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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

Adaptive Leadership for the Completions Priority (2011) draft paper by William H Graves... - 0 views

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    Challenge: The Completions Priority "The completions marketplace should be redesigned to improve overall scalability, measurable impact, mutual affordability, and sustainability. To do so while avoiding intrusive government regulation and retaining local autonomy will require voluntarily confirmed "rules of the road" that enable effective completions practices at autonomous micro levels to be rolled up collectively into mutually affordable common-good macro solutions." Solution: Economic Governance for the Completions Marketplace - a common good critical to economic and social progress "The wisdom of a crowd willing to inform and support adaptive change leadership might help create common ground in a nonprofit, non-governmental global Education Leadership Commons (ELC) formed for the purpose of developing and evolving open interoperability of common educational services, processes, and accountability metrics, all at a minimally intrusive, trusted level of economic governance. Modeled along the lines of the Internet Society's so-far successful governance mechanisms, the ELC could be operationalized through standing working groups, their advisory or governance committees, and other nested and loosely-coupled, efforts to advance and sustain educational attainment within and across the three dimensions of the completions marketplace." - Completions Productivity Task Force - Economic Governance Council chart on page 6: Governance Matrix of Rights and Responsibilities in the Completions Marketplace student, assessment provider, education provider, government (other other funding source) 8 possible outcomes, including accreditation's formative peer-review process is retained "to create "trust-but-verify" economic governance collaborations" "If government can't provide the leadership and funding stability required for victory, then we the people should do so through a social networking micro-contribution mechanism, not unlike the micro-loan infrastructure cr
Randolph Hollingsworth

Warming Up to MOOCs at Vanderbilt U - Douglas Fisher, comp sci prof - 0 views

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    flipped his machine learning class in Spring 2012 using online lectures from the F2011 Stanford MOOC (an inclass "wrapper" around a MOOC - online discussion and grading with additional requirements from the onsite instructor, e.g., add'l readings, small group discussions, final project) "I now view MOOCs, and the assessment and discussion infrastructure that comes with them, as invaluable resources that I embrace and to which I add value. I, and I am guessing many others, are short steps away from full-blown customizations of individual courses and even entire curricula, drawing upon resources from around the world and contributing back to those resources."
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

Promoting Student Metacognition, by Kimberly D Tanner (teaching students how to learn) ... - 0 views

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    recommended by Maryellen Weimer in her blog http://www.facultyfocus.com/articles/teaching-professor-blog/teaching-metacognition-to-improve-student-learning/ where she includes some great questions to get students going (e.g., one minute papers or dyads in class): - How have I prepared for class today?/What's the best way for me to prepare for a class like this one? - What questions do I have - Why did I miss those exam questions/ What do I need to do to avoid missing questions like these on the next exam?
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