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in title, tags, annotations or urlTechnology for 21st Century Learning: Part 1 : 2¢ Worth - 5 views
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21st century learning is about the experience, not about the tools you are using. The experience defines the tools, not the other way around.
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“What ICT is going to help my children learn by helping them to become resourceful and habitual learners — engaged in a learning lifestyle?”
YouTube - ''O'' (Othello) Part 1 - 4 views
2020 Vision: Experts Forecast What the Digital Revolution Will Bring Next -- THE Journal - 6 views
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2020 Vision: Experts Forecast What the Digital Revolution Will Bring Next
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the second part is the mobility we now have,
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The private sector has moved much more rapidly in implementing technological tools than education has.
eLearn: Feature Article - 0 views
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Every year at this time we turn to the experts in our field to share their predictions on what lies ahead for the e-learning community. While our colleagues here unanimously agree the global economic downturn is the overwhelming factor coloring their forecasts, they do see a great array of opportunities and challenges in the coming 12 months. Their insights never fail to inspire further discussion and hope. Here's what our experts have to say this year:
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2009 is the year when the cellphone—not the laptop—will emerge as the learning infrastructure for the developing world. Initially, those educational applications linked most closely to local economic development will predominate. Also parents will have high interest in ways these devices can foster their children's literacy. Countries will begin to see the value of subsidizing this type of e-learning, as opposed to more traditional schooling. The initial business strategy will be a disruptive technology competing with non-consumption, in keeping with Christensen's models. —Chris Dede, Harvard University, USA
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During the coming slump the risk of relying on free tools and services in learning will become apparent as small start-ups offering such services fail, and as big suppliers switch off loss-making services or start charging for them. The Open Educational Resources (OER) movement will strengthen, and will face up to the "cultural" challenges of winning learning providers and teachers to use OER. Large learning providers and companies that host VLEs will make increasing and better use of the data they have about learner behavior, for example, which books they borrow, which online resources they access, how long they spend doing what. —Seb Schmoller, Chief Executive of the UK's Association for Learning Technology (ALT), UK
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YouTube - Structuring Paragraphs Part 1 - 0 views
Ipod In Education Parts 1 - 4 - 4 views
YouTube - Part 1: Mobile Devices - 4 views
25 Free Online Photo/Image Editors Part 1 - 12 views
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