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Terry Elliott

A Study of Four Textbook Distribution Models (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAUSE - 1 views

  • At present, DSC is moving forward with campus-wide e-text adoption, following a leadership transition that included welcoming a new president in August 2011. Though we have not set a timeline for going e-text, through our study we have identified a list of key considerations our institution and others like it will need to address: Avoid top-down mandates. Institutions that require all instructors to simultaneously go e-text might be courting disaster. An effective approach will encourage, but not require, e-text adoption. Should reluctant faculty members observe demonstrable benefits in the classrooms of colleagues who have switched, they will soon decide to go e-text as well. Know your technological limits. Investing in infrastructure increases and upgrades prior to going e-text — not during, and not only as needed — will help create student and faculty buy-in by demonstrating a commitment to the project and preventing technology failures. Help students see the advantages. A sizable number of students who otherwise welcome technological expansion in their lives draw the line at textbooks. Clearly communicating to students how much money they will save and what new educational objectives they might meet will lessen resistance to this major change. Involve student support services. Faculty are never an institution’s only teachers. Collaborate with IT personnel, writing consultants, learning specialists, supplemental instructors, on-campus tutors, and other support staff in the e-text selection, implementation, and training process to ensure that the assistance students receive campus-wide is both consistent and valuable. Provide instructional support and training for faculty. Ultimately, faculty will bear the biggest responsibility for making e-text adoption successful. The development and dissemination of best practices for teaching with e-texts should be fully supported at the college, program, and department levels. Implementing a new campus-wide solution to the problem of prohibitively expensive textbooks is not without risks. But, as our study has shown, careful planning and piloting can help institutions develop strategies for using e-texts to ensure that this enduring problem troubles students much less in the future
Terry Elliott

OpenStax College - 0 views

shared by Terry Elliott on 18 Feb 12 - No Cached
  • OpenStax College offers students free textbooks that meet scope and sequence requirements for most courses. These are peer-reviewed texts written by professional content developers. Adopt a book today for a turnkey classroom solution or modify it to suit your teaching approach. Free online and low-cost in print, OpenStax College books are built for today’s student budgets. Stay informed through our newsletter, like us on Facebook, or tweet about @openstaxcollege.
    • Terry Elliott
       
      Free online, low cost in print. A good model.
Terry Elliott

How Higher Education Is Going Digital [INFOGRAPHIC] - 0 views

  • it also leaves out the fact that technology is trying to be worked into the current classroom structure (instead of disrupting it), which doesn’t necessarily mean students are learning better than without it.
Terry Elliott

Wiki:Main Page | Social Media Classroom - 0 views

  • our species might be in for another leap into an entirely different level of complexity and way of life, depending on how we use digital networks to collaborate in new ways and on new levels.
  • In what ways do communication media and practices influence the capability to organize collective action?
  • "Collective action" is the term sociologists, political scientists, and economists use to describe the human capability to organize group activities to produce something that individuals could not produce on their own
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The "social dilemma" is another term of art in the social sciences to describe the situations that inevitably arise from the tension between self-interest and collective gain
  • Peter Kollock's words "individual rationality adds up to collective irrationality,"
  • 2010 Nobel laureate in economics, Elinor Ostrom, detailed the ways in which people have worked around or mitigated social dilemmas in order to create institutions for collective action.
  • Robert Axelrod was concerned about the strategic gameplaying involved with thermonuclear strategy during the cold war, and also curious about why cooperation evolved in a competitive Darwinian environment, so he asked people to program cooperation games that computers could play
  • Ostrom, Axelrod, and Kollock could define the foundation for a new interdiscipline of cooperation studies.
Terry Elliott

WSJ Reports: New Skills Needed For Big Data (Data Scientists) - Data Science Central - 0 views

  • EMC's Pat Gelsinger discussing Big Data.
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    Big data at the University level. What is happening here? Use this as a springboard.
Terry Elliott

Connexions - Sharing Knowledge and Building Communities - 0 views

shared by Terry Elliott on 28 Nov 11 - Cached
  •  
    Connexions
Terry Elliott

California Bill Pushes for Free Online College Books | MindShift - 0 views

  • Una Daly, the communication college outreach manager at Open Courseware Consortium says teachers want to collaborate, but they haven’t been supported on the college level.
  • The first prototype of the interactive open digital textbook that models what Steinberg is hoping to recreate in California is Collaborative Statistics, written by Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean, faculty members at De Anza College in Cupertino, Calif. The book is found on Rice University’s Connexions repository, which contains 1,100 open textbooks. Developed by the 20 Million Minds Foundation in collaboration with Kno, the PDF of the book is free, but students can choose to pay $20 for the interactive app on the iPad through Kno, which features live links and videos.
  • The bill establishes the online California Digital Open Source Library, which will house the 50 most commonly used books for required lower-division courses. Similar to Flat World Knowledge, students and teachers will be able to access and adapt the texts online for free, or pay $20 for either printed form or interactive app form for tablets or mobile devices (think Kno or Inkling).
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  • “I find the publishers’ online offerings nothing more than the old ancillaries they’ve always offered bundled up in a proprietary system,” said David Lippman, a math teacher at Pierce College to the Chronicle of Higher Education.
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