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Randolph Hollingsworth

Sir John Daniel - The Technology Revolution: Coming Soon to Postsecondary Education (15... - 5 views

    • Randolph Hollingsworth
       
      recommended by Stella "scsporto scsporto" in CFHE12 discussion thread Week 1 under the topic "change drivers"
  • We want to stretch the triangle like this: more access, more quality, less cost. But with traditional teaching methods we can’t. It is an iron triangle.
  • unhealthy link between quality and exclusivity
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • that link is unnecessary and technology can break it
  • the revolution that breaks the iron triangle works with all technologies because it is rooted in the basic principles of technology
  • division of labour, specialisation, economies of scale, and the use of machines and communications media
  • the basis of the industrial revolution
  • the new technologies that let us share, study and socialise simultaneously
  • Our only requirement is to think of postsecondary education as a system and apply to it the principles of division of labour and specialisation in the service of the learner
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    3 vectors of Access, Quality and Cost - and we want to stretch the triangle to have more access, more quality and less cost = "iron triangle" if using traditional teaching methods => unhealthy link between quality and exclusivity in the popular mindset about higher ed; iron triangle can be stretched if we think of higher ed as a system and apply principles of division of labor and specialization (i.e., "unbundle" the professor)
Randolph Hollingsworth

The State of Learning Analytics in 2012: A Review and Future Challenges, by Rebecca Fer... - 1 views

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    Learning analytics different from big data in "their concern for providing value to teachers and learners (p14)" Research challenges needing to be addressed to achieve ideal scenarios of use: - Develop expertise in the provision of formative feedback and analytics - Develop methods of presenting analytics and visualizing data that are easy to use and understand - Adopt standards for the structure and export of data - Adopt standards for the structure and export of data - Broaden the focus to include not only higher education in formal settings, but also schools, workplace learning, informal learning and lifelong learning - Identify and address the issues around ethics, privacy and ownership of data (p13-14) ABSTRACT: "Learning analytics is a significant area of technology‐enhanced learning that has emerged during the last decade. This review of the field begins with an examination of the technological, educational and political factors that have driven the development of analytics in educational settings. It goes on to chart the emergence of learning analytics, including their origins in the 20th century, the development of data-driven analytics, the rise of learning-focused perspectives and the influence of national economic concerns. It next focuses on the relationships between learning analytics, educational data mining and academic analytics. Finally, it sets out the current state of learning analytics research, and identifies a series of future challenges."
Randolph Hollingsworth

EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research - Undergraduate Students and IT, 2012 - 4 views

Geoff Edlund

Higher Ed Disruption: Not So New - 1 views

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    Technology in Education can be used to facilitate instruction and realise many long-standing and sound goals around personalised learning, and clear learning outcomes, on campus and in online education.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Researchers and New Technology, ch 5 - Martin Weller, The Digital Scholar: How Technolo... - 4 views

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    Dissects how a digital scholar might construct "a networked research cycle" (planning, collecting data, analyze, reflect); themes which will have increasing relevance "whether it is because they become accepted practice or because the research community reacts against them." Granularity (e.g., iTunes vs music industry's album) Pushback from outlets (e.g., open blog vs scholarly publication - shift from output to focus on ongoing activity, engagement and reputation - more difficult to measure and reward) Crowdsourcing (inc. layers of filter and publication) Light connections and nodes (sharing in "a frictionless manner") Rapid innovation "These emerging themes sit less comfortably alongside existing practices and can be seen as a more radical shift in research practice. A combination of the two is undoubtedly the best way to proceed, but the danger exists of a schism opening up between those who embrace new approaches and those who reject them, with a resultant entrenchment to extremes on both sides. This can be avoided in part by the acknowledgement and reward of new forms of scholarship..."
Randolph Hollingsworth

Social Networks in Action - SNAPP (Social Networks adapting Pedagogical Practice) Learn... - 1 views

