Its worth pointing out, to those that are unawares, MindGenius (http://www.mindgenius.com/), a windows based mind mapping software, is available free of charge to all higher and further education sites under the CHEST licence scheme. Details of the licence can be found here: http://www.eduserv.org.uk/chest/software/mindgenius/overview.html Your learning support staff members are likely to have heard of the package, and would be likely to find it useful for a variety of student support. On 16 Sep 2004 at 11:34, M.Blackmore wrote: Mindmapping now available on OSS. Well, supposedly. 'Cos I've not played with it and don't have any particular reason to do so now that I've given up (forced into retirement for health reasons and family care) my academic pretensions. But when I was doing thesis and journal articles etc. this sort of mindmapping s/w was HUGELY useful to a "scruffy and baroque" thinker such as myself: http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=04/09/10/1946203 I think this is actually an important development for linux as desktop tool for punters, especially for open educational access where people are weak in traditional educational skills due to lack of schooling in formal ways (as a working class youth of my generation I count myself in this category - had to leave school early to bring in necessary family income, self-educated to university level - and still the first from my area to make uni level education - but never acquired many of the skills of "study" which always made things hard, particularly at postgrad level). The availability of mindmapping techniques for organising thoughts for the "ill-educated" is an important part of creating opportunities - e.g. subsistence peasants putting together a legal brief using the village linux box against a local landowners land grab, where organising the thoughts, information and dependencies of argument can be a horrifying task to even highly intelligent individuals unschooled in the mental techniques and disciplines that enable this sort of writ. But even in ordinary circumstances I can't recommend this sort of thing enough to people doing complex writing, I first came across it as Tony Buzan's Tools for Thinking in the early/mid 70s, although the reams of spider-webbed foolscap sheets all over the study floor did get overwhelming in longer writings! However, this sort of thing does seem to be a love it or hate it relationship. I love it. If anyone has a need to use this in earnest, be nice to see a feedback. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: suse-linux-uk-schools-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands, e-mail: suse-linux-uk-schools-help@suse.com ----- Paul Graydon Network Technician Haywards Heath College http://www.hhc.ac.uk (01444) 456281 In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends. - Martin Luther King Jr. (1929 - 1968)