Skip to main content

Home/ EDTECH at Boise State University/ Group items tagged documents

Rss Feed Group items tagged

kettaku

Google Docs - create and edit documents online, for free. - 0 views

shared by kettaku on 21 Sep 16 - No Cached
  •  
    Free online document creating and publishing.
  •  
    I have used Google Docs for co-editing documents with students and sharing documents. Co-editing allows in-class and out of class synchronous and asynchronous collaboration. In particular, I find the ability to synchronously co-edit in class with my students a powerful feature. I can view the students and student groups editing the document and provide input as needed.
Ag Gaire

The Innovative Educator: Turn Your iPad or iTouch into a Document Camera - 0 views

  •  
    short blog entry describing how the iPad (or iTouch) can be used as a document camera in a classroom by connecting it to the projector
Katie Sisson

How to Embed & Resize a Google Document - 0 views

  •  
    The Google Docs platform not only embraces portability by enabling you to create, update and store documents online, it also provides a way for you to publish documents to your website or blog. ...
  •  
    This website gives a step by step explanation of how to embed a Google Document and how to resize the embedded image. There is a default size when embedding an image and most of the time users want to enlarge that image.
Sarah Putnam

Primary Source Documents - 0 views

  •  
    This sites is a collect of several resources that provide rationale for using primary source documents and then resources for several content areas.
Beth Transue

Social Media Examples - College Level Classes - 0 views

  •  
    Updated examples on this document
billhatcher

Zoho Docs | Document Management Software - 0 views

shared by billhatcher on 28 Sep 15 - No Cached
  •  
    Zoho Docs is an online document management software that helps you store all your documents in one place and seamlessly collaborate with your team from anywhere, on any device.
nickurban

Using CoP's and Management - 0 views

  •  
    This particular document looks at the communities of practice model from the lens of a government agency in its' partnership with businesses, foundations, non-profits, and other organizations. The document's value comes to life in the fact that it focuses on how the communities of practice implemented are more of a valid method for productivity because a shared interest is involved and the experiences are shared. First time viewers of this document would benefit from the diagram on page 8 that explores the distinct features of the community, domain and practice which lead to a successful community of practice. The diagram is an excellent means of introducing the model to new participants or those already engaged in a community of practice, but simply unaware of their involvement. I also appreciate this document because it offers practicality and context in viewing how multiple entities can come together to form a community of practice united by a common purpose.
  •  
    I found this article interesting because it talked about the value of using CoP's in management, in particular government. It details the changing age of technology in meeting the demands and needs of communities and organizations around the world. As needs and wants begin to move, so do the challenges that are provided to government. In this regard it talks about utilizing the value on online communities to help create a network of highly skilled people to meet these new demands. By engaging people in this kind of networking through social media people are able to better handle new situations by connecting with people who have experienced similar problems in the past.
Robin Nappi

Crocodoc.com - 0 views

  •  
    View & Comment on Any Document Review a Word document, fill out a PDF form, mark up an image, and more... All with Crocodoc, all online, all for free. Also embed any document into a blog.
shannahollich

Guidelines for Primary Source Literacy - 0 views

  •  
    A PDF document created jointly by the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) and the Society of American Archivists (SAA) that outlines core ideas and learning objectives to develop literacy skills in using primary source documents as distinguished from secondary source documents.
sfledderjohann

http://valenciacollege.edu/faculty/development/tla/documents/CommunityofPractice.pdf - 4 views

