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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Knowledge Communities: About Us - 0 views

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    website for Knowledge Communities. Look at this mission: Knowledge Communities trains community facilitators how to tap into the intrinsic motivation of individuals and groups to move a community or network forward toward more autonomy, productivity and sustainability. The outcome we aim for is improved practice. Over time, network members take over the role the paid facilitator has played, requiring fewer external resource to produce greater results. To learn more about our projects see our white papers.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Cognitive Edge Methods - 0 views

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    Dave Snowden's website Cognitive Edge; explanation of ritual dissent to increase diversity of views and idea enhancement Justification in explanation: "Overall plans that emerge from the process are more resilient than consensus based techniques."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Weaknesses of Online Learning - 1 views

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    Weaknesses of Online Learning described on the Illinois Online Network website, 2012. It offers the unsupported view below that 20 is the maximum number of students that could be accommodated in an online class without losing the interactive elements. I disagree. Levels of Synergy Online learning has its most promising potential in the high synergy represented by active dialog among the participants, one of the most important sources of learning in a Virtual Classroom. However, in larger classes (20 or more students), the synergy level starts to shift on the learning continuum until it eventually becomes independent study to accommodate the large class. At this point, dialog is limited as well as interaction among participants and the facilitator. The medium is not being used to its greatest potential."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Massively Open Online Courses Are 'Here to Stay' - 0 views

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    Article identified on Stephen Downes' home page, Juy 20, 2012. Excerpt "Although MOOCs share the common characteristics of being large courses open to anyone, there are two main types, one called an "x MOOC," and another called a "connectivist MOOC." The companies and partnerships that fall into the "x MOOC" include Coursera; an MIT and Harvard partnership called EdX, and a new venture founded by three roboticists called Udacity. Other universities follow a connectivist MOOC model developed by George Siemens, Stephen Downes and Dave Cormier in 2008. What's the difference between the two? Connectivist MOOCs are more social and focused on deriving meaning of the learning experience with others, Virginia Commonwealth's Becker said. And they allow students to participate through blogs, RSS feeds and other decentralized methods, said Downes, a senior researcher for Canada's National Research Council. By contrast, x MOOCs emphasize content mastery, centralizes courses on one website and uses automated grading tools to support hundreds of thousands of students. But regardless of the category, MOOCs as a whole will change how universities offer courses, Downes said. And they're not going away. "Universities can't just keep doing what they're doing and hope this whole online thing goes away," Downes said."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

My eBooks ~ Stephen's Web - 0 views

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    Stephen Downdes' home website--has interesting ebooks/pdfs on Free learning, Access::Future, and so on
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

AICPA - The Future of Learning - 0 views

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    excerpt from AICPA website on the future of learning "Ellen Wagner has studied the Hype Cycle as it relates to education. In 2012, MOOCs and gamification were trending up the cycle toward the "Peak of Inflated Expectations." In 2013, MOOCs were adopted in many learning capacities and met with some criticism. This, says Wagner, is all part of the cycle. "When this new thing does not do all of the things that we say it's going to, we get disappointed and say, 'Ah, well, it doesn't really work very well.' The fact is that it probably worked fine all along, but when we start inflating our expectations for what it can do, it's not going to ever be able to meet those expectations." MOOCs"
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Projects | Connected Learning Research Network - 0 views

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    List of projects in Connected Learning Research Network as of July 27, 2012 Note this Longitudinal study of Connected Learning by Ben Penuel of late elementary and middle school students in connected learning environments and the "relationship of participation to valued outcomes. These outcomes include interest development, persistence in learning, civic participation, and development of a positive sense of the future." Could these outcomes be the same for WLS Studio connected learners?
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What is Connected Learning | Connected Learning - 0 views

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    Killer infograph on Connected (equitable, social, and participatory) Learning from Connected Learning Principles, Connected Learning.
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