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Seb Schmoller

Mozilla Open Badges - 0 views

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    Would there be scope to use Mozilla Open Badges as a core element of the Applied Maths Course? If there is, should we be investigating the practicalities?
Seb Schmoller

Fortnightly Mailing: Second report from Keith Devlin's and Coursera's Introduction to M... - 0 views

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    With apologies for pointing to my own stuff, here is my second report from Keith Devlin's "Introduction to Mathematical Thinking" Coursera MOOC. The first report is here: http://tinyurl.com/bqe9jck.
Seb Schmoller

The twelve most important learning factors [PDF] - 0 views

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    I'm not a fan of lists of most important things, but I like the work of Will Thalheimer and have kept vaguely in contact with him over the years. I think this list is worth having in mind when designing (online) courses
Seb Schmoller

Doodling in math class - 0 views

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    Despite her annoying vocie I found myself laughing out loud at these short videos, which came my way via Aaron Sloman http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Sloman, who was an interview subject for the Scaling Up report.
Seb Schmoller

Clearing Up Some Myths About MOOCs - 0 views

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    Slightly verbose, but authentic blog post by Cathy Davidson about what it is like at the sharp end of MOOC production and teaching. Note her point about 150 hours of production time per hour of MOOC learning time.
Seb Schmoller

A Guide to Quality in Online Learning - 0 views

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    This publication was developed by Stamenka Uvalić-Trumbić and Sir John Daniel who are Senior Advisors to Academic Partnerships as well as Neil Butcher and Merridy Wilson-Strydom. It has a traditional feel, and is HE oriented. But the underlying principles are clear and useful. The 28-page, 2.7MB document is available from http://www.academicpartnerships.com/docs/default-document-library/newbooklet15_singleb.pdf?sfvrsn=2 It covers the following topics: - What is online learning? - How is online learning offered? - What constitutes quality in online learning? - How can institutions assure quality? - What institutional structures and staffing resources do you need for ensuring quality in online learning? - What resources should you allocate to developing quality online learning? - How can students judge the quality of online courses? - How can instructional design, learning materials, and course presentation contribute to quality online learning? - How can the structure of the virtual environment facilitate quality online learning? - What do web design and web usability factors contribute to quality? - How can you use media (video, graphics, audio, animation and simulation) to enhance quality in online learning? - What online assessment and assignment methodologies promote quality learning? - How do you ensure examination security? - What strategies can you deploy for interaction and student community building? - How can teaching and facilitation contribute to ensuring quality? - What support should students receive? - Annotated Reading List: Benchmarks for Quality Online Learning
Seb Schmoller

MOOCs and Open Education - 0 views

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    MOOCs and Open Education. Useful, if HE-focused, 21p report [PDF] by Stephen Powell and Li Yuan from Jisc Cetis. Worth most project people at least scan reading, for orientation purposes.
Seb Schmoller

Learn to programme in Scratch in an Online Workshop - 0 views

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    This caught my eye. I think it is probably run in Google CourseBuilder.
Seb Schmoller

Retention and Intention in Massive Open Online Courses - 0 views

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    Interesting article, with nice density maps by Koller, Ng and others, about Coursera participation.
Seb Schmoller

English & Maths - The Challenge in Numbers - 0 views

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    Mick Fletcher (whom Seb knows) provides an overview of the double challenge faced by English FE from August 2013 when all those without GCSE Maths or English at Grade C must continue to study hose subjects, and even those with such an achievement should be expected to go further. "The logistical challenge, including the requirement to find hundreds of extra specialist teachers, is immense."
Seb Schmoller

Nathan Heller: Is College Moving Online? : The New Yorker - 0 views

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    This article gets in a great deal deeper than a lot of other recent coverage. As always, the focus is on HE.
Seb Schmoller

Precis and analysis of Edinburgh U report on its first 6 MOOCs - 0 views

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    Comprehensive filleting by Donald Clark Edinburgh University's excellent self-review of its first 6 MOOCs. DC's review and the Edinburgh report are each worth reading.
Seb Schmoller

