Friday, May 20, 2011

WEB 2.0 TRAINING AND THE END OF DAYS


No doubt, the training on Web 2.0 and its vast opportunities has come and gone with all its thrills. One thing, however, that most (if not all) of us learnt during that period is that ‘no matter how much we had thought we knew of the Internet before the training, we were dwarfed and, indeed, awed by the tremendous show of Web 2.0 knowledge and skills by the resource persons (Johnson Opigo and Bunmi Aregbe); the magnanimity of the organizers and hosts (CTA and NAERLS); and, of course, the humility of the course coordinator (Professor TJ Arokoyo). There was also the feeling of the coordinating presence of Rodger Obubo (CTA’s training programme manager) all the way from the Netherlands. Thank you, Dr Obubo, for being there for us.

Moreover, one other thing stood out: the maturity of all the participants (which comprised university professors, doctors, research institute administrators, systems analysts, web and ICT officers, etc). Most of us are used to being frequently disturbed by the crazy tunes of phones (calling), I-am-bigger-than-thou attitude, disregard for authority, etc at such training venues. The course content ( the highly resourceful google packages, drop box application, image resizers, etc) caught everybody’s attention from day one, so much so that at the end of the training, we were all asking for more. A lot of the participants even observed that the training should have run for a 2-week period.
Having said this much, I would like to remind everyone that this training is meant to be replicated in our different organizations; for it is only through this that we can actually maximize the knowledge gained. Besides, to achieve effective remote collaboration, we must first kick-start the sensitization and education process among our colleagues in other organizations and locations. I am sure that with such post-training efforts, the investment and confidence reposed on us by CTA, NAERLS and our various organizations will yield positive results.
Meanwhile, I look forward to good collaboration activities with you all.

Now, on a lighter mood; and the second part of the title. We have also heard, even at the training ground, that the world will end on 21 May 2011. Perhaps that explains why we had to conclude the training on 20 May—to allow enough room for participants to prepare for this END. 
 And as May 21 approaches, and the volume of chatter increases, I am particularly getting curious, especially as to how exactly it will end. The New York magazine interviewed one of the folks who said the world would end tomorrow and, unlike most prophets of doom, he was quite specific. Hear what he had to say:
[W]hen we get to May 21 on the calendar in any city or country in the world, and the clock says about — this is based on other verses in the Bible — when the clock says about 6 p.m., there’s going to be this tremendous earthquake that’s going to make the last earthquake in Japan seem like nothing in comparison. And the whole world will be alerted that Judgment Day has begun.
         Now, I know that one of the Web 2.0 participants (name withheld for obvious reasons) would raise questions here about Daylight Saving, etc. mainly for the mere reason of showing some superior thinking or argument. But suffice it to state that God has long figured such issues out; and of course, we will worry about that later. For now, we will just start the clock running. And, hey, who cares! Now that we are armed with Web 2.0 tools, thanks to CTA and NAERLS, we have all the capacity to collaborate remotely, whether here or in the hereafter.
May I use this opportunity to thank CTA, NAERLS (and its executive director, Professor SZ Abubakar), Professor TJ Arokoyo, Johnson Opigo, Bunmi Aregbe, all the training participants for the great success of the training. It shall be bounty harvest in the overall interest of agricultural development in Nigeria, in particular, and Africa, as a whole.

Google Doc Rocks!

Appreciation

Thanks for the organizing this workshop for me. it has been a challenging exercise but interesting training to improve my efficiency in the areas of interest. This is an eye opener to see the whole world as global village. Kudos to CTA

I AM GREATLY IMPRESSED


I count it a great opportunity personally for me to be among the beneficiaries of WEB 2.0 Training ( a fast growing avenue that provide the conglomeration of many web/internet tools) for the purpose of information gathering, dissemination and possible publishing. I cannot thank enough the organizers (CTA and NAERLS) and the team of Resource persons (Professor Arokoyo, Mr. Johnson Opigo and Mr. Aregbe B. Ezekiel) for their commendable instructions and guidance during the training session for one week. I say Kudos to my fellow trainees for their cooperation too. See you more on the Web 2.0 platform.....

Gratitude to the organizers and sponsors.

I want to thank you for the unique privilege to attend this workshop. Although the content of the course looked simple but very huge and tasking. I will have to continue building on the foundation for web2.0 you have masterly imparted to this group. There is no enough word to thank you.
Please accept my gratitude once more.

my view about web 2.0

I must say that this training has given me the opportunity to understand what web 2.0 means and how it operates and use for, am really very grateful to the organizers of this training

The Training on web 2 for zaria

The training will be very useful to me. I can carry out my official duty better and within a comfortable time line. Also useful in my personal endeavour in the area of my PhD research.
I thank CTA and NEARLS for organising the training.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Welcome Zaria!

It gives me great pleasure to extend a warm welcome to all of you. On behalf of my colleague facilitator Mr. Ezekiel Aregbe,  I wish to thank the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) for organising this course in Zaria, a town renowned for hosting one of Nigeria's prestigious universities - the Ahmadu Bello University. 


One of the defining characteristics of the 21st century is the globalisation and democratisation of Information. The world is fast shrinking. Some say it has become a global village. But in the wake of dramatic advances in technological innovation, it is fast becoming a global hamlet. Not only are we able to send static email and pictures, we are even able to ‘see’ and know the (dynamic) thoughts of another person half way across the world in an instant – in micro seconds, through micro blogging. Such is the power of user-generated content. Such is the power of Web 2.0! For us to contribute meaningfully to the growth of our organisations and the larger society with its myriads of developmental challenges, we must as 21st century citizens, key in to this information revolution. It is for this reason that CTA is organising this Web 2.0 training workshop. 


You have been selected to participate with the hope that you will in turn train others in your department, home and neighbourhood knowing that sustainable development can be achieved by sharing knowledge. Sharing is at the heart of Web 2.0 and you will be doing great injustice to the philosophy behind this workshop by hoarding any information that you take from here.

We believe this workshop will be an opportunity for all participants to improve and radically change the way they work and collaborate. The significance of holding this workshop in a university environment is not lost on us being as it were, a tertiary institution where research is done as a matter of course. We shall therefore be delivering into your hands tools that will help in your research and collaboration efforts. Use them well, use them wisely.


Once again, you are most welcome. Thank you.


Johnson Opigo
Lead Trainer/Course Director