Skip to main content

Home/ centreforelearning/ Group items tagged Home

Rss Feed Group items tagged

14More

30+ Super Secret iPhone Features and Shortcuts | iPhone.AppStorm - 0 views

  • Press the Home and Sleep Buttons Simultaneously to Take a Screenshot
  • Press Home Once to Go to First Home Screen or Search
  • Hold Home and Sleep to Reboot
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • Hold Home for Five Seconds to Quit the Current App
  • Tap Shift and Drag
  • Double Tap Space for a Period and Space
  • Enable International Keyboards for International TLDs
  • Leave Off www and .com for Faster Browsing
  • Add Sites to Your Home Screen for Quick Access and More
  • Tap and Hold a Link for Options
  • Scroll Inside Frames and Text Areas With Two Fingers
  • Double Tap a Text Column or Image to Zoom to It
  • Tap and Hold to Save Images
  •  
    kinda handy for iphone users especially the screenshots.
2More

AR by Home Team - 3 views

shared by casey ng on 19 Jul 11 - No Cached
  •  
    The Spore Home Team is also trying AR at their recent convention.
  •  
    I happened to be at their roadshow last weekend and played with the AR thingy. Good experience.
1More

A new app lets you send pictures via sound - Computerworld - 2 views

  •  
    As cool as Chirp is for fun, personal sharing, it's even better for mass communications. For example, TV shows constantly tell viewers to follow them on Twitter or go to some web site. What they're doing is giving the audience a homework assignment, making them type a code in order to receive some information. However, with Chirp, TV shows could just play the chirps. Viewers watching at home would passively receive all the content chirped by the show. TV shows could allow photo "uploads" by phone, too. You can imagine TV shows providing a number that has an answering machine. Users could snap a picture, then leave the chirp of the picture as a message on the machine. It works just as well on radio, on podcasts, in videos and any situation where sound is involved.
2More

Google Docs Editing Goes Mobile - 0 views

  • Google () announced Wednesday morning that it has begun rolling out mobile editing for Google Docs (). The update isn’t yet available for everyone, but it should be available to all over the next few days.To date, only Google Docs spreadsheets have supported mobile editing. When the the update hits, all Google Docs documents will be editable on devices running Android () 2.2 (and higher) and iOS 3.0+.We’ve not been able to test it out yet, but Google has released a little video — as seen above — showcasing the new mobile editing capabilities of Google Docs.
  •  
    That means that... - You can work on that important memo...while on the bus or train to work. - If you're behind on a group proposal, but really want to make it to the ball game tonight, your whole team can work on it from the bleacher seats. - You can take minute-by-minute notes at a concert so you'll always remember the setlist. And your friends can jealously follow in real-time at home. - and the list goes on!
11More

Student Ryan Kessler Transformed His Workflow, Raised His GPA and Left His Te... - 1 views

  • I use Evernote, Everywhere: Android (phone and Tablet) Windows Web Clipper (Chrome)
  • 1. Evernote for staying focused
  • 2. Evernote for getting organized
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • 3. Evernote for lightening my load and connecting all of my devices
  • scan paper documents using Droidscan
  • 4. Evernote for group projects and class discussions
  • 5. Evernote for crunch time
  • 6. Evernote for learning a foreign language
  • 7. Evernote for building my future
  •  
    A story on how a college student used Evernote which helped his workflow of how he studied and tips on how using Evernote helped him get organized and focused on tasks. 
  •  
    Thanks for making my life easy! ;)
2More

Nuts and Bolts: Social Media for Learning by Jane Bozarth : Learning Solutions Magazine - 1 views

  • In the industry right now – as we see in the Social Media for Learning report research data – there is considerable use of social media tools in instruction delivery efforts. But there’s less evidence that people are using the tools to support social learning. Often, people use social media tools as another means of delivering content. For example: Publishing the training department newsletter on a blog uto-scheduling tweets about class assignments from a Twitter account that does not otherwise engage with the learners or ask them to engage with each other Hosting a software application development course, in tutorial format, on a wiki By contrast, using social media to support and extend social learning invites learners to contribute, engage, and participate with one another online. For instance, when: Setting up a wiki for those in a new-hire induction program to work together to edit a FAQs page for use by the next group coming to the program Having managers-in-training use a microblogging tool for a leadership book-club discussion Helping to support and participating in a community of the organization’s customer service reps, to give them a place to share war stories and strategies for dealing with challenges           So just using the online tools to deliver content doesn’t support “social learning;” that happens when you use the tools to invite interaction from and between the learners. It’s about social, not media, and it’s about shared learning, not just pushing content.
  •  
    New social media tools now enable social learning to happen on a much larger scale. But this doesn't mean that social learning is something we suddenly need to "do," as if it hadn't existed before or that we need to attempt to "implement." Rather, those involved in eLearning should work to ensure our designs home in on and support areas where social learning is already naturally occurring in the learner's workflow and leverage new tools where that makes sense. (Workflow questions: Where and when are workers asking for help from one another? Where do they need performance support?)
1More

