Skip to main content

Home/ beyondwebct/ Group items tagged AR

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Barbara Lindsey

The Lunch Box Project - home - 0 views

  • Thoughts and Questions about the Lunch Pictures from Jess McCulloch on Vimeo. 3B ask some questions and make some comments about the pictures of lunches from around the world that are part of http://lunchboxproject.wikispaces.com
Barbara Lindsey

Hackers Are Climbing In Your Windows, So Hide Your Kids, Hide Your Files | TechCrunch - 0 views

  •  
    fall 2011 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

Swartz supporter dumps 18,592 JSTOR docs on the Pirate Bay - 0 views

  •  
    fall 2011 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

College Students Are Bad at Google [STUDY] - 0 views

  •  
    fall 2011 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

Virtual and Artificial, but 58,000 Want Course - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The rapid increase in the availability of high-bandwidth Internet service, coupled with a wide array of interactive software, has touched off a new wave of experimentation in education.
  • Dr. Widom said she had recorded her video lectures during the summer and would use classroom sessions to work with smaller groups of students on projects that might be competitive and to bring in people from the industry to give special lectures. Unlike the A.I. course, this one will compare online students with one another and not with the Stanford students.
  • In place of office hours, they will use the Google moderator service, software that will allow students to vote on the best questions for the professors to respond to in an online chat and possibly video format. They are considering ways to personalize the exams to minimize cheating.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • “The idea that you could put up open content at all was risky 10 years ago, and we decided to be very conservative,” he said. “Now the question is how do you move into something that is more interactive and collaborative, and we will see lots and lots of models over the next four or five years.”
Barbara Lindsey

11 predictions concerning technology in education - Articles - Educational Te... - 0 views

  • Much of the technology for the classroom of the "future" actually exists now. The difference in the future will be that it will be much more common and used as a matter of course.
  • Connectivity and "embeddedness" will be the guiding principles: connectivity, in the sense that whatever device pupils do their work on will not lead to a cul-de-sac: it will be straightforward to start work on a handheld computer in one place and continue on a laptop somewhere else; embeddedness, in the sense that you won't have to think about what you're using, because it will all be part of the fabric of living. These two ideas are, of course, closely related.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      We'll see the start of that with Apple's introduction of iCloud in October 2011
  • Teachers will continue to be the single most important element in the learning process.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Why do you think this is so given the technology uses described above?
Barbara Lindsey

News: The Promise of Digital Humanities - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  • Amid financial crises, humanities departments at many public universities have been razed. But even amid cuts, there has been a surge in interest in the digital humanities -- a branch of scholarship that takes the computational rigor that has long undergirded the sciences and applies it the study of history, language, and culture.
  • The NEH held a symposium on Tuesday for 60 recipients of its 2011 Digital Humanities Start-Up Grants, most of whom were given between $25,000 and $50,000. They were allowed two minutes each to describe their projects.
  • “While we have been anguishing over the fate of the humanities, the humanities have been busily moving into, and even colonizing, the fields that were supposedly displacing them,”
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • role-playing games
  • enabling learners to “experience” historical events or places instead of reading off a page.
  • visual representations
  • of data
  • One recurring theme in the presentations was the need for “linked open data” — types of research data that are tagged and stored in such a way that they can integrate with other research.
  • If one researcher had architectural data about New York City, and another had demographic data about the city, and each were able to cross-reference the other’s data with her own, it would deepen the context and understanding for both.
  • With linked open data on the rise, the same could soon happen with research data
  • “Linked open data is a very technical infrastructure, but the result of that is information that’s shared widely for free. A lot of scholarly data over the last hundred years or so is locked up in expensive journals that the public could never afford to subscribe to.
  • That could be the key to winning back support for the humanities
  •  
    Could the creative use of technology help humanities scholars win back public support?
Barbara Lindsey

