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Lisa Levinson

A Pedagogical Look at MOOCs | Institute of Learning Innovation Blog - 1 views

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    Terese Bird and Grainne Conole are holding a webinar on A Pedagogical Look at MOOCs. Funded by the EU project eMundus, they are trying to map out patterns of open educational partnerships between institutions around the world. This webinar will take a pedagogical look at MOOCs. They chose 5 MOOCs, each corresponding to a primary learning approach. They then mapped each MOOC against the 12 dimensions Grainne identified. The blog goes on to attempt to do this with one MOOC as an example.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Design Thinking, postscript: the importance of the teacher | Granted, and... - 0 views

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    Very interesting process map on how to argue with research results, Grant Wiggins' blog
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Asset-Based Design | Metropolis Magazine - 0 views

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    Article from Metropolis Magazine, October 2008 on Asset-based Design See excerpt: "In contrast, an asset-based approach works with communities to identify their skills and capacities, and invites them to play an active role in the renewal of their environment. "This approach says that all communities have assets. The needs-based provision of services really only addresses the symptoms of the issues without doing any deeper social analysis to uncover the root problems. If joblessness is linked to a lack of educational activities, well, then that is the root issue. We're not saying designers can come in and fix all of those problems; we are saying that designers themselves have a particular asset to contribute, which is their professional expertise at creating beautiful spaces and using design to involve the community in discovering and expressing who they are." How to practice design that builds on a community's strengths and priorities: 1. Identify your community partner. Target a specific organization to partner with, whether it's a design center, a development corporation, a block association, or a nonprofit. By honoring the community building that has already taken place, you will also attract less suspicion as a new face. Begin a dialogue to find a design project. 2. Immerse yourself in the life of the community. Spend time or consider living there. Find out where people like to eat and hang out, what kind of meetings they go to, and what places have a lot of energy-perhaps an arts or a recreation center. Find out what the kids are excited about. Connect with community leaders. Go door-to-door if necessary. 3. Conduct a social analysis. Who has power? What are the challenges facing the community? What are its demographics? What are its core values? Who makes the decisions, and who benefits from or bears the costs of them? It helps to understand how the neighborhood came into being, its history, and the larger town or region in which it is situated. Map ex
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

learningtheories-full.jpg (JPEG Image, 1614 × 1145 pixels) - Scaled (44%) - 0 views

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    Wonderful HoTEL (Holistic Approach to Technology Enhanced Learning) visualization of learning theories from key concepts, to learning paradigms or 'world views,' learning theorists, and scientific disciplines, from Edudemic.com. The online learning facilitator role that we are most familiar with functions primarily in communities of practice, social constructivist settings, and connectivist networks including MOOCs
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Half an Hour: Becoming MOOC - 0 views

  • Learners often select and pursue their own learning. Constructivist principles acknowledge that real-life learning is messy and complex. Classrooms which emulate the 'fuzziness' of this learning will be more effective in preparing learners for life-long learning." (Siemens, 2004)
  • There are two types of MOOCs.
  • An xMOOC
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • cMOOC
  • major criticism of the cMOOC is based on the free-form nature
  • Students have to manage their own time, find their own resources, and structure their own learning.
  • navigating the chaos and making learning decisions is the lesson in a cMOOC.
  • 21st century literacies, and digital literacies.
  • connectivity with people worldwide
  • constant flow of information
  • Framework for 21st Century Learning, which addresses several dimensions of this new type of learning, including core skills of collaboration, creativity, communication and critical thinking, and supporting skills such as workplace skills, information media skills, and the traditional core types of literacy and numeracy.
  • literacies specific to the digital medium itself
  • Mozilla Foundation
  • Web Literacy Map
  • Three major types of skills are identified: exploring, building and connecting.
  • previously under-represented function of sociality and connection.
  • The theory of knowledge underlying the creation of the cMOOC suggests that learning is not based on the idea of remembering content, nor even the acquisition of specific skills or dispositions, but rather, in engaging in experiences that support and aid in recognition of phenomena and possibilities in the world.
  • Cognitive dissonance is what creates learning experiences.
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    Excellent comparison of xMOOC and cMOOC and justification of cMOOC by who else, the cMOOC creator himself, Stephen Downes, February 11, 2015. Highly recommend it.
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