Wednesday 10 October 2018

Dementia Experience


Earlier this year, I was fortunate enough to attend a Virtual Dementia Experience [1] arranged by The College of Human and Health Sciences.

Demo ALT Text
The Dementia Experience - https://www.training2care.co.uk/c/images/33/0292510001486398319.jpg

I have to admit, I originally signed up for it because I though it would be an immersive Virtual Reality environment using a headset like a Microsoft Hololens. I was a little surprised when I found out that there were no computers involved! Instead, I was given a lesson on how effectively the learning experience can be enhanced with comparatively "low tech" ingenuity.

In order to help us try to understand what it is like to live with dementia, the experience was focused around sensory deprivation. Inserts in my shoes made my feed ache, gloves decreased my manual dexterity, glasses restricted my field of vision, darkness and flashing lights caused disoriented and a headset provide a constant stream of distracting and alarming noise.

During the experience, I was asked to perform everyday tasks such as buttoning a shirt or sifting through some washing. The more I tried to do them, the more frustrating they became. By the end of the 20 minute session, I was confused and exhausted. It was a truly remarkable experience which has given me an increased empathy for dementia sufferers, their families and their carers. It was incredibly thought provoking and I can see how it will certainly contribute to the Dementia Tour's goals of "changing practice, reducing issues and improving lives".

If we could develop programmes across the University which provoke similar levels of empathy, engagement and inquiry, I think our learning and teaching would be enhanced greatly.

[1] https://www.training2care.co.uk/virtual-dementia-tour.htm

Friday 24 August 2018

Back to the Future...

https://pragmaticcoders.com/blog/change-organization-culture-three-steps/
So, it's been over 4 years since I posted to this blog and a lot has changed! Approximately 4 years ago, I became less of a Shambrarian [1] and more of a full time Software Developer with Swansea University. I still had some responsibility for library tech and software but more and more of my time was spent with software projects from across the whole University. I was still primarily a PHP developer but, thanks to some great opportunities, I was able to expand my knowledge to .NET, Angular 2 and the Microsoft stack. I learnt a lot more about project management, the processes which support software development and user experience and got to work with a very talented bunch of people.

If that was not change enough, in the last 18 months I have got engaged, got married, moved out of the family home, become a home owner, changed jobs and become a dad (Moses [2] O'Sullivan is due in December). My new job is in Technology Enhanced Learning (TEL) team in the Swansea Academy of Learning and Technology (SALT) [3] at Swansea University and I have a blog post there which details my first four months in the role [4].

So, why after all this time, have I revived this blog? Now that I will have teaching responsibilities, I need somewhere to reflect on best practice and pedagogy and this seemed to be a good place to start.

The good news is that I haven't left my Shambarian days completely behind; they have been essential in providing me with the tools and experience I needed to take up my current role. I've spoken to subject librarians in a professional capacity more in the last few months than I probably did in the preceeding 4 years. Once a Shambrarian, always a Shambrarian!

[1] See https://shambrarianknights.blogspot.com/2011/10/shambrarian-knights.html
[2] Not actual name
[3] https://salt.swan.ac.uk
[4] https://salt.swan.ac.uk/6494-2/