The new website of ESET (April 2013). This site contains a variety of expert opinions, white papers and research. Regular short podcasts are most informative.
Katrina Schwartz and Ki Sung at MindShift started a podcast titled "Stories Teachers Share". It highlightst the many varied and interesting work teachers do daily. It gives teachers the opportunity to help the larger community better understand what it really means to be a teacher.
"Create your live podcast with Spreaker.
It's fun, simple and free."
"Spreaker provides you with a user-friendly console to manage voice, special effects, and your music library
"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. "
From the University of Wisconsin comes this set of rubrics for the following topics
Cooperative Learning Research Process/Report
PowerPoint/Podcast Oral Presentation
Web Page and ePortfolio Math, Art, Science
Video and Multimedia Project
Creating Rubrics
Writing Rubrics for Primary Grades
Game and Simulations Web 2.O
"A collection of rubrics for assessing portfolios, cooperative learning, research process/ report, PowerPoint, podcast, oral presentation, web page, blog, wiki, and other web 2.0 projects."
"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."
"This bi-weekly series takes a critical look at some of the major and minor learning theories. In each episode we will explore the historical background and basic tenets of a unique theory of learning, and discuss the theory's application and implications."
"This week on Tech Weekly with games editor Keith Stuart we take a look at an emerging trend in games, where smartphones and cutting-edge robotics are used to create more socially inclusive and dynamic games.
Joining Keith is Guardian writer Alex Hern; Iain Simons, director of the GameCity festival; and Jonathan Smith, games producer for Lego.
The panel discuss why the screen is only a part of the gaming experience - and why small-scale, cheap robotics will open up a new world for developers.
Also this week: Guardian tech writer Samuel Gibbs meets Ian Bernstein, co-creator of the robotic toy ball the Sphero, to find out about the evolution of the robot in gaming."
An interview with Clive Thompson about his book 'Smarter Than You Think You Are' in which he situates some of the changes in technology within history.