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Top 31 free alternatives to YouTube (video hosting sites) » Chaos Laboratory ... - 1 views

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    Long list of video hosting options
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Google Apps for Education New England Summit - 2 views

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     two day event focuses on deploying, integrating and using Google Apps 
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What's New in Bb 9.1 - 1 views

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    CFCC went from 7.3 to 9.1 and created a slick 7 page PDF
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Blackboard 9 | What's New in Blackboard 9 | ASU Help Center - 0 views

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    ASU's BlackBoard 9 resource guide
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A Simple Blogging Formula - 0 views

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    In all my years of blogging, I've put together what serves as a very simple formula for what I think about when I sit down to the keyboard to type. This might not serve everyone, but it might be a great start for you to consider when thinking about blogging.
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    useful for new bloggers like students, perhaps
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nsf.gov - Special Report - Science Nation - 0 views

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    online magazine that's all about science for the people published by Natl Sci Foundation. Quirky articles good for a general science class
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10 Ways to Use Social Media to Get a Job | New Grad Life - 0 views

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    There's mounting evidence that personnel specialists are now scouring social media sites and job boards for potential employees. If you're wondering how to draw attention to yourself in the right way on social-media sites, help is at hand. We've put together a comprehensive action plan for you to follow: Recommends a "work" Facebook face, but most of it is about twitter. 10 expert tips on using social media to get the job you want:
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The Twitter Tim.es - a real-time personalized newspaper generated from your Twitter acc... - 0 views

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     Twitter Times is a real-time personalized newspaper generated from your Twitter account
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Rushing too fast to online learning? Outcomes of Internet versus face-to-face instruction - 0 views

  • "Simply putting traditional courses online could have negative consequences, especially for lower-performing and language minority students."
    • Jenny Darrow
       
      I seriously question the depth of their research. Any one in education would agree with this statement. C'mon enlighten us!
  • "Until further studies on the effectiveness of online learning versus in-class learning are necessary, universities would be wise to recognize that all Internet courses are not created equally,"
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  • ushing Too Fast to Online Learning? Outcomes of Internet Versus Face-to-Face Instructi
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    "Simply putting traditional courses online could have negative consequences, especially for lower-performing and language minority students."
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Tomorrow's College - Online Learning - 1 views

  • The University System of Maryland now requires undergraduates to take 12 credits in alternative learning modes, including online. Texas has proposed a similar rule. The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system is pushing to have 25 percent of credits earned online by 2015. And the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, pointing to UCF as a model, has made blended learning a cornerstone of its new $20-million education-technology grant program.
  • "No one enforces you to do the right thing" in an online course, Ms. Hatten says. "It's at your discretion. I care about my grade, so if I don't know the answer, I'm not gonna let myself fail when I have an opportunity to look in the book."
  • Blended classes generate the highest student evaluations of any learning mode at Central Florida, and, like her classmates, Ms. Black is a fan. She gets as much from the online work as she would from more time in class, she says. Plus, the free time helps make it easier for her to do dance.
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  • If you want to encounter distance education, a student once said, sit in the back of a 500-seat lecture.
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    The classroom of the future features face-to-face, online, and hybrid learning. And the future is here.
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200 Students Admit To 'Cheating' On Exam... But Bigger Question Is If It Was Really Che... - 0 views

  • Now, there's a pretty good chance that some of the students probably knew that Quinn was a lazy professor, who just used testbank questions, rather than writing his own. That's the kind of information that tends to get around. But it's still not clear that using testbank questions to study is really an ethical lapse. Taking sample tests is a good way to practice for an exam and to learn the subject matter. And while those 200 students "confessed," it seems like they did so mainly to avoid getting kicked out of school -- not because they really feel they did anything wrong -- and I might have to agree with them. We've seen plenty of stories over the years about professors trying to keep up with modern technology -- and I recognize that it's difficult to keep creating new exams for classes. But in this case, it looks like Prof. Quinn barely created anything at all. He just pulled questions from a source that the students had access to as well and copied them verbatim. It would seem that, even if you think the students did wrong here, the Professor was equally negligent. Will he have to sit through an ethics class too?
  • The answer to that first one surprised me. The "cheating" was that students got their hands on the textbook publisher's "testbank" of questions. Many publishers have a testbank that professors can use as sample test questions. But watching Quinn's video, it became clear that in accusing his students of "cheating" he was really admitting that he wasn't actually writing his own tests, but merely pulling questions from a testbank. That struck me as odd -- and I wasn't really sure that what the students did should count as cheating. Taking "sample tests" is a very good way to learn material, and going through a testbank is a good way to practice "sample" questions. It seemed like the bigger issue wasn't what the students did... but what the professor did.
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FeedFlash widget, a flash feed reader, put feeds and news everywhere on the Web... - 0 views

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    A feed widget that works inside of BlackBoard... amazing
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Media Fluency Rubric (Final) - Google Docs - 2 views

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    Critical Consumption: Participatory Media: Collaborative Technology
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    12/2009 - evolvong (i.e. "not yet approved" ISP outcomes that AT work shouuld map to
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At universities, is better learning a click away? - Boston.com - 0 views

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    students gather in small groups to decide answer to click
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http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2010/03/free-33-page-guide-google-for-teachers.html?ut... - 0 views

shared by Judy Brophy on 29 Mar 10 - No Cached
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    news widgets, some book stuff
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The Power Of Being Influenced - Science News - 1 views

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    A key reason some ideas are so successful, conventional wisdom has held, is that a few highly influential people espouse them. In his book The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell wrote that what he calls "social epidemics" are "driven by the efforts of a handful of exceptional people." Those exceptional people tend to be experts on a subject who love to talk. Such people can convince dozens of others of their opinions. An excellent sales strategy, then, would be to find those few critical people, persuade them of the value of your product, and leave it to them to convince others. It's a compelling idea, but does it really work? Social network theorists Duncan J. Watts of Columbia University and Peter Sheridan Dodds of the University of Vermont in Burlington decided to put the notion to a test. What they found is a disappointment for "viral marketers" who specialize in selling products by influencing influential people.
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