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Julie Lindsay

Creating Emotional Engagement in Online Learning | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    As educators who deliver online courses in a teacher education program, we wanted to find the most effective ways to facilitate online learning and teaching. We collected survey data and conducted interviews with three hundred university students about how they engaged with their online courses and found that, above all else, teachers help students feel connected and supported in their online studies and are essential to students' emotional engagement.
Kate Davis

Synchronous Strategies for the "New Normal" - 0 views

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    Practical tips for online synchronous classes
Kate Davis

Higher-ed is digitized - now, let's modernize it - 0 views

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    Gems: "While education technology has grown as an industry, its acceleration isn't up-to-speed with other sectors, such as business and health care." "It's up to edtech companies to give... unis tools that can help them adapt to changing needs... And it's the responsibility of HE decision-makers to incorporate these tools into their vision for modern education" Yes!
Kate Davis

What should schools, colleges and Universities do in September? …7 actions - 0 views

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    Some good reminders here, including this one: "Endless talking heads on Zoom is not nearly enough."
Julie Lindsay

The 7 elements of a good online course - 0 views

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    George Veletsianos shares his insight into online learning and course design.
Julie Lindsay

Online Collaboration Principles - 0 views

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    This paper uses the community of inquiry model to describe the principles of collaboration. The principles describe social and cognitive presence issues associated with the three functions of teaching presence-design, facilitation and direction. Guidelines are discussed for each of the principles. Garrison, D. R. (2006a). Online collaboration principles. Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, 10(1) pp. 25-34.
Julie Lindsay

My top tips for using social media for professional networking and more | katedavis.info - 0 views

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    Excellent blog post about how to manage social media as a professional. Valuable advice includes keeping profile pics and bios up to date and use of different tools for distribution, retweeting etc.
Julie Lindsay

An Affinity for Asynchronous Learning - 0 views

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    There are two misconceptions that we think hinder teachers' creativity when thinking about teaching online. The first is a tendency to think of ways of approximating their face-to-face teaching into an online format as much as possible - instead of considering the possibilities afforded by the new medium, with the diverse opportunities for engagement and communication. The (problematic) assumptions behind this include a belief that text is less personal, that immediacy is inherently more valuable, and that approximating face-to-face is beneficial. The second, which relates to the first, is the belief (as Kolowich suggests) that increasing the "human" element of an online course is best done by either showing the face/voice of the teacher (e.g., as in pre-recorded lectures used in many xMOOCs), approximating a non-interactive lecture-based face-to-face class, or interacting synchronously (as in Google Hangouts), approximating a discussion-based face-to-face class. An automatic preference for synchronous (usually audiovisual) interaction with students is often a "mistake". It would, teachers imagine, be just like a face-to-face class, only online. Right? Actually, usually not. Maha has had experiences facilitating web-based video dialogue, and even though she sees it could have enormous potential when it works well, very often it does not. When we learn online, we are not together in one room, and we need to recognize not only the limitations of that, but the openness of its possibilities. The strengths of online learning, especially in massive courses such as MOOCs, and especially for adult learners, might lie in their asynchronous interactive components.
Julie Lindsay

Education in 2030 - The $10 Trillion dollar question - HolonIQ - 0 views

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    Education in 2030 is a free 60 page report that deep dives through the four drivers of the global expansion in education and identifies 5 Scenarios for the Future of Learning and Talent. Methodology for developing the scenarios is explained and over 100 charts and tables are provided with sources and references for further research. DOWNLOAD the full report
Julie Lindsay

Towards a radical digital citizenship in digital education - 0 views

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    Critical Studies in Education: Vol 60, No 1 In this article, we attempt to define and explore a concept of 'radical digital citizenship' and its implications for digital education. We argue that the 'digital' and its attendant technologies are constituted by on-going materialist struggles for equality and justice in the Global South and North which are erased in the dominant literature and debates in digital education. We assert the need for politically informed understandings of the digital, technology and citizenship and for a 'radical digital citizenship' in which critical social relations with technology are made visible and emancipatory technological practices for social justice are developed.
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

so you want to blog - should I write a guest post? | patter - 0 views

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    Pat Thomson starts a series of posts about blogging and posting as a guest.
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
oalttech

Social Construct's computer-optimized buildings could shake construction industry's fou... - 1 views

  • Social Construct isn’t actually getting into the contracting side of things. The plan is to partner with, train and certify contractors so they can scale more like a platform than a boots-on-the-ground company
  • Third, the layout is calculated to minimize the possibility of variance in measurements or construction
  • Second, all the pipes, cables and assorted in-wall infrastructure has been moved under the floor, the routes pre-determined by the computer.
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  • First, construction uses pre-fabricated “assemblies,” of which there are about a hundred types total: walls with kitchen cabinets, walls with holes for shower fixtures, lighting and so on.
  • the Social Construct system plans out every aspect of the construction, optimizing the layout for a variety of parameters.
  • Flexibility is more important than precision.
  • The industry has effectively insulated itself against a great deal of innovation with an “if it ain’t broke, don’t spend millions of dollars fixing it” attitude.
  • laying cables and pipes below floors instead of in walls, and standardizing both pieces and assembly, this new tech-informed method could reduce the time and cost of constructing a building by 20 to 30%.
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    Not obviously linked to education, but in terms of technology this is a pretty interesting read and could be beneficial to engineering/architecture students.
Julie Lindsay

What will education be after Covid-19 - 0 views

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    USQ-based panel discussing education and COVID-19 influences. Good example of the use of Voicethread for asynchronous discussion.
Kate Davis

Make Super Simple Videos for Teaching Online [video] | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    An engaging video on how to make short, simple videos for teaching online. Definitely worth a watch. "The hard part can be getting the confidence to talk to the camera, but making simple videos for online teaching can help you engage with students."
Julie Lindsay

Flipping the Classroom - ANU Coffee Courses - 0 views

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    Relevant online short course focused on flipped learning and flipping the classroom.
Julie Lindsay

How I keep up to date with the latest in higher education learning and teaching news an... - 0 views

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    Digital first pedagogical guru Dr Kate Davis shares how she keeps up to date with online news and resources for higher education.
oalttech

Sony Q1 financial report: camera sales more than 50% down - Photo Rumors - 0 views

  • Camera sales were down more than 50% compared to the same period last year
Julie Lindsay

Synchronous and asynchronous learning - 0 views

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    Excellent overview of synchronous and asynchronous learning modes and when to use each in higher education and beyond.
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