  •  
    "The basic argument made by Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger is that communities of practice are everywhere and that we are generally involved in a number of them - whether that is at work, school, home, or in our civic and leisure interests. In some groups we are core members, in others we are more at the margins." In these communities we share information and resources that further our education.
  • ...6 more comments...
  •  
    This article is an outstanding review by Mark K. Smith of Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger's theories of social learning through communities of practice. It gives a great overview of the theoretical foundations as well as additional explanations of those theories.
  •  
    This article outlines the theory and practice of communities of practice, and discusses the idea that learning is social and comes from of our experience of participating in daily life. The authors identify a variety of types of CoPs that all humans are engaged in, even if they are not formally identified as such. A CoP is defined along three dimensions: what it is about, how it functions, and what capabilities/resources it has produced. Also emphasized are the importance of the relationships formed between the people within the CoPs - hence, the community in CoP. Stemming from that, they extend the idea of CoPs to apply to the classroom culture and environment and discuss the need for educators to cultivate a similar idea to best facilitate learning among their students.
  •  
    The point that I learned from this article is that communities of practice go beyond the acquisition of knowledge and skill. They build relationships where people within the community work together to share their skills, knowledge, and interests they have learned in order to complete new or more complex tasks. We learn best through active participation.
  •  
    Articles like this one make it clear that we are actively involved in communities of practice every day, without even realizing it. This is largely due to the internet; now, if one needs to reach out to another person for advice on baking, for example, one can use online forums or message boards to connect to others in their community of practice. This was not possible before the internet, or at the very least it was difficult to accomplish so easily. I'm interested to learn a little more about what COPs might have looked like before the internet.
  •  
    Learning is social and takes place by participating in daily life. Learning takes place situationally in communities of practice. These communities of practice exist all around us: home, work, school, etc. As we pursue our goals within our groups, learning occurs. Members off s community of practice (CoP) are united by common activities and by what they learn through participating in those activities. A community of practice is defined by three factors, "what it is about," "how it functions," and "what capability it has produced." For a community of practice to be effective, it needs to "generate and appropriate a shared repertoire of ideas, commitments and memories." There also need to be resources like documents, tools, procedures, and a shared vocabulary. The the developers of this theory, Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger, focused on the kinds of "social engagement" that caused learning to take place. People join groups and initially learn from the periphery. Eventually, they become more proficient through their participation as they move toward the center of the group. The situation in which the learning occurs has a significant effect on the learning.
  •  
    After reading through this article, I kept coming back to this quote: "Rather than looking to learning as the acquisition of certain forms of knowledge, Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger have tried to place it in social relationships - situations of co-participation." These are ideas I try to integrate into my classroom on a day-to-day basis because healthy social relationships can enhance learning experiences due to students becoming vested in goals. Students are more willing to put their feet outside of the box, without fear of sharing and participating in these learning environments---and they become active inside members of these groups, rather than outside onlookers.
  •  
    This article begins by explaining communities of practice. The article cites Wenger who states that a community of practice defines itself among three different dimensions which are what it is about, how it functions, and what capability it has produced. It explains that there are a vast number of different types of communities of practice and that in our daily lives we are a part of a number of them whether a central member or more on the outskirts. Being an educator myself, I really appreciated the final section of the article which explains implications for educators. It explains that learning occurs through interactions with people, we as educators work so that students may become members of communities of practice, and the importance of thinking through the connection between knowledge and practice.
  •  
    This article is a great starting piece for understanding the theory and basic practices of communities of practice. You get background information on the work of Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger. In addition to this background information on communities of practice the article also discusses some of the issues and implications for educators,.
ShellyWalters

Technology to Deliver Service Learning in Introductory Engineering Courses | The Sloan ... - 0 views

  •  
    Gannon University instructors used blogs to have teams document service learning projects.
Fabio Cominotti

ComparingHemispheres - home - 1 views

  •  
    This is a Wiki that documents and allows collaboration between two different classes to answer various questions.  The classes are in New York and New Zealand.  What a great use of a wiki.
Paige Goodson

http://www.gatesfoundation.org/learning/Documents/innovation-esl-education-mobile-learn... - 0 views

  •  
    This article explore the problems and innovative solutions for ELLstudents.  
Cate Tolnai

