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cbjohnsrud

American Revolution Video - American Revolution History - HISTORY.com - 0 views

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    Short American Revolutionary War video clips from History.com
block_chain_

'Americoin' is the way to Achieve the American Dream | Blockchain Council - 0 views

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    With primary elections and caucuses underway in full swing in the USA, be it the Democrats, the Republicans or the Libertarians etc. In a new statement made by Adam Kokesh who is the leading libertarian candidate of the 2020 U.S. presidential race, he says that cryptocurrencyis the tool to achieve the 'American Dream'. Keeping this in mind, he aims to develop the AmeriCoin cryptocurrency.
Leanne Tacosik

American Currency Exhibit - 0 views

American Currency Exhibit. (n.d.). Retrieved July 18, 2016, from http://www.frbsf.org/education/teacher-resources/american-currency-exhibit/. Description: This resource provided a gallery of the ...

education resources learning

started by Leanne Tacosik on 18 Jul 16 no follow-up yet
Leanne Tacosik

American Currency Exhibit. - 0 views

American Currency Exhibit. (n.d.). Retrieved July 18, 2016, from http://www.frbsf.org/education/teacher-resources/american-currency-exhibit/. Description: This resource provides a gallery of what...

education resources edtech541

started by Leanne Tacosik on 18 Jul 16 no follow-up yet
bharris_edtech

Who plays video games? Younger men, but many others too - 0 views

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    This study from Pew Research Center offers a good look at just who in American culture plays digital games regularly. The statistics here might be surprising.
Chris Pontillo

Gaming to learn - 0 views

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    The American Pshychology Association reviews the research findings about Game-Based learning. The article also talks about pilot programs that were conducted to explore GBL, links are provided to these studies.
Debi Banks

Activism and Social Media Course Projects | American University, Washington, DC - 0 views

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    This article talks about a class where an instructor challenged her students to make a difference in a field of their choice using social media. 
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    Students were supposed to put the title of the class into action and they were to pick a cause or issue that they cared about and use social media. This was a great way to have the students actually see what was out there and to get involved rather than just learn from books.
Russell Nash

Communities of Practice - 4 views

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    Eckert looks at Communities of Practice (COP) to study situated language use. She finds that the COP is important because of "its focus on the fluidity of social space and the diversity of experience" (p. 3). She finds the COP to be complementary to the speech community and that feedback between the two approaches would provide the best process for analysis.
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    Communities of practice are groups of people who share the same job or a common interest in a subject. They come together to form a link to help each other perform in the world around them. This article talks about the value of communities of practice and how and why they work.
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    Eckert, P. (2006). Communities of practice. ELL, 2, 683-685. In this article, Mrs. Eckert does a great job in simplifying what a community of practice entails and means. She allows you to visualize the communities you belong to as well as other communities of practice you interact with or observe on a daily basis. One important distinction is that the author of this work is written from the sense of sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology and not from an educator's mind set. Irrespective of this standpoint, you can see direct correlations to where students understand themselves and what communities of practice your own student population may fall under. In order to understand the social development of communities of practice Mrs. Eckert does a good job in breaking down common cores that can emerge from memberships. The linguistic side she writes, "A white working class Italian-American woman does not develop her ways of speaking directly from the larger categorical working class, Italian American, and female, but from her day to day experience as a person who combines those three memberships. Her experience will be articulated by her participation in activities and communities of practice that are particular to her place in the social order."(Eckert, 2006) Building upon that theory, she discusses the importance of social space "Emma Moore's study of teenage girls in Northern England (Moore 2003) traced the gradual split of a group of somewhat rebellious "populars" as some of them emerged as the tougher "townies" in their ninth year. In the process, the vernacular speech patterns of the "townies" intensified in opposition to those of their more Conservative friends". (Eckert, 2006) While the article sheds more light on the development of speech patterns and dialects through the medium of communities, we can also see the definition in practice in which a collection of people gather together over a common interest and then orients to their new surrounding
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    This is just a basic definition of communities of practice. It is a very easy way to understand it.
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    Communities of practice (CoP) are created through a community of people who have common interests. In communities of practice, Eckert (2006) explains "a community of practice develops ways of doing things, views, values, power relations, and ways of talking" (p.1). CoP's have a way of providing a personal identity and a way of speaking within a CoP.
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    Communities of Practice: Eckert describes a community of practice (CoP) as a group of people who interact ongoing with a common goal or endeavor. Sometimes they come about by similar interests, the workplace, and education. She concludes that communities of practice are very powerful inside and outside the community.
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    Penelope Eckert discusses the value of a community of practice in linguistic studies, giving a definition for a community of practice and distinguishing it from a more conventional linguistic construct: speech communities. Communities of practice link broad social patterns with concrete, observable behavior in individuals. They emphasize individual experience over demographic generalities. They address dynamic, fringe effects within a community. They build on social constructivism as groups of people engage in active sense-making.
Katie Swanson Sathre

Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age - 5 views

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    This article reviews how behaviorism, cognitivism, and constructivism have all been central ideas that we based our teaching on. However, in the new digital age, it is becoming evident that we need to shift to a connectivism point of view. We need to use the resources we have to connect with teachers and learn from each other.
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    Connectivism: This article talks about connectivism model shifts with the learning society and that the educational field is slow to embrace and use new tools. Connectivism is essential for learners to grow in educational technology.
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    This article was written by George Siemens the father of connectivism, focusing on how learning occurs through networking especially through the use of technology. The article also explains the differences between connectivism, behaviorism, constructivism, and cognitivism in a simple to read manner.
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    This was the first article I read during my research. It really gave me a baseline understanding of connectivism. I liked the way that it explained how connectivism is different from other learning theories. Overall great article.
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    In this article George Siemens relates connectivism to PLN's. He begins by explaining that knowledge is growing exponentially and now instead of being measured in decades, the life of knowledge is measured in years and even months. He goes onto explain that half of what is known today was not known a mere ten years ago and according to the American Society of Training and Documentation, knowledge in the world has doubled in the last ten years and continues to double every 18 months. He explains that networks are an integral part of growing one's knowledge base and our small world networks are made up of people who share our interests. He also lists eight principles of connectivism and connects these ideas to social networking. He concludes by stating that connectivism provides insight into learning skills and tasks needed for learners to be successful in a digital era.
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    This article, written by George Siemens explains how connectivism is the theory behind the PLNs. The author describes how connectivism fills the limitations of behaviorism, cognitivism and constructivism, the learning theories developed when learning was not impacted by technology. It is the complement. The author compares the connections in a PLN with pipes and says "The pipe is more important than the content within the pipe. Our ability to learn what we need for tomorrow is more important than what we know today." (Siemens, 2014)
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    A detailed article on connectivism, written by one of the biggest promoters of Connectivism- George Siemens. There is a lot of great information on how this impacts organizations which was particularly interesting. We struggle with this all the time at my company- "Connectivism addresses the challenges that many corporations face in knowledge management activities. Knowledge that resides in a database needs to be connected with the right people in the right context in order to be classified as learning".
Leanne Tacosik

History of Money and Banking in the United States - 0 views

History of Money and Banking in the United States: The History of American Money. (n.d.). Retrieved July 18, 2016, from https://youtu.be/JHP510yxC54. Description: This resource provides insight o...

resources learning tools edtech541

started by Leanne Tacosik on 18 Jul 16 no follow-up yet
jincelli

Activity Tools | DocsTeach - 0 views

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    DocsTeach is a product of the National Archives education division. Our mission is to engage, educate, and inspire all learners to discover and explore the records of the American people preserved by the National Archives. The National Archives and Records Administration is the nation's record keeper.
juliahill

NEEDS Outreach - 0 views

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    This website, which is now only available as a mobile app, provides learners and educators with videos that demonstrate the signs in American Sign Language for specific mathematical terms.
danderson0613

History.com - American & World History - 0 views

shared by danderson0613 on 08 Aug 16 - Cached
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    Explore HISTORY shows, watch videos and full episodes, play games and access articles on historical topics at History.com.
Alaka Pradhan

Chromebooks Head To School With Android Apps, Tablet Modes - 0 views

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    Google announced new hardware, Android software compatibility, and other improvements meant to make Chromebooks even more welcome in the classroom. The changes--plus updates to the company's suite of education products--could extend Google's influence over the American school system. Chromebooks are popular with schools because they're much cheaper than PCs or tablets.
Lynette McDougal

How teens use social network sites | Pew Internet & American Life Project - 0 views

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    This updated PEW Research report provides more up to date stats regarding teen usage in social networks.
Todd Vens

Social Learning Theory and Web-Based Learning Environments: A Review of Research and Di... - 3 views

Hill, J. R., Song, L., & West, R. E. (2009). Social Learning Theory and Web-Based Learning Environments: A Review of Research and Discussion of Implications. American Journal of Distance Education,...

collaborative community group learning social students

started by Todd Vens on 16 Sep 12 no follow-up yet
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