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Michèle Drechsler

Socialbookmarking with Diigo and Education. A survey that could interest you. - 77 views

Please note that this survey is usually taken in 20 minutes, but you can save your partial answers with the "Resume later" button: this would ask you a login and password to save your answers. Then...

socialbookmarking Diigo survey research

Randolph Hollingsworth

sample reality / videogame studies syllabus for Honors course at Geo Mason U ... - 2 views

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    Videogames in Critical Contexts (HNRS 353) syllabus for George Mason University uploaded to GitHub by Mark Sample - see also his CHE article on this at http://chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker/git-a-fork-in-my-syllabus-its-done/40331?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
psmiley

Elementary October Newsletter - 14 views

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    Kay's writing about Quadblogging
Michelle Kassorla

Linguistics Tags: linguistics Guide to reference sources and databases in the field... - 12 views

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    Again ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ. No Web 2.0 to get my students interested? Anyone? . ..
Barbara Schroeder

Patty Hicks EdTech Learning Log | An online inventory of what I've learned and created - 3 views

  • n Uncategorized | Le
  • EdTech Smart Brief
  • 982E-BC18C690187E&sid=53c635d9-8e3e-4fb3-a223-c3dbb097b677
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  • Here is a link to a bundle I’ve created on Google Reader. I enjoy following David Pogue from the NYT. He is funny and witty and interesting, at least I think so. I’m a fan of Mitch Resnick from MIT and must give him all the credit for my passion in helping my students see themselves as creators not just users of technology. You should search out some of his writings. Actually better yet go to a conference at MIT and meet him.
cphuber

General OneFile - Document - Science education and ESL students - 12 views

teacherjanelle

Memes in Digital Culture - 74 views

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    Behind a firewall.
Maureen Greenbaum

Distance-Learning Survey Shows Growing Concern for Student Services - Wired Campus - Th... - 2 views

  • “With the greater focus on distance learning, colleges’ expectations are increasing,” says Christine P. Mullins, executive director of the Instructional Technology Council. “They’re realizing that student services, like library services, student orientation, tutoring, and counseling are needed to provide a well-rounded education.”
  • Sixty four percent of colleges require faculty to take distance-education training programs, and among those that offer training, 59 percent require more than eight hours of it.
  • 79 percent of colleges are creating their own online course content, which requires staff members with experience and knowledge of instructional design. Nineteen percent use content created by textbook publishers, and 2 percent contract or license materials from some other content provider.
Becky Roehrs

Creator of 'Anonymous' Gossip Site Names Names - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher... - 2 views

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    Campus-gossip Web sites like JuicyCampus and CollegeACB used the lure of anonymity to entice students to post on them. The cloak gave students a virtual bathroom wall on which to write racy rumors and explicit insults about their peers without fear of being exposed.
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    I want to share this with my students in future, when we work with social media..are you really ever anonymous on the web?
sha towers

Next Time, Fail Better - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • The work of coding, I discovered, was an endless round of failure, failure, failure before eventual success. Computer-science students are used to failing. They do it all the time. It's built into the process, and they take it in stride.
  • Humanities students are not used to failure. They want to get it right the first time.
  • Perhaps of all the humanities, the creative arts come closest to valuing failure. Poets and painters don't expect to get it right the first time. That's the idea of workshopping as a pedagogy, right? Still, there's a real difference. I'd be willing to bet that most creative writers bring a piece of work into a workshop secretly hoping it's a success. Sure, they know they need help on aspects of their story or poem, but that's not the same as failing. A computer program that doesn't run is a failure. A program that produces no usable data about the text it was set up to analyze is a failure. Why don't those failures devastate the developers? Because each time their efforts fail, the developers learn something they can use to get closer to success the next time.
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  • That's what we should be teaching humanities students—to look at what went wrong and figure out how to learn from it
  • kind of administrator who is not afraid to take chances for fear of failure.
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    what the humanities could learn from computer programmers
Wayne Holly

TED Releases Educational Videos - 3 views

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    The TED-Ed channel on YouTube is now available.
Roland Gesthuizen

Comparison of Citation Software at MIT - Overview of Citation Software at MIT: Managing... - 74 views

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    Overview of Citation Software at MIT: Managing Your References. Endnote, RefWorks and Zotero
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    There's so many other options out there now...Mendeley, Qigga, etc.
Steve Ransom

Would Gandhi Use Social Media?, by Nipun Mehta - 26 views

  • but with a conscious mindfulness of their strengths and weaknesses.
  • What transformation does is shift the pattern of addiction altogether; changing the habits of your heart was the true genius of these social change giants.
  • The Internet, then, is great for spreading awareness and it can be quite powerful in terms of its impact as well.  Where it lacks, though, is the third element -- transformation.
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  • FaceBook's organizing principle is to retain the online attention of its users and monetize it by displaying ads
  • More than half of the world’s population is now on a social networks, and it's increasing everyday
  • If we are to have sustainable revolutions that last for generations, our modern day technologies have to be designed for this element of inner transformation.
  • Each of those legendary service heroes started with changing themselves at the root level, and despite leading vast revolutions, always kept that front and center.
  • When organized, such inner-transformation driven designs work at the intersection of three big circles: outer change, systemic change and personal change.
  • Giftivism: the practice of radically generous acts that change the world.  It works by transforming the heart of the change maker, even more than the impact on its external beneficiaries.  A key metric of giftivism is that it works to uplift the 100%.  It has no enemies.  It is unconditionally kind to everyone.
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    Why change/impact is so hard... it must begin or move to the inner self. Passion-driven action... no tools, policies, initiatives, services,... are ever enough if we don't address the deep-seated ideas and behaviors that need to change.
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