Curricula Designed to Meet 21st-Century Expectations | EDUCAUSE - 1 views
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Faculty concerns perhaps center less on being "replaceable" and more on worrying that the teaching and learning enterprise will be reduced to students gathering information that can be easily downloaded, causing them to rely too heavily on technology instead of intellect.
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First, traditional age students overwhelmingly prefer face-to-face contact with faculty to mediated communication. Second, technology used in the service of learning will require more—not less—sophistication on the part of students as they engage in processes of integration, translation, audience analysis, and critical judgment.
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With such specific applications of technology and the limited use of other forms (for example, multimedia), students' low expectations for the use of technology in the curriculum is not surprising. Such constrained use of technology by the faculty in the curriculum and low student expectations may serve to limit innovation and creativity as well as the faculty's capacity to engage students more deeply in their subject matter.
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Your thoughts on this?
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I completely agree. As a student, I don't think a text-based PowerPoint slide presentation would interest me too much, partcularly when there are too many words squeezed into just one slide. If a PowerPoint slide presentation is just a copy of texts, the use of technology makes nothing different from teaching with a blackboard and chalks. The use of technology must have, and then can serve, a pedagogical purpose.
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This remindes me of the first time stuents at my school started using powerpoints to make presentations and how exciting it was for them to see thier classmates ideas presented in front of them this way. Over using this and without really integraing sth new than their words written, showed boredom and disinterest later! So teachers should think here of using technology in a different way like turning the lesson into a digital story or using technology differently ! Being unexpected in the way you use technology in the classrooom, would make them always eager to learn and excited about it!!!
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Integrating ICT into the MFL classroom:: Tweeting and polling in PowerPoint - 0 views
Becoming a (More) Socialized Organization: 10 Tips for UNICEF to Tap the Social Web 04 ... - 0 views
Seth's Blog: Really Bad Powerpoint - 1 views
Curricula Designed to Meet 21st-Century Expectations | Resources | EDUCAUSE - 0 views
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W here students had once called a large number of their classes "death by lecture," she noted they were now calling them "death by PowerPoint." >
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here students had once called a large number of their classes "death by lecture," she noted they were now calling them "death by PowerPoint."
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The Best Sources Of Advice For Making Good Presentations | Larry Ferlazzo's W... - 0 views
Presentation Zen Bento Box - dr. jude rathburn's posterous - 0 views
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Take an hour to show Garr's award winning Presentation Zen video (included in the bento box) so that people can see the principles in action before trying to design their own presentations.
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since viewers are not familiar with the approach, I found it is helpful to take some time to discuss each element.
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rovide risk-free (i.e. low stakes) opportunities for learners to practice various elements of the Presentation Zen approach, share the results and provide peer reviews.
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Information overload, the early years - The Boston Globe - 0 views
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The larger printed books became, the more they needed to offer guidance through their own texts. The tables of contents and alphabetical indexes developed by printers and authors to accompany them are still recognizable today.
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More effective to modern eyes, though not as widespread, were tables of contents that outlined layers of subdivisions with successive indentations, as a PowerPoint slide might today (but without the bullet points).
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These slips were cut from a full page and soon glued onto a new sheet, but in the mid-17th century for the first time one scholar advocated using the slips themselves as an information-storage system.
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Second Life: Do You Need One? (Part 4) : July 2007 : THE Journal - 0 views
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Digital learners then typically end up in extremely diverse networks, further expanding their cultural experience in the digital world. Digital learners are also constantly faced with challenges to their established real world social norms and ask some very tough questions about those real world dividers. Many traditional visitors remain in those topic-centered social groups, which typically consist of people of common interest and backgrounds, providing them less immersion into the diversity of the digital environment.
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Most traditional educator-visitors soon ask how they can find the space inworld to create a "classroom." The result is typically a walled building, with ceilings, desks and chairs, and a lectern at the front next to a PowerPoint screen. Digital visitors may also request space for a "classroom," but it is more likely to end up being a platform floating in the sky, with clouds instead of chairs, and digital media streamed onto the side of a giant bubble floating in the middle of the space.
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Shirky: A Group Is Its Own Worst Enemy - 1 views
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April 24, 2003
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I want to talk about a pattern I've seen over and over again in social software that supports large and long-lived groups.
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definition of social software
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Confessions of a Podcast Junkie: A Student Perspective (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE - 3 views
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My experience in creating podcasts came through much nobler endeavors. It began with a research project in the working-class neighborhoods of North Belfast and a frustrated conversation over pints in a pub. I was on a research high after an interview with two women of very different political backgrounds. They were friends, brought together by the work of a local nonprofit, and their mutual admiration shone from the lightning-fast banter that they tossed back and forth throughout the interview. It was clear to me that they were a perfect example of a friendship from different sides of the political divide. But my friend at the pub just couldn't get it. He suggested that their friendship might be contrived, a mere show for my benefit, or that if real, it didn't mean as much as I thought. Exasperated, I pulled out my recorder and played the conversation back to him. As their Belfast accents filled up our corner booth, I could see his posture slacken and the battle turn my way. In that moment, I decided that only a podcast could finish telling my story. Over the next months, armed with just an MP3 player and some freeware suggested by a friend, I worked to piece together the story of North Belfast through interviews, conversations, and the sounds of the streets. The result was crude, elementary, and slightly difficult to listen to. But I was hooked.
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Student Use (and Misuse) of Podcast Technology
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In fact, the iPod topped the list of the most "in" things on campus in 2006, according to Student Monitor's Lifestyle & Media Study.
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How many in our class own an iPod? Other mp3 player?
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I don't have any of them, but after studying and teaching in an American university , I feel it is one of the important things that I have to own!!
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I own an iPod touch and I believe my cellphone is also part mp3 player
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I have 2
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I have a mp3 player, not an iPod and, anyway, I do not see why iPods are so popular...
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I own an iPod but I never use it!
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I don't have an IPod
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You made very interesting comments, Inas! Congratulations!!
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I own one but have yet to use it! :(
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Mine doesn't really work since I put it in the laundry. But I never used it much anyway because it's not compatible with .flac files.
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"Besides the entertainment value, Westfall and Finnegan say that the podcasts were especially useful for reviewing material. They used the podcasts as refreshers throughout the semester and during exam time. In addition, creating a segment meant that they had to brush up on their own knowledge of the subject."
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