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ZABDIEL BRITO-BRITO

GoClass - Create and Deliver Lessons on iPads - 2 views

  • GoClass is a promising iPad app for teachers who are working in 1:1 iPad environments.
  • Teachers also have the option to ask questions and poll their students. After the students' response have been gathered teachers can project those responses without showing individual student's names.
  • GoClass is a free iPad application for creating short lessons and delivering them to your students.
ZABDIEL BRITO-BRITO

It Takes Two to Tweet: Interpretation as a Shared Responsibility - 1 views

  • I remember lots of advice to take care in writing emails because emails don’t convey things like tone of voice or body language. Without such communication aids, the argument went, emails are easy to misinterpret. There’s only so much that emoticons and careful word choice can do to convey one’s affect, so some messages are better delivered in person or over the phone.
  • I think this issue of misinterpretation is even more relevant to Twitter than it is to email.
  • Moreover, a tweet may look like a free-standing piece of writing, but to the author of the tweet, it’s part of an ongoing narrative she or he is constructing over time through dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of tweets.
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  • A wise consumer of tweets knows all this and acknowledges that his or her interpretation of a given tweet might suffer for lack of context.
Andres Ruiz-Sahagun

Activando el Conocimiento : Innoemotion - 1 views

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    Las organizaciones sólo se preocuparán por los nodos y flujos de conocimiento cuando lo caractericen como un activo clave en su discurso estratégico. De esta forma, el tratamiento y gestión responsable del conocimiento se asocia a todas aquellas tareas que permiten identificarlo, capturarlo, explotarlo, desarrollarlo, protegerlo, etc., dado que se comprende y evidencia su impacto, retorno o rentabilidad en los resultados de la organización.
ZABDIEL BRITO-BRITO

Does the Internet Make Us Lonely? - 0 views

  • Study after study has analyzed how our increased Internet usage is negatively affecting us.
  • CNN reported on in 2009 painted a grim picture, linking excessive Internet use with social phobia, depression, and other psychological problems
  • Stanford University researchers in 2005 warned that those who use the Internet frequently spend about an hour less each day interacting with their familie
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  • Such studies have made it sound like the Internet will eventually turn us all into bumbling, awkward, and socially inept creatures, unable to handle in-person interactions.
  • But now, IEEE Fellow Gerhard Fettweis says that couldn’t be further from the truth.
  • “Our world in 50 years will, of course be deeply influenced by interconnected networks of communicating technologies, but we will use them efficiently to synchronize personal freedom and professional responsibilities so seamlessly that we will have more spare time to spend with friends and family,” Fettweis adds.
ZABDIEL BRITO-BRITO

Nearpod - Create and Deliver Quizzes on iPads - 1 views

  • Nearpod is a free iOS app that teachers can use to create quizzes, polls, and multimedia presentations.
  • Teachers can view students' responses individually or as a whole class. The video below provides a short overview of Nearpod.
  • The feedback mechanisms may allow you to quickly get a sense of your students' comprehension of the lessons that you deliver.
Felipe de Jesus Garciasantana

Pearson's "Free" LMS - 0 views

  • Many schools are rethinking the LMS, not just because these tools have cost them a pretty penny, but because they're looking for ways that can further student collaboration and that can emphasize content and learning and not just administration. That could put Pearson in a good position to be a go-to tool for schools, particularly if the focus becomes content, something Pearson does hold market control over. As the Delta Initiative's Phil Hill told Inside Higher Ed, Pearson "wants to change the perception of an LMS to [make colleges] say: �Hey, that's a commodity, that's a delivery system � and really education, and the education system, needs to be about the content itself and how students interact with that content.'"
    • Felipe de Jesus Garciasantana
       
      Learning Management Sistem educational tools
  • drian Sannier, senior vice president of product at Pearson, told Inside Higher Ed that the new OpenClass can be used absolutely for free. No licensing costs, no costs for maintenance, and no costs for hosting. So this is a freer offer than Moodle is. It's a freer offer than any other in the space. And from the email I received from the PR firm handling the announcement, I give you these gems: "Pearson Launches First Truly Free and Open Learning Platform for Higher Ed." The tool "Provides Open Access." And this is where we need to stop and scrutinize what's happening here and look past the invocations of "free" and "open." Why would Pearson offer a free LMS? For one thing, Pearson doesn't need to sell OpenClass. Its emphasis -- indeed, its strategy -- lies elsewhere. Pearson is the largest education company in the world -- with or without success in the LMS market -- with profits of �208 million for the first half of this year alone. Its educational sales are up 9%; it's educational profits are up 31%. Much those sales and profits come from educational content: textbooks -- both print and digital -- as well as other curriculum offerings. (Much of the profits come from assessment products and services too -- Pearson sells the textbooks and the standardized tests. That's pretty damn lucrative, clearly.) Pearson can give away OpenClass in the hopes that schools will go for the "up-sell" and buy the company's other offerings. Many schools are rethinking the LMS, not just because these tools have cost them a pretty penny, but because they're looking for ways that can further student collaboration and that can emphasize content and learning and not just administration. That could put Pearson in a good position to be a go-to tool for schools, particularly if the focus becomes content, something Pearson does hold market control over. As the Delta Initiative's Phil Hill told Inside Higher Ed, Pearson "wants to change the perception of an LMS to [make colleges] say: �Hey, that's a commodity, that's a delivery system � and really education, and the education system, needs to be about the content itself and how students interact with that content.'" For its part, Pearson says that it's not going to lock users in to using just its content. But I can't help but wonder if that's true. After all, I think we need to question its usage of adjectives like "free" and "open" here. Furthermore when a company touts Google's involvement when really, what we have here is just a fairly simple and straight-forward integration with Google Apps, we should be a little suspicious about the labeling and the marketing and our consumption habits. More Sharing ServicesShare | Share on twitter Share on facebook Share on gmail Share on diigo var addthis_config = {"data_track_clickback":true}; Tags: <a href
  • Adrian Sannier, senior vice president of product at Pearson, told Inside Higher Ed that the new OpenClass can be used absolutely for free. No licensing costs, no costs for maintenance, and no costs for hosting. So this is a freer offer than Moodle is. It's a freer offer than any other in the space. And from the email I received from the PR firm handling the announcement, I give you these gems: "Pearson Launches First Truly Free and Open Learning Platform for Higher Ed." The tool "Provides Open Access
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    So interesting "No licemsing costs, no costs for maintenance, and no costs for hosting. So this is freer offer than Moodle is...than any other in the space" really?
Nicola Massarelli

College, Reinvented: The Finalists - 0 views

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    Costco University I model my proposed college after a law firm. Just as senior lawyers own the firm and delegate various administrative responsibilities, I would have a college where faculty own the institution, and administrators work for faculty, rather than vice versa.
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