What Is HTML? Back to Basics | Design Shack - 0 views

  • Hypertext Markup Language
  • 1980 b
  • fundamental building block of the web as you know it.
  • ...29 more annotations...
  • HTML is all you need to create a web page
  • HTML is the pivotal piece of the puzzle.
  • the web is written in plain text.
  • writing code is more like using WriteRoom or IA Writer; all you get is plain old letters and symbols
  • “mark up” your document and insert extra indicators of how you want the text to be formatted.
  • With HTML, this markup is accomplished through tags.
  • bold tag
  • “<b>”
  • “</b>
  • <i>This is italicized.</i>
  • <b>bold</b>.
  • we have “wrapped” it in a ta
  • linking.
  • not just a tag but an attribute as well
  • <a href="http://designshack.net/">Design Shack</a>
  • tag (<a></a>)
  • attribute (href)
  • <tag attribute="VALUE">Text, images, etc.</tag>
  • anything between the “a” tags becomes a link.
  • “src” attribute
  • “alt” attribute
  • “img” info
  • it’s basically a way to give the browser plain text and have it output richly formatted and even active content that can be clicked on to some end.
  • HTML mostly relates to directly inputting content onto a page.
  • CSS is The Skin, Hair and Clothing
  • Cascading Style Sheets, or CSS.
  • The typical web developer workflow might be to insert all the various pure content first into an HTML document, then jump over to CSS and begin crafting that content to appear in a more visually pleasing and usable way
  • JavaScript jumps into this game by taking a more active role in how the page behaves.
  • HTML5 developers have some new tags to work with that make the basic structure of a web page more logical.
Kristen Taubman

http://s3.amazonaws.com/academia.edu.documents/34476046/full_130302_20140213_1512.pdf?A... - 0 views

  •  
    This is a dynamic article focused on researching the effectiveness of using a rhizomatic structure within the PLN for students using a variety of social media. Researchers evaluate a variety of social media as well as their impact on both the students and instructors. Outcomes include implications of impact on faculty workload, student perceptions of learning enhancement and level of peer engagment.
itxasocayero

Sharing and Collaborating with Google Drive - 0 views

  •  
    Any questions you may have on how to use Google Drive supported software tools like Google Docs, Google Slides and Forms will likely be answered in this extensive step by step training document. You can also find the link to the YouTube video that shows the live training.
peter bg

Upload & Share PowerPoint presentations and documents - 0 views

  •  
    SlideShare is a great way to share presentations, documents and professional videos.
Beth Transue

Transue-ConnectivismInformationLiteracy-ResearchPaper-Summer2012.docx - Google Docs - 0 views

  •  
    This document is a research paper Beth Transue completed for EdTech 504 on Connectivism Theory and Information Literacy. It demonstrates the alignment between Connectivism principles and ACRL Information Literacy standards, and recommends that librarians consider Connectivism learning theory when creating information literacy instruction sessions.
Ag Gaire

Springnote - your online notebook based on wiki - 1 views

  •  
    A free online notebook where you can keep notes, create documents with groups, share up to 2GB of files and collaborate with groups using a wiki.
cynthia mills

Executive Summary: Transforming American Education - 3 views

  •  
    This is the government's take on Communities of Practice, and I included it because like it or not, it impacts many of us on so many levels. The National Education Technology Plan asserts that we need PLC's, and if you have never read this document, it is worth the read. It definitely furthered my knowledge when I read it in EDTECH 501. The bottom line is that because so many students have access to mobile technology, they are able to be a part of social networks. The goal is to harness this power and cultivate collaboration and engaging learning experiences. Its premise is student-centered learning where students are able to make decisions and choices that form their own pathway to learning.
  •  
    Thanks for including this document. I was impressed to see the progressive views outlined with many strong and important points for changing our education culture. One of the main areas included the need to leverage technology to empower students and shift learning responsibility from teacher to learners. In essence we want to strive to create master learners, where students understand how to evaluate and gain the information they need as life-long learners. The section "Measure what Matters" I especially applauded, as I feel our extreme emphasis on testing is misplaced if we don't make sure the tests and measures are appropriate for what students need to know to be life-long learners. Do standardized tests even have a section about locating information and assessing its validity? This report started out with a short list of recommendations that included, "Be clear in outcomes we seek". I think this is an important point as we strive to embrace and utilize the growing potential of connectivness.
1 - 20 of 119 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page