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Barbara Lindsey

YouTube - ElQuijote's Channel - 0 views

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    The Royal Spanish Academy crowdsources the reading of Don Quixote
Barbara Lindsey

Who says our way is the right way? « BuzzMachine - 0 views

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    A group of Danish academics say we are passing through the other side of what they wonderfully call the Gutenberg Parenthesis, leaving the structured, serial, permanent, authored, controlled era of text and returning, perhaps, to what came before the press: a time when communication and content cross, when process dominates product, when knowledge is distributed by people passing it around, when we remix it along the way, when we are more oral and aural.
Barbara Lindsey

Unmasking the Digital Truth / FrontPage - 0 views

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    The goal of this collaborative wiki is to "unmask the digital truth" with respect to the reasons some leaders today are overfiltering and overblocking web 2.0 sites in schools and libraries, and provide reasonable alternatives which support broader student and teacher access to these sites.
Barbara Lindsey

CaptionTube: Home - 0 views

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    Caption Youtube videos for free. Must have a google account to use.
Barbara Lindsey

YouTube - TestTube - 0 views

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    Caption YouTube videos with the caption editor. Must have google account linked to your YouTube account.
Barbara Lindsey

Twitter Chat Schedule - 0 views

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    Schedules for a huge number of hashtag using chat conversations, including #edchat
Barbara Lindsey

Online tools and applications on Go2Web20 - 0 views

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    Tools that come up after selecting the tag 'collaboration'
Barbara Lindsey

VoiceThread Image Attribution « Moving at the Speed of Creativity - 0 views

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    How to give attribution on images used in Voicethread. A nice set of screenshots.
Barbara Lindsey

8 Ways Technology Is Improving Education - 0 views

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    efficiency
Barbara Lindsey

Information overload, the early years - The Boston Globe - 0 views

  • Complaints about information overload, usually couched in terms of the overabundance of books, have a long history — reaching back to Ecclesiastes 12:12 (“of making books there is no end,” probably from the 4th or 3d century BC). The ancient moralist Seneca complained that “the abundance of books is distraction” in the 1st century AD, and there have been other info-booms from time to time — the building of the Library of Alexandria in the 3d century BC, or the development of newspapers starting in the 18th century.
  • around 1500, humanist scholars began to bemoan new problems: Printers in search of profit, they complained, rushed to print manuscripts without attention to the quality of the text, and the sheer mass of new books was distracting readers from the focus on the ancient authors most worthy of attention.
  • To confront this new challenge, printers, scholars, and compilers began to develop novel ways to manage all these texts — tools that listed, sorted under subject headings, summarized, and selected from all those books that no one person could master. Note-taking was one solution, which the humanist pedagogues advocated alongside their teaching of ancient rhetoric. But not everyone followed their advice to take notes from everything they read throughout their lives, and for those who didn’t, new kinds of reference books offered a ready-made version — collections of best bits that could be consulted using sophisticated indexes and tables of contents.
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    Page 2 of article
Barbara Lindsey

Information overload, the early years - The Boston Globe - 0 views

  • 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.
  • 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).
  • 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.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The slips, ordered and sorted, would eventually inspire both the index card and the library card catalog.
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    Page 3 of article
Barbara Lindsey

Information overload, the early years - The Boston Globe - 0 views

  • In many ways, our key methods of coping with overload haven’t changed since the 16th century: We still need to select, summarize, and sort, and ultimately need human judgment and attention to guide the process.
  • Early modern compilers were driven by this enthusiasm, even beyond their hopes for acquiring reputation or financial gain. Today, we see the same impulse in the proliferation of cooperative information sharing on the Internet, such as the many designers and programmers sharing new ways to visualize and efficiently use huge quantities of data. In democratizing our ability to contribute to a universal encyclopedia of experience and information, the Internet has shown just how widespread that long-running ambition remains today.
  • Overload has long been fueled by our own enthusiasm — the enthusiasm for accumulating and sharing knowledge and information, and also for experimenting with new forms of organizing and presenting it.
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    Final page of article
Barbara Lindsey

10 Tips to Help Master Prezi - 0 views

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    Great set of tips for creating a prezi by Andrew Davis
Barbara Lindsey

15(2) | in education - 0 views

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    Peer-reviewed open-access journal on ed issues. This one is on technology and social media
Barbara Lindsey

16(1) | in education - 0 views

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    Peer reviewed open access journal on ed issues. This one has a provocative artile exploring the need for higher ed institutions in face of the ease with which learners can create, collaborate, communicate and learn from others outside the institutional framework.
Barbara Lindsey

WikiLeaks: The revolution has begun - and it will be digitised | Heather Brooke | Comme... - 0 views

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    Leaks are not the problem; they are the symptom. They reveal a disconnect between what people want and need to know and what they actually do know. The greater the secrecy, the more likely a leak. The way to move beyond leaks is to ensure a robust regime for the public to access important information.
Barbara Lindsey

Scopus - Document details - 0 views

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    Blended learning using video-based blogs: Public speaking for English as a second language students
Barbara Lindsey

Scopus - Document details - 0 views

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    Uncharted waters? Exploring experts' opinions on the opportunities and limitations of serious games for foreign language learning
Barbara Lindsey

How Online Classrooms Are Helping Haiti Rebuild Its Education System - 0 views

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    One of the advantages of online education is that the students can access quality education while in Haiti. "Unlike those who leave to the states to study - which if they succeed in doing so, they never return - we want to keep them [in Haiti]," Reshef says.
Barbara Lindsey

Teach like a video game: Use assessment as learning and motivation - cleanapple.com - M... - 0 views

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    Use this as the main article on gaming
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