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15 Social Networks for Teachers From edshelf - 0 views

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    A variety of networks that can be used in education such as Facebook, Edmodo, Twiducate, Twitter, Noodle, Everloop, etc.
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Special issue "Mobile Campus Systems" for Campus Wide Information System - 0 views

  • Higher Education Institutions around the world have reacted differently to the increasing demand for information and communication through mobile devices. The special issue wants to attract research and development papers about “mobile campus systems” that support learners and researcher in Higher Education Institutions in their daily practices.
    • Ashley Tan
       
      Mazlan, monitor this please!
  • Mobile learning environments
  • Mobile Campus Communities
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  • Mobile app development for Higher Education
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PolivkaVox: Why social networks are powerful for learning. - 2 views

  • Typical instructional design and pedagogy focus on breaking down a subject into component parts, gaining mastery of those parts, whether they are steps in a process or techniques or parts of the anatomy, and then reassembling them in the learner's mind and in practice so that the result is overall mastery of the broader subject. That may be oversimplified, but this basic approach goes back to Aristotle, at least. It's not debated in education, it's assumed that this is the best approach for learning anything, including complex processes or highly nuanced behaviors in shifting contexts.
  • Centola's conclusions. He studied positive changes in people's behaviors regarding health care, changes that resulted directly from placing subjects in carefully designed social networks with the goal of improving their health decisions. What he concluded was that smaller, tighter social groups had more success improving health behaviors than larger, looser social groups (ie, the typical Facebook connections). Maybe you already see what it took me a while to notice. Both of them had success. Social networks designed for a specific purpose can do something pretty amazing: They can change people's behaviors. Any educator or trainer whose goal is actually to impact both thinking and behaviors (to change lives!) rather than just getting people to pass a test or check a box, should be paying close attention. And maybe getting a little excited.Researchers in education have long known the power of social groups to alter behavior. Brown, Collins, and Duguid made this case a while back
  • these three went on to say that highly complex behaviors are picked up, absorbed, through relatively informal social exchange more quickly than they could be if they were "taught" in the usual break-it-down sense. We're talking about complex behaviors. Processes. Highly nuanced interpersonal interactions. Centola's study suggests to me that we now have an online tool, the social network, that is fully capable of carrying the power of culture to shape behaviors and establish norms. And it can be done on purpose.
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A Principal's Reflections: Tools to Help Become a Tech Savvy Educator - 0 views

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    Great resource for educational technologies
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I Education Apps Review - I Education Apps Review - 0 views

  • App Review: Animoto
  • Animoto’s functionality is in the ability to take photos and video that the user specifies, add a music soundtrack ,which can be from their open source music library or music uploaded by the user, to create a movie complete with transitions.
  • it is a great way to have students in an online class introduce themselves. Students are able to choose the images they would like to share as well as select their music. This provides a window to the students when they get to choose how to express themselves
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  • a colleague of mine has used Animoto for students to develop presentations. Using images and text they are able to convey ideas and their knowledge.
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ingentaconnect A model for e-education: Extended teaching spaces and extended le... - 0 views

  • The paper proposes a model for e-education in instruction, training, initiation and induction based upon the concept of extended teaching spaces involving execution, facilitation and liberation, and extended learning spaces used for acquisition, application and construction cemented by dialogue and reflection.
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Augmented Reality (AR) in Education « Learning Technologies - 0 views

  • introduced the concept of AR, discussed the recent AR developments, examined the impact of AR on society, and discussed the implications of AR for education
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iPads in Education - Implementation Stories and Lessons Learned (continued) | Emerging ... - 0 views

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    Reference for m-learning principle objectives
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http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/17439884.2010.534798 - 2 views

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    In a study earlier this year educators are seen as more credible when they Tweet. Here is the reference and the link: Johnson, K. A. (2011). The effect of Twitter posts on students' perceptions of instructor credibility. Learning, Media and Technology, 36(1), 21-38. Routledge. Retrieved March 31, 2011, from http://www.informaworld.co​m/index/935339874.pdf.
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    This is very interesting... I think I will share this idea with my teacher friends!
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YouTube Blog: YouTube Copyright Education (remixed) - 0 views

  • Because copyright law can be complicated, education is critical to ensure that our users understand the rules and continue to play by them. That’s why today we’re releasing a new tutorial on copyright and a redesigned copyright help center. We’re also making two changes to our copyright process to be sure that our users understand the rules, and that users who abide by those rules can remain active on the site.
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Blackboard: Now More "Open" | Hack Education - 0 views

  • The change will allow instructors to publish and share their courses — syllabi, handouts, and so on — under a Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY).
  • This will mean that, for the first time, content in Blackboard will be available to those who aren’t registered for a course — learners not enrolled, learners not on campus. Professors will be able to share their material to Facebook and Twitter.
  • Blackboard also says that it’s revising its policies so that institutions that do open up their course materials this way don’t incur any additional licensing costs when people access the materials, even via webinars and the like. That means non-traditional, non-enrolled, non-revenue generating students will be able to access the material as “guests” without forcing schools to pay more.
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  • “Sharing educational content is much more complicated that simply clicking the new ‘Share’ button,” he writes. How will universities handle the licensing of courses? Is it up to individual faculty? Will universities devise larger strategies to connect their open course content to other online efforts — both on their own campuses and alongside others?
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    Not sure this will happen to NIE? I wander..
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Startups are about to blow up the textbook - Fortune Tech - 0 views

  • "CK-12 basically looked at STEM [science, technology, engineering, and math] and broke it down into the 5,000 fundamental concepts, and they mapped them all together," Chakrapani says. "It's not about creating a textbook and every three years putting out a new edition so you can capture more revenue. It's about thinking how a student learns."
  • "And then you go back at the end of year with teachers, see what students struggle on, and revise and improve the book. Each year, the text gets better."
  • Free educational resources -- like a university course on Coursera, for example -- may be available for students to use at no cost, but students cannot reuse, remix, or repurpose that course content however they'd like. By contrast open-source materials like CK-12's materials are not only free, but can also be freely repurposed in any way a student or teacher sees fit.
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http://www.fontshop.com/education/pdf/fsfinalbook_spread.pdf - 0 views

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    For the MDs - you might be interested in this guide to typography
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Why I Let My UCLA Students Cheat On Their Exam - 0 views

  • So last quarter I had an intriguing thought while preparing my Game Theory lectures. Tests are really just measures of how the Education Game is proceeding. Professors test to measure their success at teaching, and students take tests in order to get a good grade. Might these goals be maximized simultaneously? What if I let the students write their own rules for the test-taking game? Allow them to do everything we would normally call cheating? 
  • Is the take-home message, then, that cheating is good? Well … no. Although by conventional test-taking rules, the students were cheating, they actually weren’t in this case. Instead, they were changing their goal in the Education Game from “Get a higher grade than my classmates” to “Get to the best answer.” This also required them to make new rules for test-taking.
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    This is a fantastic article... 
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10 Resources for Higher Education Web Designers | EdTech Magazine - 1 views

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    Exktra info for our MDs
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