Are they central or peripheral to practice?
Digital, Networked and Open : The Digital Scholar: How Technology Is Transforming Schol... - 4 views
Ideas from the thirteen weeks of MOOC « Not Worth Printing - 4 views
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Search: Not Worth Printing open source, elearning trends, ethics in technology and education About
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In terms of formal learning, Tony Bates believes that changes can occur within the existing education institutes
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Martin Weller points to the importance of academic institutes recognizing digital scholarship, moving away from the inefficient and costly publishing model and moving towards online publications that better promotes interdisciplinary endeavours
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Is the Revolution Justified? : The Digital Scholar: How Technology Is Transforming Scho... - 9 views
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And Oblinger and Oblinger (2005) claim as one of the defining characteristics of the net generation that ‘they want parameters, rules, priorities, and procedures … they think of the world as scheduled and someone must have the agenda. As a result, they like to know what it will take to achieve a goal. Their preference is for structure rather than ambiguity’. This rather begs the question, ‘was there evidence that previous generations had a stated preference for ambiguity and chaos in their learning?’
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It is amazing to me how in all the hoopla and debate these days about the decline of education in the US we ignore the most fundamental of its causes. Our students have changed radically. Today's students are no longer the people our educational system was designed to teach. (Prensky 2001)
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I think this statement is anachronistic. In fact, the "new students" today who do not fit into the traditional educational system are in many cases people who were raised in the system, and then either rejected it or were rejected by it in some way. Our educational system is designed to train conformist drones, who do not know how to learn without school. There are many who are also able to live in both of these worlds, the traditional and the new, but I think they can bring new insights to the traditional school environment.
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I think this is a red herring as far as technology is concerned. it's much more to do with a pervasive social issue about inclusion and exclusion, probably worldwide, but much more marked in the UK due to the enthusiastic implementation of Thatcherism by her and subsequent governments. Many students know or suspect that there is no point for them in school and schools exclude like everyone else does those pupils who are likely to be expensive. Cost has truly overtaken value as the main point of reference
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The Digital Scholar - Martin Weller
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I haven't read any of this book yet, but this quote is running along the lines of my own thinking for my own interaction with the web and all its tools and structures. I'm beginning to feel that many of the new tools used for organization, aggregation, and note taking are too regimented for what I want right now, too task-oriented. I'm figuring out how I learn best, and the most important part of that process that has been missing for me in the past is connection to creativity. Of course, the internet is a place where so much creation is going on and I can certainly find inspiration from it. But in terms of working out my projects using solely these new tools, I keep running against a wall. I'm not exactly sure if that's what Oblinger and Oblinger are talking about, but that's what I thought of.
The Ed Techie: Digital scholarship - introduction - 1 views
The Ed Techie: What is the learner responsibility in open education? - 1 views
Acknowledgements : The Digital Scholar: How Technology Is Transforming Scholarly Practi... - 3 views
Digital scholarship MOOC - YouTube - 3 views
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