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    referred to in EdFuture.net webinar by Simon Buckingham Shum, Associate Director (Technology), Knowledge Media Institute, Open University, UK - uses student data generated from LMS (inc Bb and Moodle) discussion forums reinterpreted into a network diagram Can visually depict - disconnected (at risk) students - key information brokers within a class - potentially high and low performing students so to plan interventions before deadline for grading - before/after snapshots to indicate impact of intervention - student reflection/benchmarking in informal self-assessment
Randolph Hollingsworth

Google Public Policy Blog: Promoting civic innovation through technology - 0 views

    • Randolph Hollingsworth
       
      Civic innovation can be mightly enhanced by the civic engagement goals of higher education - too bad there's not anything here about the role of local universities or community colleges in a life-long learning effort to support innovative experimentation and public discussions
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    Internet redefining citizenship in 21st century - Civic Information API, e.g., Kenya Elections Hub - Sunlight Foundation programs for open govt data - MySociety collaboration among developers esp open source code
Randolph Hollingsworth

Challenge and Change (EDUCAUSE Review, 5 Sept 2012) | George Mehaffy AASCU - 1 views

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    Six Core Challenges lie at the core of the innovative disruption facing higher education: University Model; Structural Model; Funding Model; Cost Model; Business Model; Success Model Seven Areas of Change - The six core challenges noted above are driven by seven areas of rapid change, primarily technological change: The Players; The College Models; The Course Models; Data and Learning Analytics; The Cost: Reduced and Free; Measuring Success; Threats to the Credential
Randolph Hollingsworth

UDL-U: A Comprehensive Faculty Development Guide on Universal Design for Learning - 3 views

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    2 guides to support UDL course redesign: - faculty development workshop guide (2 hour) - UDL Institute Guide (one or 2 day) UDL-U supports postsecondary faculty and staff by providing resources and examples to improve postsecondary education for all students, including those with disabilities. UDL-U is designed to be useful for individual inquiries related to small UDL topics, issues, or problems, as well as scalable to larger faculty development efforts (e.g., Faculty Learning Communities). UDL-U frames course redesign as a three-tier professional development process: 1. Application of UDL principles to enhance teaching and learning 2. Utilization of accessible instructional media and practices 3. Awareness of assistive technology enablers and barriers
Geoff Edlund

Innovating Pedagogy in the UK - 3 views

http://www.open.ac.uk/personalpages/mike.sharples/Reports/Innovating_Pedagogy_report_July_2012.pdf

CFHE12 higher education pedagogy online technology students teaching

Geoff Edlund

Campuses and Online Education - 6 views

http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2012/s3608157.htm

CFHE12 technology learning students internet

Geoff Edlund

Innovation in Online Education - 3 views

http://theconversation.edu.au/online-opportunities-digital-innovation-or-death-through-regulation-9736

CFHE12 technology innovation quality online

Randolph Hollingsworth

Napster, Udacity, and the Academy - Clay Shirky - 1 views

  • Higher education is now being disrupted; our MP3 is the massive open online course (or MOOC), and our Napster is Udacity, the education startup.
  • Higher education is now being disrupted; our MP3 is the massive open online course (or MOOC), and our Napster is Udacity, the education startup.
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    Mr Shirky lets it all hang out. Good read.
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    Napster lost the battle but won the war - changing the story and disrupting the cost models; in higher ed our MP3 is the MOOC and our Napster is Udacity...
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    Napster did lose. What won was DRM-laden iTunes, then Amazon. What lesson will higher education draw from that?
Randolph Hollingsworth

Making Sense of MOOCs, by Sir John Daniel - 8 views

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    definitions, economics, platforms, assessments, pedagogies still morphing; his perspective as a Fellow at Korea National Open University (and Open U) warns about all the previous efforts that "were ignominiously shuttered"
Randolph Hollingsworth

What is big data? - multiple perspectives from The Economist (Ideas Economy: Informatio... - 0 views

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    Andrew Chung (partner, Khosla Ventures); Beth Comstock (senior VP, GE); Andie Grace aka "Actiongrl" (communications manager and regional network manager, Burning Man); Jason Silva (co-founding host, Current TV); Don Tapscott (co-author, Macrowikinomics) "This is not an Information Age - it's one of networking, collaboration"; Craig Hatkoff (co-founder, Tribeca Film Festival) "The question is are we wise enough"?
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