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kasey8876

Facilitating management learning developing critical reflection through reflective tools. - 0 views

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    The aim of this article is to explore how the practice of critical reflection within a management learning process can be facilitated through the application of reflective processes and tools. A distinction is drawn between reflection as a form of individual development (of, say, the reflective practitioner), and critical reflection as a route to collective action and a component of organizational learning and change.
efleonhardt

How to Design Effective Online Group Work Activities Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  • Online collaboration tools While Skype and other real-time collaboration tools make it easier for dispersed students to “get together,” Mandernach cautions against overusing synchronous tools. Instead, she says, you should encourage your students to take advantage of the many asynchronous collaborative tools inside your course management system or some of the new Web 2.0 tools. Some of her favorite Web 2.0 tools include: Tokbox, VoiceThread, Creately, Google Docs, and Teambox. These tools are relatively easy to use and help build a sense of community in the online classroom. They’re also another way to get students to buy into group work activities and using them makes the students more marketable upon graduation. “If you can use the collaborative environment to really bring them into your classroom and get connected to you and connected to their peers you’re going to see a lot of benefits besides increased test scores,” Mandernach says. “Many employers and graduate schools really view online learning as learning in isolation, and I think it’s important for students to show that they are capable of collaborative work — that they can work independently and with others.”
  • In the recent online seminar Online Group Work: Making It Meaningful and Manageable, Mandernach provided tips for adapting proven face-to-face group work strategies to the online environment. The key is to design tasks that are truly collaborative, meaning the students will benefit more from doing the activity as a group than doing it alone. Effective online group activities often fall into one of three categories: There’s no right answer, such as debates, or research on controversial issues. There are multiple perspectives, such as analyzing current events, cultural comparisons, or case studies. There are too many resources for one person to evaluate, so a jigsaw puzzle approach is needed with each student responsible for one part.
Alicia Fernandez

Breaking the Mold: An Educational Perspective on Diffusion of Innovation/Change Agents ... - 0 views

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    Wikibook chapter examines why a change agent is necessary and what an educator as change agent does.
Alicia Fernandez

Our Iceberg is Melting - 0 views

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    Fable about successfully responding to change in an ever-changing world. Based on Kotter's 8-Step Process for successful change management.
Alicia Fernandez

The 8-Step Process for Leading Change - 0 views

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    To successfully react to windows of opportunity, regardless of the focus - innovation, growth, culture, cost structure, technology - a new methodology of change leadership is required.
Alicia Fernandez

Educator as Change Agent - 0 views

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    8 questions to determine if you are an agent of change
rhondamatrix

Guest Post | Helping Students Motivate Themselves - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This article tackles the subject of student motivation - specifically, how students can be intrinsically motivated rather than just going for the grade. Several possible options are discussed for how to build up motivation over time. The article mostly focuses on younger children, but perhaps some of the strategies can be adapted for college students?
Alicia Fernandez

Achieving meaningful online learning through effective formative assessment - 0 views

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    An online course was studied to investigate how integration of formative assessment enhanced the course design to facilitate learner engagement with meaningful learning experiences within the context of ICT-related professional development for teachers.
Alicia Fernandez

Assessment and Student Learning: a fundamental relationship and the role of information... - 0 views

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    Role of assessment in student learning and its relationship with the use of information and communication technologies (ICT).
sherrilattimer

FILLING THE TOOL BOX - 0 views

  • If on the other hand, they are used to information questions, they may ask, "Which states joined the Confederacy? What were the six main causes of the war? What happened at Shiloh? Who was the Union commander at Shiloh? When did the war end?"
  • If you ask many tantalizing and divergent questions in your classroom, your students are likely to model after your behavior for example, "What would have happened if Lincoln was shot in the first month of the war? Why did Lincoln only free the slaves in the rebel states? How did it feel to be a woman in the path of Sherman's army?"
  • The four rules of brainstorming: 1. all contributions are accepted without judgment; 2. the goal is a large number of ideas or questions; 3. building on other people's ideas is encouraged; 4. farout, unusual ideas are encouraged.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • And why do we bother with a time-consuming activity like developing a typology of questions? Because once students have the labels, you can lead them to practice each type of question thoughtfully. You can show a film and ask each student to think of three "why?" questions to share with the class at its conclusion. You may assign a story to read and ask for three "inference" questions. Suddenly the students can reach into their questioning tool box and carefully select the saw for sawing and the plane for planing.
  • When questions are nurtured, admitting a lack of knowledge is rewarded. It is the first step in learning and problem-solving
  • Unlike answers, questions carry little risk because the activity has made it acceptable to identify what it is that you do not know.
  • Some questions deserve 10 seconds of thought. Others require days or even months. Great questions span centuries of human civilization (i.e., "why are we here?" "How do we know?" "Can we know?" "How can we know if we know?").
  • The more typical classroom activity involves concealing what it is that you do not know.
  • Research into wait-time for American classrooms paints a distressing picture. Many teachers wait less than two seconds for the answer to each question and ask hundreds of questions per hour. These types of questions are generally recall questions demanding little thought.
  • Unlike many textbook publishers, reporters like to ask questions that flow from or stimulate curiosity, because unlike schools, televisions do not have captive audiences. A reporter will ask the victim how he or she is feeling, the rock star why he or she used drugs and the politician why he or she betrayed his or her constituents. Sometimes we are offended by the boundary lines of decency that curiosity compels these people to cross, so a recent rock song portrayed the phenomenon as "We love dirty laundry." We should expect considerably more sensitivity from our students, yet the model can work powerfully for us as we explore the issues surrounding any human event being studied in a classroom.
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    Classroom strategies to engender student questioning.
abeukema

Online Pedagogy - 0 views

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    "Grant Agreement number: 200 1 - 3453 /001 - 001 EDU - ELEARN Workpackage 1, Working group 7/8 Pedagogy Background paper 1 ONLINE PEDAGOGY - INNOVATIVE TEACHING AND LERNING STRATEGIES IN ICT - ENVIROMENTS BACKGROUND PAPER OF THE CEVU WORKGROUP O NLINE PEDAGOGY"
lkryder

ETAP640amp2014: Are you prepared to change the way you teach? - 0 views

  • 50 things to do in your course besides lecture
    • alexandra m. pickett
    • lkryder
       
      Thank you - a funny thing happened with this. I was working with Bill on something and mentioned I use this in my training. He said he had no copy of it and asked me to forward. I had scraped it off the old SLN site and made a pdf of it for my faculty to use offline. So it is good to see there is a new source for this I can link to in my training. They do love this!
lkryder

User Interface Design For eLearning - 0 views

  • In the example below, the user interface is an elevator panel. Learners choose a floor on the panel, ride up to the selected floor and partake in learning activities on each floor. As they climb higher in the building, the activities become more advanced. The elevator panel on the left doesn’t correspond to a typical mental model of how an elevator works. When the user realizes that going up to a higher level lesson is represented as going down the elevator, it’s confusing. When we stick to conventions, as shown in the example on the right, we’re modeling the way most people think.
sherrilattimer

Harvard Education Publishing Group - Home - 0 views

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    Teaching Students to Ask Their Own Questions. One small change can yield big results.
dkiesel

Welcome | Faulkes Telescope Project - 0 views

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    Online learning project where students can use high powered telescopes via the web
dkiesel

Decameron Web - 0 views

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    a community of discussion, argument and debate at a student and professional level, Italian studies
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