The Dangers of Personalization | Ideas and Thoughts - 0 views

  •  
    For online privacy and rights post.
Barbara Lindsey

The University of Wherever - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Thrun, a German-born and largely self-taught expert in robotics, is famous for leading the team that built Google’s self-driving car. He is offering his “Introduction to Artificial Intelligence” course online and free of charge. His remote students will get the same lectures as students paying $50,000 a year, the same assignments, the same exams and, if they pass, a “statement of accomplishment” (though not Stanford credit). When The Times wrote about this last month, 58,000 students had signed up for the course. After the article, enrollment leapt to 130,000, from across the globe.
  • Thrun’s ultimate mission is a virtual university in which the best professors broadcast their lectures to tens of thousands of students. Testing, peer interaction and grading would happen online; a cadre of teaching assistants would provide some human supervision; and the price would be within reach of almost anyone. “Literally, we can probably get the same quality of education I teach in class for about 1 to 2 percent of the cost,” Thrun told me.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Your thoughts?
  • Thrun believes there are technological answers to all of these questions, some of them being worked out already by other online frontiersmen.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • “If we can solve this,” he said, “I think it will disrupt all of higher education.”
  • John Hennessy, Stanford’s president, gave the university’s blessing to Thrun’s experiment, which he calls “an initial demonstration,” but he is cautious about the grander dream of a digitized university. He can imagine a virtual campus for some specialized programs and continuing education, and thinks the power of distributed learning can be incorporated in undergraduate education — for example, supplanting the large lecture that is often filled with students paying more attention to their laptops. He endorses online teaching as a way to educate students, in the developing world or our own, who cannot hope for the full campus experience.
  • As The Times’s Matt Richtel recently reported, there is remarkably little data showing that technology-centric schooling improves basic learning. It is quite possible that the infatuation with technology has diverted money from things known to work — training better teachers, giving kids more time in school.
  • “When is the infrastructure of the university particularly valuable — as it is, I believe, for an undergraduate residential experience — and when is it secondary to the learning process?”
  •  
    Op ed piece on Stanford's free AI course and the impact of open, online education on the traditional academy. Should have mentioned Siemens, Downes & Couros MOOCs.
Barbara Lindsey

O'Reilly Network: What Is Web 2.0 - 0 views

  • "folksonomy" (in contrast to taxonomy), a style of collaborative categorization of sites using freely chosen keywords, often referred to as tags. Tagging allows for the kind of multiple, overlapping associations that the brain itself uses, rather than rigid categories. In the canonical example, a Flickr photo of a puppy might be tagged both "puppy" and "cute"--allowing for retrieval along natural axes generated user activity.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Key is flexibility for user-generated tags that are meaningful to them.
  • peer-production
  • RSS allows someone to link not just to a page, but to subscribe to it, with notification every time that page changes.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • RSS is now being used to push not just notices of new blog entries, but also all kinds of data updates, including stock quotes, weather data, and photo availability
  •  
    O'Reilly definition of Web 2.0
Barbara Lindsey

One Year or Less: Electronic Books « 2011 Horizon Report - 0 views

  • The content of electronic books and the social activities they enable, rather than the device used to access them, are the keys to their popularity;
Barbara Lindsey

Critical Challenges « 2011 Horizon Report - 0 views

  • reconciling new forms of scholarly activity with old standards continues to be difficult, creating tension and raising questions as to where faculty energy is best directed.
  • Economic pressures and new models of education are presenting unprecedented competition to traditional models of the university
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Any concerns about this particular trend?
  • There is a greater need than ever for effective tools and filters for finding, interpreting, organizing, and retrieving the data that is important to us.
Barbara Lindsey

Basics · Mightybell - 0 views

  • By directly defining in plain language what people will get out of your Experience and how it will make them smarter, more interesting, survive in the Amazon, increasingly witty, or a more competitive athlete in the title of your Experience, you are one step closer to creating a compelling Experience
Barbara Lindsey

Changes to Electronic Course Reserves - 0 views

  • You can tag items of special interest
  • your students will be able to sort by those tags. They will also be able to add their own personal tags.
  • You can see how many times each reserve item was accessed and which student accessed it.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Your students can choose to receive emails when new items are added to your reserve list.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      RSS!
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      We'll use this brand-new information from HBL to practice using Diigo's tools!
« First ‹ Previous 301 - 320 of 329 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page