Skip to main content

Home/ academic technology/ Group items matching "lectures" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Judy Brophy

7 Things You Should Know About Lecture Capture | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  •  
    "Lecture capture systems offer three important benefits: an alternative when students miss class; an opportunity for content review; and content for online course development. Lecture capture enhances and extends existing instructional activities, whether in face-to-face, fully online, or blended learning environments."
Jenny Darrow

Why Faculty Shouldn't Worry About Lecture Capture - 0 views

  •  
    Did a quick pass of this MediaSite presentation and it appears to bring up some valid points about the benefits of lecture capture. Worthy of a Diigo tag, I think.
Judy Brophy

Teaching Without Technology? | MindShift - 0 views

  •  
    One of the best, most concise explanations of why the antipathy to technology in education.~JB The conflict between computers and schools is really a conflict between educational paradigms. The traditional and dominant paradigm is rooted in the book and the pedagogy is one of transmission. Teachers, who have presumably read more books than their students and listened to more scholarly lectures, transmit what they've learned to their students in a similar fashion. The students who do best within this system are those who can capture the transmission - as unfiltered as possible - and mirror back to the teacher what they have delineated. Within this model, digital technology can provide improvements, but they are cosmetic. Teachers can enhance their lectures with presentation software, videos and other forms of multimedia, but the methods stay the same. For teachers who don't understand how these new tools can enhance what they are teaching, then technology can be a distraction. Within this system of learning, (Inquiry based and student centered) there is real value in having the widest range of technological tools for not only consuming information in all its multimodal forms, but for creatively demonstrating what one has learned.
Judy Brophy

The History of Western Architecture: From Ancient Greece to Rococo (A Free Online Course) | Open Culture - 0 views

  •  
     The History of Architecture, a free course that recently debuted on iTunes. Taught by Jacqueline Gargus at Ohio State, the course features 39 video lectures that collectively offer a classic survey of Western architecture. We begin in Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome, laying the conceptual foundations for what's to come.
Judy Brophy

Professor Disrupting Lecture Hall with Best Use of Skype Ever | edtechdigest.com - 0 views

  •  
    Through a YouTube request, professor John Boyer lands skype interview with Aung Sun Suu Kyi
Judy Brophy

What Makes an Online Instructional Video Compelling? (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE.edu - 0 views

  •  
    The developing themes have influenced the design and strategy of media production at SCE, including: Strategizing videos to tie directly to course assignments and/or assessment Advising faculty members to use conversational language in production; also encouraging them to use humor and draw on past experiences Adding audio/visual elements to the video that supplement the content; the videos should not convey information that students could just read as text Producing high-quality videos (despite mixed findings related to production values, elements such as professional sound, lighting, and graphics are considered important when creating high-quality media) Keeping the four-minute view time as a design consideration, especially when producing longer-form content lectures that can be broken up into shorter segments
Jenny Darrow

l e a r n i n g ...... t e c h n o l o g y.....by juice - 0 views

  •  
    Mobile Learning and Social Media: Increasing Engagement and Interactivity Tanya Joosten | University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Interim Associate Director, Learning Technology Center Lecturer, Department of Communication
Judy Brophy

How to Teach With Google Earth - 0 views

  •  
    to support hands-on inquiry by students in computer classrooms. as a basis for homework assignments. for dynamic presentations during class lectures. for inquiry during class presentations. to create imagery and maps for PowerPoint, Word, and other presentation tools. as a data discovery, organization, and distribution tool for research projects. to enrich discussion of an issue that arises spontaneously during an informal classroom discussion.
Matthew Ragan

YouTube U. Beats YouSnooze Through - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • There are some college experiences that don't fit this mold. Many seminars and advanced courses are based on hands-on projects and small-scale discussions with professors. Those are undoubtedly valuable. But core classes tend not to be taught that way. The very classes that should establish a student's base understanding of a subject are taught like assembly lines—lecture, problem set, exam—with no quality control. Sure, the product's quality is graded, but nothing is done about defective understanding as the student is pushed down the line.
  • Students don't retain anything because they didn't intuitively understand it to begin with.
  • Why aren't we using the 300-person gathering at 10 a.m. every Tuesday and Thursday as an opportunity for active peer-to-peer instruction rather than a passive, one-size-fits-all lecture?
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Then the professor is freed to be an active participant in an interactive, peer-to-peer problem-solving powwow in the classroom.
  • Ten years from today, students will be learning at their own pace, with all relevant data being collected on how to optimize their learning and the content itself. Grades and transcripts will be replaced with real-time reports and analytics on what a student actually knows and doesn't know.
Judy Brophy

