, ideas, feedback, customer assistance, etc.
8. Beyond articles.
Continuous live blogging, tweeting, data, etc.
There a lot more formats that can be used to create valuable content.
9. Mobile is not about content delivery.
Mobile is about use cases
re-organise the news around the public specific needs we would create higher value that by following our own production cycle.
What about if we broke up news in hundreds of different use cases that specifically apply to mobile?
For example: give me all the world news that count in 2 mins.
Or: I want to know everything that happens about this story, in real-time
or: I want to connect with members of my community and accomplish something
10. We've to re-invent TV news
TV news sucks.
There is a lot of untapped tech that we can use.
Great opportunities to do better.
11. Business Models - Digital first
Every journalist is fully digital.
Print comes after digital.
Print no longer rules the culture of a newspaper.
12. The traditional (ad-based) mass media business model kills journalism.
By importing the old business model of mass media onto the Internet, with reach and frequency, mass, scale, volume, we have corrupted journalism.
Clicks will inevitably lead to cats.
If your goal is more clicks you will put up more cats.
We have to move past volume, to value.
We need give more relevance to our readers.
And we can do so only if we get to know them as individual members of a true communities.
13. Paywalls are not the way to go.
The idea of selling content online doesn't work very well. Unless you are Bloomberg or someone who sells information that is very fresh and valuable for a specific need.
14. Native advertising is not going to save us.
Rather, with it, we may giving up our true last values, as our own voices, authority and our ability to tell a story. If we fool our readers into thinking that native advertising comes from the same people who gives them the news, we have given up our last asset. Credibility.
15. Rethink the metrics.
Views, clicks, likes are no longer appropriate.
Attention is a better metric. (see Chartbeat).
The metric that is count to count most is going to be more qualitative than quantitative and it is going to be about whether we are valuable in people's lives. I don't know how to measure that, but we need to find out how to do it.
My comment: This is a must-watch video for any journalist seriously interested in getting a better feel for the direction and focus that news and journalism will take.
Insightful. 10/10
Original video: https://youtu.be/RsPvnVeo1G0
(55':30")
Keynote: 0:00 to 29:43
Audience Q&A: 30:00 to 55:30