Videodropper - 1 views

  •  
    If you work in an environment that blocks YouTube access, Videodropper could be a great way for you to download and organize the videos that you want to show and share. Of course, you would have to do that from home or some other place where YouTube isn't blocked. Then from where you are, you'll be able to open the videos from the download on your computer.
2More

Slide Screen by Larva Labs - 0 views

  • Larva Labs presents a home screen that creates a meaningful hierarchy out of your information. Built for Android-based handsets, our home screen is designed for heavy phone users and people struggling with information overload.
  •  
    Am downloading from the android market now. Anyone who wishes to have a look at it may come over to my cubicle. :)
2More

ZOMBIES, RUN! - 1 views

  •  
    Shared during lunch with IDs Zombies, Run! is an ultra-immersive running game for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and Android. We deliver the story straight to your headphones through orders and voice recordings - and back home, you can build and grow your base with the items you've collected.
  •  
    great. im sure my running regime with this app will be more fun soon.
1More

Lynda.com video tutorial on Android graphics - 0 views

  •  
    Designers, please watch this video. Important!
3More

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.
  •  
    This is a fantastic article... 
6More

Simple Techniques for Applying Active Learning Strategies to Online Course Videos | Fac... - 2 views

    • Rachel Tan
       
      Dr Ashley, I agree with you and posting a question at the beginning of the video is an excellent strategy. That is how I learn. I need to know the question upfront so that I know what to pay attention to in the video.
  • Embed short graded or self-assessments either in the video itself, or at the end of each video. Including one or two multiple-choice questions or requests to post to a forum—either between scenes (using a post-production editing tool such as Camtasia or Captivate) or after the video—alerts students to the “take homes” they should be getting from the material. It also helps teachers assess, at point of contact, whether students understand the major concepts.
    • Rachel Tan
       
      This (self assessment) is absolutely necessary to give learning a chance to happen, as we develop open learning courses. This applies to Google Sites training resources out there.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Video as a way to strengthen online research skills while driving conceptual understanding.
    • Rachel Tan
       
      Dr Ashley, this is a really good article - timely, very useful. Thanks for sharing!
  •  
    For IDs and VCDs! Quote: "there's a big difference between watching a video and learning something from it" Article goes on to suggest strategies for incorporating videos into lessons. 
1More

Award-winning LMS for teachers and school administrators | Schoology - 0 views

  •  
    Another option of LMS, beside Google Sites, Edmodo and Moodle.
2More

Smartphone Usage Statistics and Trends 2013 [Infographic] | AnsonAlex - 0 views

  • Mobile and smartphone usage is most prevalent in the morning and evening. Smartphone users tend to glance at and skim over emails more than desktop users who tend to fully read emails. Smartphone users around the world tend to use their smartphones at home more than anywhere else. From October 2010 to October 2012, email open rates on smartphones increased by 300%. Mobile email creates twice as many conversions as social and search. The average price of an order placed from a mobile device is higher than the average order from a tablet or desktop. Mobile and smartphone usage is higher Thursday – Monday than on Tuesday or Wednesday.
  •  
    As we use our smartphones more and more, our patterns of email reading and replying change. We could take note of these patterns, especially if doing surveys or email marketing campaigns, for better responses.
1More

Virtual Nerd: Real math help for school and home - 1 views

  •  
    For general interest but for VCDs and ETs in particular. Check out this video tool if you have not heard of it before.
1More

Google Drive - 0 views

  •  
    An alternative easy to use Google Drive would make sharing a whole lot easier. I've tried. So try it now and get started with 5 GB free. 
1More

Harvard Education Letter - 1 views

  •  
    Teaching Students to Ask Their Own Questions
1 - 20 of 56 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page