Stephen Downes: The Role of the Educator - 0 views

  •  
    it is misleading to suggests that all, or even most, aspects of providing an education should, or could, be placed into the hands of [teachers] Historically, it has been impractical to break up the roles of the teacher. You need a certain scale even to have a separate person assigned as a librarian or an audio-visual coordinator. You need a much greater scale, not to mention much better coordination, to have separate people assigned as lecturers, coaches, theorizers and evaluators. Yet relatively few of these roles need to be performed in person, and most of them scale pretty well. This means that with improved information and communications technologies we can begin to rethink how we've organized labor in education. This is in fact what is happening online, at least, outside the circles of formal education
Judy Brophy

Instructional Strategies Online - Think, Pair, Share - 0 views

  •  
    Think-Pair-Share is a strategy designed to provide students with "food for thought" on a given topics enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with another student. It is a learning strategy developed by Lyman and associates to encourage student classroom participation. What is Think, Pair, Share? Think-Pair-Share is a strategy designed to provide students with "food for thought" on a given topics enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with another student. It is a learning strategy developed by Lyman and associates to encourage student classroom participation. Rather than using a basic recitation method in which a teacher poses a question and one student offers a response, Think-Pair-Share encourages a high degree of pupil response and can help keep students on task. What is its purpose? * Providing "think time" increases quality of student responses. * Students become actively involved in thinking about the concepts presented in the lesson. * Research tells us that we need time to mentally "chew over" new ideas in order to store them in memory. When teachers present too much information all at once, much of that information is lost. If we give students time to "think-pair-share" throughout the lesson, more of the critical information is retained. * When students talk over new ideas, they are forced to make sense of those new ideas in terms of their prior knowledge. Their misunderstandings about the topic are often revealed (and resolved) during this discussion stage. * Students are more willing to participate since they don't feel the peer pressure involved in responding in front of the whole class. * Think-Pair-Share is easy to use on the spur of the moment. * Easy to use in large classes. How can I do it? * With students seated in teams of 4, have them number them from 1 to 4. * Announce a discussion topic or problem to solve. (Example: Which room in our school is larg
Jenny Darrow

YouTube - RSA Animate - Drive - 0 views

  •  
    Daniel Pink's lecture about his book, Drive. While directly addresses the business world but the connections to education are apparent. Speaks to why incentive pay for teachers is a ridiculous idea. Even why grades are a lousy incentive for students.
Judy Brophy

AcademicPub - Create a course pack with real-time copyright clearance - 0 views

  •  
    Built to be used by professors and administrators, AcademicPub features real-time copyright clearance, and the ability to include materials from anywhere - articles from the web, lectures of your own, content from our library - almost anything. Distribute digitally, or in print - your choice. Students get lower-priced, up-to-the-minute materials and Educators get a fast, easy way to expand educational horizons.
Matthew Ragan

Free Online Class Shakes Up Photo Education | Raw File - 1 views

  •  
    On the ground floor of a converted, Victorian-era cinema in Coventry, England, Jonathan Worth delivers a world-class photography lecture anyone can attend at any time, from anywhere, for free. The green-tiled building stands on an otherwise typical city center street. From here, alongside teaching assistant Matt Johnston and boss Jonathan Shaw, Worth corals 28 attending students in addition to the few thousand clocking-in from across the globe.
Judy Brophy

TP Msg. #1114 Timeslicing in the Classroom | Tomorrow's Professor Blog - 0 views

  •  
    "My goal is to instill appropriate mobile-technology behaviors because they will be using these devices in their professional careers. As a teacher, should I be alarmed about their desire to stay connected? Quite the opposite, I believe." Issues: audio and video recording of lectures/classes
Judy Brophy

CosmoLearning | Your Free Online School: Courses, Video Lectures, Documentaries, Images, Books and more - 0 views

  •  
    Free educational website for students and teachers
Judy Brophy

Student-centred learning: What does it mean for students and lecturers? - 0 views

  •  
    chapter from a book- excellent summary with suggestion on how to achieve thru curriculum and class design
Matthew Ragan

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.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • If you want to encounter distance education, a student once said, sit in the back of a 500-seat lecture.
  •  
    The classroom of the future features face-to-face, online, and hybrid learning. And the future is here.
Jenny Darrow

videolectures.net - videolectures.net - 0 views

  •  
    High quality lectures on many topics
1 - 20 of 22 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page