Who We Are
The SLENZ Team
Joint Project Leader: Terry Neal (SL: Tere Tinkle)


Terry is an experienced project manager who managed collaborative e-learning projects for institutes of technology and polytechnics (ITPs) for four years before establishing the consultancy, Blended Solutions, in August, 2007. Terrys projects have included building e-learning capability in ITPs and understanding how using technology in teaching and learning could better support Maori and Pacific learners. She also won a Flexible Learning Leaders award to visit international examples of institutions working together for flexible learning. She recently led a national assessment of e-learning capability for the Tertiary Education Commission and is working with government on an e-learning communication project. Terry is new to virtual worlds and brings a novice user perspective to the SLENZ project, as well as her proven ability to help teams work together effectively to deliver agreed outputs within finite resources and time frames. Terry says: To be honest I have mixed feelings about the project. Part of me is excited by the potential and convinced we need to learn as much as we can about what virtual worlds offer. Like the internet, they wont go away. That is why I am involved. The other part of me wants to put my head in the sand and wait until someone else has sorted that out, not be taking responsibility for part of it. But I continually remind myself I have the rest of the team to lean on. None of us can do this alone.
Joint Project Leader: Dr. Clare Atkins (SL: Arwenna Stardust)


Clare is Research Leader and a Senior Lecturer in IT at Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology and has been a Second Life resident since November 2006. Currently responsible for the development of NMITs presence in Second Life with the islands of Koru and Kowhai, Clare has a strong conviction that the use of multi-user virtual environments will have lasting changes on tertiary education. Arwenna Stardust”””””””’’s Second Life Blog
Group members
Lead Developer: Aaron Griffiths (SL: Isa Goodman)


Aaron is a virtual world developer, specialising in interactive educational content designer, interactive content development, courseware design, learning technologies, VR development, educational programming. Director, F/Xual Education Services. Education in a Virtual World
Developer: Todd Cochrane (SL: Toddles Lightworker)


Todd teaches a range of topics in the Wellington Institute of Technologys Bachelors, Diploma and Cybertechnology programmes, including client-side and server-side scripting (ASP JavaScript), Ecommerce Website Design (DB), Human Computer Interaction, Operating Systems, Software Engineering, Software Quality Assurance, Prototyping, Programming Practice (Visual Basic). He is a polyglot programmer, writing software in a number of imperative/procedural languages (C/C++,Delphi, Visual Basic, JavaScript, Java, Flash ActionScript) as well as being able to produce code in functional (RUFL and Hope+C) and declarative languages (Prolog). His current research is focused by the development and extension of a visual programming language. Todd spent a number of years as a research programmer, tutor and lecturer. He has undertaken commercial work as well as curriculum and course development. He ran a Human Computer Interaction using SLas development platform last Trimester. He is currently delivering Computer Systems Architecture in SL and RL synchronously and is becoming proficient at SL development, and SL to RL crossing. He has presented Cross-worlds art work , also know as Club Temp, at the International Symposium on Electronic Art tomorrow in Singapore.
Learning Designer: Leigh Blackall (SL: Leroy Goalpost)


Leigh is an educational developer with Otago Polytechnic. He specialises in social media, networked learning and open education. Leigh currently works with staff at the Polytechnic developing critical literacies in contemporary Internet use. He supports staff in their online publishing and professional networking, and is working hard at establishing the Polytechnic as a leading institution for open education, online teaching, and professional networking. Learn Online ¤ Leigh”””””””’’s WikiEducator Profile
Research: Dr. Ben Salt (SL: Orwell Sorbet)

Social researcher, PhD Adult Education, SLENZ literature reviewer and project evaluator, Bens main area of expertise is international comparative adult education. He has spent many years as a social researcher and evaluator for education and business initiatives in the US, UK and NZ. His social science work is informed by his knowledge of economics (he is a neo-Keynsian), human geography (post-fordism, spatial praxis), socio-linguistics, history, critical theory and adult education.
Communications Contractor & Blogger: John Waugh (SL: Johnnie Wendt)


An award-winning journalist in real life, John has lived in Second Life and other virtual worlds as Johnnie Wendt and other avatars for some three years. During that time he has monitored the virtual world phenomena and believes that, although virtual life is still in its infancy, it and the descendants of todays virtual worlds potentially offer dazzling and unlimited opportunities for education, communication, social prototyping and modification, scientific experimentation and research as well as the arts. He has been engaged by the Second Life Education New Zealand project to independently report and comment regularly on that project as well as providing pointers to what is happening in Second Life and virtual world education around the real world. His blog will appear fortnightly on Fridays (New Zealand time) if not more frequently. He can be contacted at john.waugh1@gmail.com ¤ John”””””””’’s Facebook Profile
Lead Educator: Merle Lemon (SL: Briarmelle Quintessa)

Merle is a Senior Lecturer at Manukau Institute of Technology. With MIT for more than seven years she has taught in six different departments and is currently teaching Communication, Research and Computing for the School of Foundation Studies. She has previously taught eCommunication for the Communications Department, Level 2-4 Computing for Business Services, Computing for Travel & Tourism, Computing in the Classroom for the Secondary Teaching MIT qualification, ESOL (including English Through Computing), and has helped produce resources for Learning Technology. She has used eMIT (MITs Blackboard) since her first year at MIT, and designed and run a fully online course for the School of English using eMIT. Merle has had an clectic background teaching in NZ secondary schools, working as a PD consultant, in public relations, personnel, and as a qualified psychologist and crisis counselor. She has a Graduate Certificate in Applied eLearning and a Web Technologies and a Web Graphics & Multimedia Certificate from the International Webmasters Association. She is excited about the SLENZ project, and is looking forward to a stimulating and challenging year ahead.
Lead Educator: Sarah Stewart (SL: Petal Stransky)


