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Debi Banks

Teaching Students to Become Curators of Ideas: The Curation Project - 1 views

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    The Curation Project made students research and step outside of their comfort zone to experiences different types of social media. They were able to learned how to track and were able to see how they can share with other countries as well as "break the walls of the classroom".
Jackie Gerstein

Content Curation for Online Education | Scoop.it - 1 views

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    Content Curation for Online Education
Deborah Lyman

Assessing Curated Material - 0 views

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    Checklist for students to assess their curated libraries
Gretel Patch

Curation Checklist: 15 Criteria for Assessing Quality and Value - Google Docs - 1 views

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    Group Curation checklist for EdTech 543
anonymous

Digital Habitats: Creating Our Personal Technology Configurations - 5 views

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    This blog post (linked to the book, Digital Habitats) discusses creating ones "personal technology configuration," which is a topic we'll be covering later in the semester. The author describes the tools in his "PTC" that he uses to "close triangles" (aka- network individuals to one another; Skype, LinkedIn), share information (blogs, Twitter), and curate information (tagging). Personal identity on the web is an important aspect of developing PLNs and CoPs.
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    This was a good perspective on how we can can individually configure our PLN's to work for us based on using the technology in different ways. The concept of "Closing Triangles" was completely new to me. Thinking of how our own configurations interact with others in our network is definitely something to consider when we go into the practice phase.
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    I like how he has coined the phrase "network weaving practices", and also shows how he "weaves" in and out of other networks by using three different PLN configurations: closed triangles, sharing information, and curating resources.
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    I've never heard of this before with that term. I know it because of the general idea. I think it it great to weave our thoughts and information together with other professional. Teachers love to use materials and ideas from other and this would help make it easier to collaborate with them.
Renee Phoenix

In abundance: Networked participatory practices as scholarship | Stewart | The Internat... - 1 views

  • Boyer’s (1990) four components of scholarship – discovery, integration, application, and teaching – and to explore them as a techno-cultural system of scholarship suited to an era of knowledge abundance. Not only does the paper find that networked engagement both aligns with and exceeds Boyer’s model for scholarship, it suggests that networked scholarship may enact Boyer’s initial aim of broadening scholarship itself through fostering extensive cross-disciplinary, public ties and rewarding connection, collaboration, and curation between individuals rather than roles or institutions.
  • The way Twitter draws scholars from multiple disciplines and geographic areas together via conversations and hashtags emerged as a clear manifestation of scholarship of integration. Participants demonstrated active engagement with multiple audiences, across fields and disciplines. The accounts that participants connected with in their 24-hour reflections were traced, and in all cases but one participants were found to engage across both geographic and disciplinary boundaries.
  • Boyer (1990) emphasizes scholarship of integration as “research at the boundaries where fields converge…[T]hose engaged in integration ask “What do the findings mean?” (p. 18). Thus scholarship of integration centers on public discussions and negotiations of meaning; what distinguishes the techno-cultural system of NPS is that this happens in constant, abundant real-time. This indirectly reinforces the system’s emphasis on individual rather than institution; the regular unsettling of the boundaries of what is known or understood makes formal hierarchies and categories – tenets of the techno-cultural system of institutional, disciplinary scholarship – difficult to enact and enforce.
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    Bonnie Stewart makes connections between Boyer's four components of scholarship and network participation. She contends that networked engagement fits Boyer's model for scholarship, and broadens scholarship, building connection, collaboration, and curation between individuals rather than roles or institutions.
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    A very interesting article! Even though the word "connectivism" isn't used (that I could find), what the author describes is essentially that. I especially liked this quote from the article: "Twitter served as a space for thinking aloud, sharing expertise, and raising investigative conversations. Participants appeared to carve out regular areas of discussion and investigation for which they become known, in their Twitter circles; peers would then send them links on those topics due to their expressed interests, and signal them into conversations in those areas, thereby extending participants' network reach and visibility." Sounds like connectivism in action!
joshgiudicelli

Scoop.it - Content Curation Tool | Scoop.it - 0 views

shared by joshgiudicelli on 31 Mar 19 - No Cached
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    This curation tools allows user to publish a page over any topic they choose. After establishing a page, the user can then scoop different resources and curate the topic. After the user has finished gathering resources the list can be shared out to different social media outlets.
Rhonda Lowderback

MediaShift . How Educators Are Using Pinterest for Showcasing, Curation | PBS - 0 views

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    Northwest Missouri State University - Jody Staunch uses Pinterest to show positive examples of web design.
Rhonda Lowderback

Pinterest for academic libraries webcast Murphy acrl - 0 views

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    A librarian presents the use of Pinterest as a curation and researching tool.
Todd Vens

Online Learning Update - 1 views

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    This is the blog of Ray Schroeder, Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois. Dr. Schroeder offers no commentary on the blog, instead he uses it to curate articles, news and research pertinent to online learning. I subscribe to this site through RSS readers on my laptop, iPad and phone.
Dennis Large

Pinterest for Showcasing and Curating - 1 views

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    University of Southern California class is using Pinterest for assignments. They use the social media app to gather images for a project on public art.
Gretchen Smith

5 Little-Known iPad Skills Teachers Should Have | Edudemic - 0 views

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    I love this article because it focuses on skills like annotating, publishing, and curating, which are all skills classroom teachers need.
Paige Goodson

Scoop.it - 0 views

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    The tag reads "Be the curator of your favorite topic". With this tool, you can easily gather articles and media from the web. Makes it very easy to publish a continuously-updated page about your topic of interest.
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    Use this tool to easily publish gorgeous magazines
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    This is an online content curation site. I like this one because students don't have to have a Facebook or Twitter account to sign up.
bijal11

Emerging Education Technologies - 0 views

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    Do you prefer tools that are efficient, straightforward, and get the job done? We like them, too! This month, App Ed Review has curated four of our favorite easy-to-use websites for your classroom! Each of the websites we share in this RoundUp cut across the subject areas and can be easily embedded into middle and high school teachers' lesson plans.
danderson0613

Organize your resources in an online digital binder - LiveBinders - 0 views

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    LiveBinders is your digital on the web, create an online binder for content curation
anonymous

Teaching in Social and Technological Networks - 1 views

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    This article describes how the connectivism of social and technological networks has changed the role of the teacher. The author maintains that the connectedness students have with information at any given time or place means the teacher does not need to serve the role of the only expert in the students' lives. Several roles that the author believes teachers should play in such connected learning situations are described.
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    This article is really good. It gets to the heart of what a teachers role really is now, not expert but facilitator. Our job now is to help students navigate the wealth of information available to them.
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    This blog post focuses on the role of the teacher in a connectivist driven teaching paradigm. The author suggests that the role of the teacher must shift from "controlling" learning to "influencing" learning. He suggests seven roles teachers must play in networked learning environments: amplifying, curating, wayfinding and socially-driven sensemaking, aggregating, filtering, modelling, and persistent presence.
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    I really like that it defines the role of the instructor. It is moving away from some of the earlier educational theories were the instructor was simply a subject matter expert. As an instructor we are moving more to not just telling but showing the information and where to get the information to enhance the learning.
glorihinck

Connectivism for Online Learning - 0 views

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    This curated site of "scoops" contains 20+ posts related to connectivism and online learning. A brief synopsis is linked to the original source for each post. These original sources include blog posts, wikis, videos, and summaries of conference presentations- all related to connectivism.
Erica Fuhry

Internet4Classrooms 5th grade language skills - 0 views

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    This website offers a plethora of useful links. In this case, they have curated websites that would help fifth grade students with various facets of literacy: writing, communication, language, research, logic, informational text, media, literature, and review help.
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