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Maria Jerskey

New York Times Review of QUIET: My Reaction - By Susan Cain - 1 views

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    This is Susan Cain's response to responses to her book, "Quiet."
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    Wow, Maria. Thanks for this.
C. Jason Smith

Marc Prensky's Weblog: Make those You Tubes! - 1 views

  • But with You Tube and Flip videocams (and, of course cell phones that take video), the latter problem, at least, has been solved. Now all that has to happen for sharing is for a teacher to ask a student to point a video camera at them, and for the teacher to say, in 30 seconds, exactly what they typically tell me in person: "I'm doing this really exciting program where we...". Add two students talking and a shot of the classroom, and you're ready to post (which the student can also do) Total time elapsed: 15 minutes tops.
    • C. Jason Smith
       
      I am going to try this in my Media cluster next week!
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    I was on a panel with Prensky in the Spring. He is a big advocate of teaching through Youtube.
Priscilla Stadler

Blogging Rubric by Ryan Bretag - 1 views

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    by Ryan Bretag; from Prof. Hacker link
Priscilla Stadler

Purdue U Brings Social Networking to the Classroom - 1 views

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    platform created to allow "open sharing" inside a school Hotseat at Purdue
Priscilla Stadler

Revising Bloom's Taxonomy wrt Engineering Education « Learning & Computing Ed... - 0 views

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    another revision of Bloom's taxonomy developed by engineering educators, using Mentoring as apex of the pyramid
Priscilla Stadler

When a Favorite App Dies or Goes Pro - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    see comments as well as article; this is just the beginning. Interesting comment from a school that doesn't permit faculty to use sites where s's have to sign away their privacy
Ximena Gallardo

Wiki Writing: Collaborative Learning in the College Classroom / Robert E. Cummings and ... - 0 views

  • a hierarchical power structure for the state’s body of creating and disseminating original knowledge.
  • Wikipedia has clearly demonstrated, however, that knowledge can be created and disseminated by people who may or may not be credentialed, who contribute as little or as much as they like, who do not need to wait for approval or other works, and who are motivated by something more elusive than cash.
  • as the Nature study has shown, they cannot simply be dismissed as unreliable either.
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • Wikipedia has fundamentally and finally altered epistemology itself—our commonly held ideas about knowledge. For the academy at large, the significance of Wikipedia is roughly equivalent to that which the Heisenberg uncertainty principle had in the sciences in the 1920s—stating what is not possible rather than what is.
  • No matter how improbable it might seem that a Web page that anyone can edit would lead to valuable knowledge, Wikipedia makes clear that there is now another model for knowledge creation.
  • certainly everyone in that audience, has probably relied upon a knowledge acquisition path—from Google to Wikipedia—for which everyone is responsible and no one is responsible at once.
  • this introduction hopes to show nonbelievers, the uninitiated, and wiki followers alike that the simple act of allowing a Web page to be edited by a reader—which is really all that a wiki does—has createdPage  3 a global transition to networked epistemology that affects most anyone who is concerned with knowledge acquisition,
  • Well, it’s a Web page. Which anyone can edit. Usually, but not all the time. I mean, it’s an electronic mailing list with memory. It’s really a collaborative Web space where the mechanics of epistemology and the politics of knowledge creation can be revealed and explored.
  • the largest wiki with the greatest cultural impact
  • open wiki,
  • Wikipedia is not only a reference source, but it is the acknowledged site on the Web for claiming an interpretation of knowledge, as well as a place for controlling public image on an important figure.
  • A wiki is a Web page that users can modify.
  • Wikipedia works because of the massive scale of the Internet; there are simply so many users that articles can be destroyed and reconstructed overnight because enough readers on any given topic are invested in the discussion.
  • The basis of many critics’ complaints with Wikipedia lies in the fact that they view the project against the ideal of a singular, verifiable truth, while Wikipedia envisions itself as a project wide enough to host competing truths.
  • 1.5 million articles
  • the central question over Wikipedia: namely, can its knowledge be trusted?
  • In the study, entries were chosen from the websites of Wikipedia and Encyclopaedia Britannica on a broad range of scientific disciplines and sent to a relevant expert for peer review. Each reviewer examined the entry on a single subject from the two encyclopaedias; they were not told which article came from which encyclopaedia. A total of 42 usable reviews were returned out of 50 sent out, and were then examined by Nature’s news team. Only eight serious errors, such as misinterpretations of important concepts, were detected in the pairs of articles reviewed, four from each encyclopaedia. But reviewers also found many factual errors, omissions or misleading statements: 162 and 123 in Wikipedia and Britannica, respectively
  • college-level scholarship should reflect deeper thinking and research skills than an encyclopedia than a wholesale retraction of the worth of Wikipedia.
  • By expressing surprise and disapproval at the fact that college students are citing the online encyclopedia in research papers, Wales would urge us to develop more awareness of how knowledge is produced and to make use of that awareness when interpreting and applying that knowledge. More bluntly stated, knowing where we get our knowledge is as important as the knowledge itself. The academy needs to react more quickly to the realities of knowledge production in a networked environment if it is to fulfill its role in creating and disseminating knowledge
  • But as long as there is an agreed-upon scope for any particular wiki, there is no reason not to apply this tool of networked consciousness to almost any endeavor.
  • While speaking at a college conference in June 2006 called “The Hyperlinked Society,” Wales said that he gets about 10 e-mail messages a week from students who complain that Wikipedia has gotten them into academic hot water. “They say, ‘Please help me. I got an F on my paper because I cited Wikipedia’’’ and the information turned out to be wrong, he says. But he said he has no sympathy for their plight, noting that he thinks to himself: “For God[’s] sake, you’re in college; don’t cite the encyclopedia.”
judith gazzola

- What's It Worth: The Economic Value of College Majors - Interactive Summary Tables - 0 views

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    Interactive tables from What's It Worth: The Economic Value of College Majors, a Center on Education and the Workforce Report
Priscilla Stadler

Sketchy Thinking - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    Not about integrating technologies per se, this piece provides a very poignant glimpse into an educator's process.
Priscilla Stadler

Escalation in Digital Sleuthing Raises Quandary in Classrooms - Technology - The Chroni... - 0 views

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    Instead of being used as tools to enable faculty policing for plagiarism, Turnitin and WriteCheck can help students vett their own work and learn to paraphrase!
Ximena Gallardo

MicroGlobalScope - 0 views

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    Awesome resource! Check it out, biologists!
Priscilla Stadler

Flipping the Classroom - Simply Speaking - YouTube - 0 views

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    via Penn State
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    Flipping the Classroom - animation on logistics
Priscilla Stadler

Flipping the Classroom (from Penn State) - 0 views

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    YouTube video from Penn State that walks through the basic logistics of Flipping the Classroom
Ximena Gallardo

EBSCOhost: The impact of domestic abuse for older women: a review of the literature - 0 views

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    Cool, but can we access it?
Aaron Rizzieri

social pedagogy - 0 views

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    I haven't read this......but judging by title it is relevant to some of you.
jrc nyc

Academic Writing that Engages Emotions - 0 views

    • jrc nyc
       
      This is an echo of our conversation today!
Ingrid De Leon

Learning -to-Learn---for Math - 0 views

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    Learning how to learn in the key to success in college!
veraalbrecht

Journal of Computing in Higher Education, Volume 15, Number 1 - SpringerLink - 0 views

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    Journal Article Educational Experiences and the Online Student
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