Sarah is a midwife and senior lecturer in midwifery at Otago Polyttechnic. Born in the UK she currently lives in Dunedin, New Zealand. Her project, to be done in conjunction with a colleague, Deborah Davis, will consist of collaborating with midwifery educators in Christchurch and Auckland to design, build and evaluate a virtual birthing unit. Sarah’’s Blog
The SLENZ Project Steering Group
James Brodie
James is Head of Centre for Creative Technologies and Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Wellington Institute of Technology (Weltec). He has spent most of his working life in education primary, secondary and tertiary. He is a teacher, educational psychologist and latterly manager of the Centre for Creative Technologies at WelTec. The Centre is built on collaborative cross disciplinary teaching involving projects in collaboration with industry. This process is supported by the Centre for Smart Product working within the Centre to create industry links and provide industry projects that are managed and workid on by staff and students across a range of disciplines including creative arts, information technology and engineering. With a particular interest in the changing educational world that is so rapidly developing, he believes the advent of web3D and the educational opportunities that are evolving in the virtual world will radically alter the community of learning that we currently experience.
Terry Marler (B.V.Sc., Grad. Dip. Ed., Grad Cert in Flexible Learning)

Terry is a Principal Lecturer and the team leader of Otago Polytechnics Educational Development Centre, which provides a range of staff training, academic support practices and professional development to support strategic priorities which include a memorandum of understanding with Ngai Tahu, education for sustainability, and internationalisation of vocational education. He was awarded a Flexible Learning Leader in NZ scholarship in 2006, and is currently an active member of the TANZ eLearning Forum. His particular interest is in the interface between learning communities and workplace communities, and he has presented at national and international conferences, including ODLAA (1998, 2006), eFest (2003, 2007), and ITPNZ research forum (2008). Consultancy work with the Commonwealth of Learning in developing countries (India, Samoa and Ghana) has resulted in a commitment to reducing the digital divide, and to finding ways of providing experiences to learners which might not otherwise be possible. In particular, virtual cultural and work experience could be especially valuable to prepare learners from developing nations for work in developed countries, and to assist prospective volunteers or those about to undertake work placements to overcome cultural hurdles which can be disruptive to effective work in unfamiliar situations. He believes the value of Multi-User Virtual Environments in this context needs further exploration.
Colin Cumming Executive Director Operations, The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand

Colin joined the Open Polytechnic in March 2005 as the Information Systems Director, bringing skills and experience in information systems and consultancy from previous roles with leading New Zealand agribusiness company Wrightson, and through ten years spent working around the world as an IT consultant with Ernst & Young around the world. Prior to this he spent ten years working in IT for Hitachi, primarily in Europe. He has an MBA in corporate strategy from Kingston Business School, London, UK and BSc and MSc degrees from Southampton and Reading Universities in the UK. Currently the Executive Director Operations at The Open Polytechnic covering the areas of IS/IM, Library, Logistics, Customer Support, Design & Development, Print and Foundation Learniing. He has a strong interest in emerging technologies in education.
Susan Jenkins (SL: Sweetpea Karillion)- Executive Assistant to the Head of Centre, Creative Technologies at WelTec

Susan provides administrative support to the SLENZ Project team. She has also been a business analyst with Unisys NZ and was heavily involved in BAU and project application development work for two government departments. She has an understanding of the SDLC and risks and issues relating to software/technology development projects. Although new to Second Life, Susan is extremely interested in the advent of alternative learning delivery mechanisms. As a kinesthetic learner she is especially interested in mechanisms that enable students to actively participate in their learning and to experience the outcomes of their actions without the real-world being impacted.
Murray Price – IBM Representative
Healthcare and Life Sciences Business Manager, IBM New Zealand Ltd. Murray has been involved in Information Technology for more than 20 years in a variety of roles, all non-technical. As the result of an acquisition he has been with IBM in Christchurch for more than four years, initially running the South Island and latterly heading up the Health and Life Sciences practice for IBM nationally. Murrays client focus areas have been the Health Boards and Universities. He has an excellent understanding of these sectors and the demands these clients have. Significant achievements over this time have included the sale of the first BlueGene Super Computer in the Southern Hemisphere to the University of Canterbury. This system is the most powerful in the Australasia and is being used to further research into many areas including BioEngineering, Climate Change and Astronomy.
John Eyles – Telecom NZ Representative


John Eyles is an artist, educator and businessman. He is married with four children and lives on a small island in the South Pacific called Waiheke. John wears a number of hats: Visiting Fellow, Auckland University of Technology; Research and Alliances Leader, Telecom New Zealand; Chair EON Foundation; Director of a new media company, and shareholder in English-To-Go, an online education company he co-founded in 1998 that has customers in 150 countries. He was a Flexible Learning Leader in New Zealand in 2006. He has been playing, learning and doing business on the Internet for fourteen years. His passion is the use of social media to foster and harness the collective potential of distributed groups. Website
