If you are a blockchain expert and want to prepare yourself for an interview, this guide will help you in cracking the difficult interviews at the beginner's level.
Scott Traylor of 360KID interviews media theorist and educator Henry Jenkins about what educational publishers should consider when making learning games for classroom use. In this interview Jenkins discusses the problems with gamification and new ways to reinvent the textbook for game enhancement.
Recorded online interviews with noted teachers, pundits, and researchers in the area of future edtech. I think of it as a mini TED for educators and instructional design.
Recorded online interviews with noted teachers, pundits, and researchers in the area of future edtech and pedagogy. I think of it as an online TED for educators and instructional design.
"In this episode of the November Learning Podcasts Series, Alan speaks with Dr. Mitch Resnick, Professor of Learning Research and Director of the Scratch Team at MIT. The two discuss why coding is such an important element to bring into the educational process, at all ages, and they exchange their ideas on why global publication through an online community add an important aspect into this online, coding tool. In the end, Dr. Resnick also shares an exciting announcement about upcoming developments."
Donna Baum (@AuntyTech) put an interview conducted by Dean Shareski (@shareski). He spoke to Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) about curation & his best list of tools. Put onto Theme.
Learning and teaching resources organized around the people awarded the Nobel Prizes. Note the serious games and video clips of interviews and lectures by Nobel Laureates.
Learning and teaching resources organized around the people awarded the Nobel Prizes. Serious games and video clips of interviews and lectures by Nobel Laureates. Inviting layout and easy navaigation design.
Lots of tutorials. Learn computer literacy and software programs, banking and money, job search and interviewing, as well as other modern life skills. All free!
"Around 60 students and staff from four DSNN schools took part in the first Deakin Media Day at the Burwood campus on Nov 23rd 2012. Many thanks to everyone from Brauer College, Keysborough Secondary College, North Geelong Secondary College and Newcomb Secondary College for your enthusiasm and hard work to make the day such a success. Activities included a 'hands-on' work presenting a live news bulletin in Deakin's TV studio, Journalism video and interviewing exercises and a tour of the Deakin campus. Many thanks to Subway for providing lunch, too! We will be running more Deakin Media Days in June and November, 2013, so watch out for more news about these."
"Stephen Orth wondered why Apple didn't use the metadata in photos to better organize pictures in the iPhoto app so, last September, he started developing an app of his own in his spare time to do just that. The result was Photowerks, a 99-cent iPhone app released last month, which lets users sort their photos by date and location.
"I always thought it sounded strange that Apple didn't do that in its photo app," Orth told Mashable in an interview. "I figured it was just a matter of time before they did do it.""
"The new wave of educational tools include fresh ways of deploying phone and tablet apps, online games and videos, and social networking. The goal is to create effective learning tools, new methods of grading, and virtual classrooms of unprecedented sizes-even numbering in the tens of thousands online. While these goals have certainly been attempted before, the latest crop of mass-market, interactive learning tools are also intended for mass-market, global consumption. And enjoyment.
"We should try to bring back the joy of learning because you want to learn, not because someone is going to give you a grade at the end of the semester," Schocken said in a recent interview."
An interview with Dylan Wiliam, Emeritus Professor of Educational Assessment at the Institute of Education, University of London, on his paper entitled Optimizing Talent: Closing Educational and Social Mobility Gap Worldwide, published last year at the Salzburg Global Seminar in Austria.
"Several tech-forward US marketing companies are going where few have gone before: they're ditching the resume and the conventional job interview process for tweets. A simple tweet or two - sometimes called Twitterviews - can lead to a job. In a nation where unemployment stands at 7.9 per cent, how you tweet can now determine how employable you are."
In an interview with Tyler Wood, Fred Benesen explains how and why data is far more subjective than we always recognise.
The term mathwashing should be more of a warning to fellow technologists: don't overlook the inherent subjectivity of building things with data just because you're using math. Algorithm and data driven products will always reflect the design choices of the humans who built them, and it's irresponsible to assume otherwise.
"A podcast, hosted by two science teachers, that discusses science news and science education by interviewing leading scientists, researchers, science writers and other important figures in the field. "