Skip to main content

Home/ centreforelearning/ Group items tagged benefits

Rss Feed Group items tagged

1More

11 Ways To Explain Social Business Benefits - 0 views

  •  
    The table in the link illustrates the benefits of what social learning can brings for adopting each tool. This could perhaps translate to management's interests in our cause.
1More

Benefits, dangers of geotagging on Facebook, Twitter - The Ball State Daily News - Feat... - 1 views

  • For any type of theft, if someone knows where you are, they know where you are not and if you are alone. If someone is watching you over time, they can get a sense of your routine
1More

Benefits of Social Learning in the Workplace - 2 views

  •  
    The author of this short article is perpetuating a harmful myth for business reasons. An LMS is not the only or best way of enabling social learning.
1More

Tips for Using Chat as an Instructional Tool -- Campus Technology - 1 views

  •  
    This article was written 5 years ago. Now, we have the benefit of ubiqutious mobile chat platforms e.g. Whatsapp, which can create small focus groups to talk about a particular topic. Not only so, besides the usual text, Whatsapp also allows participants to share mobile videos taken on the spot, share their geolocations with one another, share audio recordings and of course, images. A personal example of how I use Whatsapp for personal learning: I use Whatsapp regularly to practice reading and writing my Japanese with a few other friends, and when I make mistakes, they can quickly give me feedback in real-time. We also exchange photos of Japanese culture, food items and even on-the-spot videos from those who are in Japan. Some of us go for Japanese classes, some don't. But those who go for the classes share what they have learnt with those who haven't.  I'm not sure if this can be classified as a type of "flipped learning", but I realized that mobile chat makes an excellent real-time, yet highly personalized tool for e-learning in small group discussions. Perhaps this is one area we can consider next time as a way to do mobile learning that harnesses the social nature of us learners.
1More

3G powers Singapore school's 21st century classroom - 1 views

  •  
    NIE is mentioned in this article talking about mobile technology in schools. And the platform chosen was Windows.... The National Institute of Education of Singapore is assisting teachers with the development of customized curriculum in English, Science and Chinese that leverages the benefits of mobile, Internet-connected, learning devices and provides students with new learning opportunities that are not possible with paper and pencil. We co-design technology enabled lessons with the teachers and provide professional development to teachers that enable them to enact lessons using smartphones. It is critical to empower teachers to orchestrate the transformed classroom to support students' personalized learning," says Professor Looi Chee Kit of the National Institute of Education. All smartphones are equipped with MyDesk, a next-generation mobile learning platform tailored to leverage the capabilities of Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system. MyDesk enables each student to access his or her assignments, relevant websites that contain podcasts, textual material and video clips and educational applications, such as concept mapping, drawing and animating, to practice both self-directed and collaborative learning.
1More

How-to video: Diigo -- the social bookmarking Web 2.0 application - 3 views

shared by Sally Loan on 08 Feb 11 - Cached
  •  
    Find out the benefit and drawbacks of using Diigo.
2More

The 21st Century Principal: 4 Benefits of iPad Use for Administrators and Educators - 3 views

  •  
    If only more of our NIE staff thought and acted this way!
  •  
    Influence them from top down and bottom up. Our stakeholders like ACIS, Programme Offices and AG supports may be our initial targets. Hopefully with a bigger support group, we will be able to induce the others to come on board. I am trying to influence my bus buddies in a small way too :)
3More

Kill Your Meeting Room - The Future's in Walking and Talking | Wired Opinion | Wired.com - 1 views

  • Sending information in advance has obvious benefits, including more time for: research, formulating ideas, and asking other people about their points of view to inform a better discussion. Perhaps more significantly it allows those who are naturally quiet or introspective to contribute more meaningfully.
  • I’m not arguing that we should ditch technology in the workplace, or for our meetings. Technology has its place in work; of course it does. But as with all things, technology should be there to support human connection — not get in the way of it.
  •  
    How to match the right technology to the right goal for a given meeting
1More

What is the Right Blend? - 0 views

  •  
    A recent Department of Education study suggested that blended classes (part online and part face-to-face) had higher achievement levels than either face-to-face or totally online classes. Students felt greater community in blended classes. This session will explore the design and delivery of blended classes to provide the benefits of both on campus and virtual instruction. What a Blended Course is NOT: —Traditional classroom activities + "let's put some stuff on the web" —Online courses with campus tests On campus lectures with reading and tests online
1More

What is MITx? - MIT News Office - 0 views

  • MITx will be coupled with an MIT-wide research initiative into online learning that will study ways in which students, whether on campus or part of a virtual community, learn most effectively. To the degree that MITx demonstrates highly effective online learning tools from which campus-based students might benefit, such as self-paced online exercises, those tools will become part of the experience of MIT students. These tools will enable campus faculty to automate some of the more repetitive and less creative tasks, such as grading, thereby liberating more time to devote to innovative ways of teaching the material and to additional contact time with resident students.
2More

Need To Create? Get A Constraint | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