David Wiley on MOOCs and personalisation - 0 views

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    Getting on for 15 years ago I put David Wiley's precursor to Creative Commons "Open Content" licence on the wholly online Learning To Teach Online Course that I played a role in, having read about Wiley and the licence in the Economist. Wiley is still active in this field and this post has a very incisive observation in it about personalisation. I do not know whether I agree with it fully (adaptive learning and algorithms may/should have a role too): "There is simply no way to scale the centralized creation of educational materials personalized for everyone in the world (cf. the 15 years of learning objects hype and investment, which feels very similar to the current MOOC mania). Perhaps the only way to accomplish the amount of personalization necessary to achieve high quality at scale is to enable decentralized personalization to be performed locally by peers, teachers, parents, and others. And given the absolute madness of international copyright law there is no rights and royalties regime under which this personalization could possibly happen. The only practicable solution is to provide free, universal access to content, assessments, and other resources that includes free 4Rs permissions that empower local actors to engage in localization and redistribution."
Seb Schmoller

Stanford to merge Class2Go with Harvard/MIT edX. Open Source online learning platform o... - 0 views

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    Needs keeping an eye on, as much as anything else in view of Coursebuilder/EdX collaboration points made by Peter Norvig during telco in April.
David Jennings

About EDUC115N "How to learn math" - 0 views

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    "This course is for teachers of math (K-12) or for other helpers of students, such as parents. After the summer I will release a student version of this course. This course provides an opportunity for teachers and parents to preview the ideas for students and think about how they may be useful, as well as learn from new research ideas and share ideas with other teachers and parents who enroll in the course. The course will also include interviews with some of the world's leading thinkers, such as Sebastian Thrun (Udacity/Google) and Carol Dweck (expert on mindset)."
Seb Schmoller

Online Courses in Community Colleges - 0 views

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    The Community College Research Center is based at Columbia University. It describes itself as the US's "leading independent authority on the nation's nearly 1200 two-year colleges". Since 2009 CCRC has been doing (amongst other things) a range of interesting and important qualitative and quantitative research about online courses in community colleges (which sit somewhere between FE and HE in a UK context, overlapping with both), funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and led by Shanna Smith Jaggars. This page has links to abstracts and presentations, which highlight general and specific disparities in outcomes between face-to-face and online provision, and which point to action that can be taken to deal with these problems. (Instructor presence seems to be key.....)
Seb Schmoller

Google I/O Mini-Course - Udacity - 2 views

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    You can sign up here for a Udacity 10 minute "mini-MOOC", which from the fact of its target audience, is likely to have been very carefully implemented by Udacity. The promotional video gives some pointers to why Udacity withdrew (their focus is increasinly firmly on "higher" stuff). The min-MOOC should be seen in the context of Udacity wanting to attract Google-focused programmers onto its just launched $7000 Computer Science Masters, done in partnership with Georgia Tech.
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    Not the clearest learning experience I have known.
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    I particularly resent the "happy-clappy" over-enthusiastic tone of the feedback
Seb Schmoller

MOOC on Human-Computer Interaction: 7 fails in screen design - 0 views

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    A constructive review by Donald Clark (Ufi Trustee) of one particular Coursera MOOC (with references to one of Edinburgh University's), with a focus on how the interaction design of the course could have been improved.
Seb Schmoller

A thorough report on the production and delivery of Duke University's first MOOC - 0 views

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    Nice open approach by Duke University to reporting on the development and running of Duke's first MOOC, with data about costs and operational issues.
Seb Schmoller

How Is Testing Supposed to Improve Schooling? Some Reflections by Dylan Wiliam - 0 views

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    Just published. I really liked this section: "Rather than data-driven-decision making, it seems to me we need a culture of decision-driven data collection-the data are collected only after a clear theory of how they are to be used has been developed, to be certain that they will be usable. The argument I am making here is that for instructional guidance, teachers simply do not need or find useful (and certainly do not want to wait, or to pay, for) the precision that the educational measurement community is used to providing. All this may seem like a counsel of despair, so perhaps it is appropriate to conclude these reflections by saying that I am actually very positive about the role that assessment can have in improving schooling. First, as Haertel points out, often the unit of action is the instructional group rather than the individual student. For this reason, Caroline Wylie and I have been exploring the use of single items that can be embedded in instructional episodes (Wiliam, 2011; Wylie & Wiliam, 2006, 2007). The response of one student to one item is not particularly meaningful, but the response of a class of 30 students to a single item does give the teacher useful information about whether to move on, or to review an instructional episode."
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