Integrated framework for Person and Professional Growth
Slides from the presentation (.pdf file):
Stricker-Integrated-Framework-Personal-Professional-Growth-2Oct2024
This presentation addresses the design and development of an integrated framework and immersive 3D simulation, making use of the ‘Life Worth Living’ model (taught at Yale University) with Montana ‘Bitterroot’ Salish, Hopi, and Navajo concepts, for helping to guide meaningful personal and professional growth.
This presentation addresses the design and development of an integrated framework and simulation, making use of the ‘Life Worth Living’ model (taught at Yale University) with Montana ‘Bitterroot’ Salish, Hopi, and Navajo concepts, for helping to guide meaningful personal and professional growth. Three deictic categories are applied in the design framework of an immersive 3D interactive simulation: personal deixis (I, you, we), spatial deixis (this, that, here, there), and temporal deixis (yesterday, now, tomorrow). Each deixis is represented in the integrated framework and companion simulation (conveyed using audio recordings of representative words from spoken ‘Montana Salish’). Temporal and discourse deictics help to introduce and contextualized Native American concepts applied in the integrated framework. The integrated framework makes use of features from the ‘Life Worth Living’ model, offered by Miroslav Volf (Henry B. Wright Professor of Theology, Yale Divinity School), with Native American concepts: Hopi ‘Koyaanisqatsi’, Navajo ‘Four Worlds’, and Sacred Hoop.
Speakers
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Andrew Stricker / Spinoza Quinnell (Poster Booth #3)
Andrew Stricker serves as an innovation and strategy analyst for LeMay Center at Air University. Previously, Dr. Stricker served Vanderbilt University as associate provost for innovation through technology. He has also served 27 years as an Air Force officer and scientist specializing in learning sciences and human-factors engineering. His research is focused on modeling adaptive expertise and the design of learning technologies. His graduate work was conducted at Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas and Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
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Cynthia Calongne / Lyr Lobo (Poster Booth #3)OSCC Co-Chair, Professor
Lyr is a Professor Emerita at Colorado Technical University, where she teaches doctoral AI classes and since 2005, 62 classes held in virtual worlds. A $25,000 Grand Prize winner for the Mars space simulation, she tests game simulations at Virtual Harmony. Lyr volunteers for AvaCon as a research scientist and is co-chair of the OSCC Organizing Committee
https://www.slideshare.net/lyrlobo/presentations
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JJ Jacobson / JJ Drinkwater (Poster Booth #3)Sci-Fi Librarian
JJ Drinkwater is a Virtual Librarian in a Real World, or a Real Librarian in a Virtual World, or both, or neither. Curatorial experience includes the real & imaginary 19th c, American Culinary History, and Speculative Fiction. Current research is Interactive/Immersive/Improvisatory Narrative in Virtual Environments.
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Francisca Yonekura / Frankie Antonelli (Poster Booth #3)
Frankie comes from the higher education world where she specializes in instructional systems and emerging technologies in support of learning. Frankie is also known to be a curious traveler immersed in virtual worlds for empowering learning experiences in the company of kindred spirits.