  • One of the many paradoxes of human creativity is that it seems to benefit from constraints. Although we imagine the imagination as requiring total freedom, the reality of the creative process is that it’s often entangled with strict conventions and formal requirements. Pop songs have choruses and refrains; symphonies have four movements; plays have five acts; painters still rely on the tropes of portraiture.
  •  
    Interesting insight into the nature of creativity...
10More

21 Rules for Social Media Engagement - 0 views

  • Rules of Engagement As social media continues to evolve, defining the “rules of engagement” will encourage thoughtful interaction that benefits the business, brand, customer, peers, and prospects at every touchpoint. In the end, we earn the attention, relationships and business we deserve.
  • Don’t just participate solely in your own domains
  • Participate where your presence is advantageous and mandatory.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Discover all relevant communities of interest and observe the choices, challenges, impressions, and wants of the people within each network.
  • Become a true participant in each community you wish to activate. Move beyond marketing and sales.
  • Don’t just listen and placate — act. Do something.
  • Consistently create, contribute, and reinforce service and value.
  • Don’t get lost in translation. Ensure your communication and intent is clear and that your involvement maps to objectives created for the social web.
  • Give back, reciprocate, and recognize notable contributions from participants in your communities.
  •  
    Rules of engagement - Social Media.
1More

Some advantages of LLC in Offshore - 0 views

  •  
    Many company owners want to cut down the cost of reduction and running of the business. Its not easy since they have to keep up with tax filing, high cost of filing the returns and running the business.
1More

YouTube - Using ePortfolios as a reflective teaching tool - Case study - 2 views

  • This case study examines how ePortfolios, used in conjunction with blogs, can encourage students to become more critically reflective learners. The benefits and challenges of using ePortfolios are discussed, along with strategies for providing sufficient technical and pedagogical support, to enable teachers and students to confidently use the technology as a collaborative learning tool.
1More

SpringerLink - Education and Information Technologies, Online First™ - 0 views

  • A Video Lecture Capture (VLC) system was implemented to address issues relating to retention, and to reverse the trend of high drop, failure, and withdrawal (DFW) rates. The purpose of this study was to examine student perceptions of how using VLC impacted their academic performance. Areas of interest surrounded students’ perceived benefits, value, and helpfulness of using the system. In addition, the study probed the concern of many about the impact using VLC would have upon class attendance. Finally the study compared students’ perceptions about their performance as a result of using VLC with faculty perceptions about their students’ performance as a result of using VLC. It was hypothesized that there is a significant difference between student and faculty perceptions.
3More

Twitter finds a place in the classroom - CNN.com - 0 views

  • Teachers across the country have been incorporating Twitter into classrooms for a few years, but the site's adoption by educational institutions appears to be limited. A survey of 1,920 U.S. teachers published in April found that 2% of them use the micro-blogging site in college lectures. About half those polled said the use of Twitter and Facebook in class is harmful to the learning experience, according to the study from consulting firm Pearson Learning Solutions. Still, Legaspi is hopeful. When he explained the plan to his students at Hollenbeck Middle School in East Los Angeles, he learned that only one of them had used Twitter. But most, he said, live on their phones. So getting them started wasn't difficult.
  • Legaspi said shy students are benefiting the most. For "a lot of them, what it did is help find their voice," he said. "I have many students that do not participate in my classes or share what's on their mind, so Twitter became that vehicle." Several students praised the new approach. "It's a great way to get people to notice you," said Oscar Lozoria, a shy 14-year-old with long hair that other students used to tease him about. He said Twitter has changed how his peers view him. "They see me as somebody now -- as an equal," he said. Ivan Sabaria, also 14, said Twitter makes learning more fun. "I'm paying attention and doing all my work," he said.
  • Occasionally, the students will type in something inappropriate during class. Still, Legaspi is convinced he has discovered the future of education. "I get feedback on the spot. Not only that, all the students can see what they're sharing," he said. "This is powerful."
2More

Effective practice with e-Portfolios | CITations - 2 views

  • CIT used to have an e-Portfolio service that did not have a high take up rate. There are several reasons for this that I can think of: It was provided under the build it and they will come model. I believe not enough was done to convince students and teaching staff about the benefits of building e-Portfolios. Consequently, no one was willing to integrate this into their course, as part of reflective learning. Keeping an e-Portfolio was seen as extra work, which neither students nor staff were keen on. Perhaps the software itself was not very conducive to building e-Portfolios. One key area with users seem to be that the e-Portfolio should have a customisable design and layout (at least on its public face). Our system was not flexible in that aspect. In fact, in the latter years, the option to publish the e-Portfolio was taken away entirely. The e-Portfolio service was a walled garden. It wasn’t easy to bring in digital artefacts, which may have resided on other public services, nor was it easy to repurpose that information into useful formats – personal reference, actual resume, showcase of work. No one figured how students would access the e-Portfolios after they graduated as it was all based on our single sign-on system.
  •  
    A reflective commentary by one CIT staff in NUS on his dept's attempts to implement an ePortfolio service - and why it didn't have a high take-up rate.
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page