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Julie Lindsay

Online Teaching 2.0: Reimagining What We Know - WISE - 0 views

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    The global pandemic has pushed educators around the world to a transformative moment for online learning. Since February 2020, an unprecedented number of teachers, students, and parents have become exposed to a new mode of teaching. Teachers did not have the luxury of options, as online education came towards them, shouting "Ready or not, here I come!" The transformation is deep and wide: All levels of teaching, from pre-k classes to doctoral programs, moved to the cloud. Every discipline, from physics to physical education, from chemistry to creative writing, has a chance to test their limits and potentials in the new modality of teaching.
Kate Davis

How to Structure & Chunk Your Video Lecture Content - LX at UTS - 0 views

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    Great blog post from UTS on structuring and chunking video content. Two more posts follow (linked from this one) that are also really helpful.
Kate Davis

A practical guide to digital teaching and learning | Times Higher Education (THE) - 0 views

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    A new guide from Times Higher Ed on digital teaching, covering a huge range of topics including choosing tech, maintaining inclusion, establishing virtual labs, encouraging faculty engagement...
Julie Lindsay

Tales of Teaching Online Podcast | DTeach - 0 views

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    "Join A/Prof. Chie Adachi (Director, Digital Learning), A/Prof. Marcus O'Donnell (Director, Cloud Learning Futures), Dr Jo Elliott (Lecturer, Digital Learning Innovation) and Joan Sutherland (Senior Educational Developer) as they capture, share and celebrate the stories of teaching staff who share their personal experiences and provide insights into what is needed to innovate in the digital learning space. These insights into what they have learnt along the way, what has worked, and what they are doing to further enhance the teaching and learning experience at Deakin can influence your teaching practice. Topics range from the power of social media during COVID-19 through to facilitating connection through digital polling in the online space. "
Kate Davis

Videos won't kill the uni lecture, but they will improve student learning and their marks - 1 views

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    A summary of results from a systematic review on the impact of video on student learning, and some really useful resources on producing video.
Julie Lindsay

When to Teach Online Classes Live and When to Let Students Learn on Demand | EdSurge News - 0 views

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    This article is part of the guide https://www.edsurge.com/research/guides/sustaining-higher-education-in-the-coronavirus-crisis Experts in online teaching have been debating and researching the question of synchronous versus asynchronous for decades. Since the 1990s and the rise of online video conferencing, though, it has been possible for educators to choose which activities in their distance-education courses to conduct synchronously and which to leave as asynchronous. The overall advice from experts is to mix both formats in any given class.
Julie Lindsay

9 Insights For Educators We Learned On A Zoom Call - With Zoom | EdSurge News - 0 views

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    "Of all the behaviors necessitated by the pandemic-wearing face masks, ordering takeout or groceries online, working from home-only one has taken over the lexicon, serving variously as a verb, adjective or noun: Zooming. "
oalttech

Apple is Moving to ARM Processors. Should Filmmakers Go With Them? - 0 views

  • But if you work largely in Premiere or Resolve, it's a trickier conversation. Adobe and Blackmagic Design will obviously roll out ARM versions of their software the same way there are currently for Intel, Mac, and Linux versions, and a lot of the benefits of moving to ARM will still play out there. But you do run the risk of some of your favorite plugins, or small workflow apps, not immediately working.
  • The issue with Rosetta is that it will inevitably slow things down, since it is setting up a layer of interpretation between the application and the system architecture, and that takes time to process.
  • Apple will also allow you to keep using those older applications using a tool called Rosetta 2, calling back to the original Rosetta which did the same job for the PowerPC-to-x86 switch.
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  • Developers will work to get their software ready for ARM Macs, and for those that don't, new replacements will appear that might not have otherwise. This is a moment for refreshing workflows, and you will likely discover that you get introduced to a whole host of new tools through the transition.
  • Because the architecture is different, the software running on it needs to be optimized for it, which has slowed down adoption so far outside of the mobile space. While Microsoft did release a version of Windows for ARM years ago, it didn't take off, and this move from Apple to put macOS on ARM is a massive transition for the computing industry.
  • Apple says the first ARM Macs, a 13" MacBook Pro and a 24" iMac, will ship this fall and the transition will take 2 years. That means we are looking at the very real possibility of an ARM Mac Pro by 2022.
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    Something *important* to keep in mind for future upgrades, especially within the DLAV Space
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