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ccozort

The Challenges of Digital Leadership - 9 views

  • Teachers who used index cards or worksheets as quick checks for student understanding may now use more expensive student response systems (“clickers”) to do the same.
    • ccozort
       
      The issue here is that clickers are too specialized and limited value-add.  An iPad runs Socrative, and does a lot more...
  • Heads of school don’t have to be skilled users themselves to be effective technology leaders, but they do have to exercise appropriate oversight and convey the message - repeatedly - that frequent, meaningful technology use in school is both important and expected.
  • eel sad for the students and teachers in the schools who choose to simply ban and block rather than do the harder but necessary work of enabling and learning from other schools that have followed a less restrictive, more creative path
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  • powerful amplifiers
  • A few workshops here and there rarely result in large-scale changes in implementation
  • We can’t simply delegate things to our technology coordinators and integrationists and be done with it all.
Jeremy Price

Social Network Sites: Public, Private, or What? : The Knowledge Tree - 0 views

  • Social network sites are the latest generation of ‘mediated publics’ - environments where people can gather publicly through mediating technology.
  • Persistence. What you say sticks around.
    • Jeremy Price
       
      Interesting.
  • Searchability.
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  • Invisible audiences. While it is common to face strangers in public life, our eyes provide a good sense of who can overhear our expressions. In mediated publics, not only are lurkers invisible, but persistence, searchability, and replicability introduce audiences that were never present at the time when the expression was created.
  • Replicability. Digital bits are copyable; this means that you can copy a conversation from one place and paste it into another place.
  • Context is only one complication of this architecture. Another complication has to do with scale. When we speak without amplification, our voice only carries so far. Much to the dismay of fame-seekers, just because the Internet has the potential to reach millions, the reality is that most people are heard by very few.
  • The lack of context is precisely why the imagined audience of Friends is key. It is impossible to speak to all people across all space and all time. It’s much easier to imagine who you are speaking to and direct your energies towards them, even if your actual audience is quite different.
  • two audiences cause participants the greatest headaches: those who hold power over them and those that want to prey on them.
  • Some try to resumé-ify their profiles, putting on a public face intended for those who hold power over them. While this is typically the adult-approved approach, this is unrealistic for most teens who prioritise socialisation over adult acceptance.
  • Recognise that youth want to hang out with their friends in youth space.
  • When asked, all youth know that anyone could access their profiles online. Yet, the most common response I receive is “…but why would they?”
  • The Internet mirrors and magnifies all aspects of social life.
    • Jeremy Price
       
      Consistent with capturing/recording interactions in general.
  • When a teen is engaged in risky behaviour online, that is typically a sign that they’re engaged in risky behaviour offline.
  • technology makes it easier to find those who are seeking attention than those who are not.
  • Questions abound. There are no truths, only conversations.
  • They can posit moral conundrums, show how mediated publics differ from unmediated ones, invite youth to consider the potential consequences of their actions, and otherwise educate through conversation instead of the assertion of power.
  • group settings are ideal for engaging youth to consider their relationship with social technologies and mediated publics
  • Internet safety is on the tip of most educators’ tongues, but much of what needs to be discussed goes beyond safety. It is about setting norms and considering how different actions will be interpreted.
  • Create a profile on whatever sites are popular in your school.
  • Keep your profile public and responsible, but not lame.
  • Do not go surfing for your students, but if they invite you to be Friends, say yes. This is a sign that they respect you.
  • The more present you are, the more opportunity you have to influence the norms.
Natalie Lafferty

Here's a Free PowerPoint Template & How I Made It - The Rapid eLearning Blog - 0 views

  • On my screencasts: I’m not at liberty to discuss the tool I use (you’ll hear soon enough). However, most people ask about the screencasts because of the clarity. Here’s the secret: Capture your screen so you don’t have to compress the SWF. For example, this demo was captured at 960×600 and it’s locked into the player at 960×600. Many people will do a full screen capture at 1024×768. Then they want to put it on the slide which is 720×540. So the SWF gets published down which causes degradation. The next secret is to lock your player so that the image quality remains. Many people will allow the player to scale which causes degradation. Tip: to do a full screen capture, bring your monitor resolution down (it will look fuzzy). Then when you’re done, bring the resolution back up and it will look crisp. I am on a 30″ monitor with a 2560×1600 resolution, but I can bring it down to 960×600 and still get a decent full screen capture. That’s how I did all of the Articulate product tutorials.
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    Helpful post on developing a Powerpoint template to support rapid elearning development using Articulate. Also helpful tips from Tom in the comments re screen resolution when recording a screencast.
Reynold Redekopp

Robert Putnam - Bowling Alone - Journal of Democracy 6:1 - 5 views

  • ocial scientists in several fields have recently suggested a common framework for understanding these phenomena, a framework that rests on the concept of social capital. 4 By analogy with notions of physical capital and human capital--tools and training that enhance individual productivity--"social capital" refers to features of social organization such as networks, norms, and social trust that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit.
  • Whether or not bowling beats balloting in the eyes of most Americans, bowling teams illustrate yet another vanishing form of social capital.
  • the most fundamental form of social capital is the family, and the massive evidence of the loosening of bonds within the family (both extended and nuclear) is well known.
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  • Across the 35 countries in this survey, social trust and civic engagement are strongly correlated; the greater the density of associational membership in a society, the more trusting its citizens. Trust and engagement are two facets of the same underlying factor--social capital.[End Page 73] America still ranks relatively high by cross-national standards on both these dimensions of social capital. Even in the 1990s, after several decades' erosion, Americans are more trusting and more engaged than people in most other countries of the world. The trends of the past quarter-century, however, have apparently moved the United States significantly lower in the international rankings of social capital. The recent deterioration in American social capital has been sufficiently great that (if no other country changed its position in the meantime) another quarter-century of change at the same rate would bring the United States, roughly speaking, to the midpoint among all these countries, roughly equivalent to South Korea, Belgium, or Estonia today. Two generations' decline at the same rate would leave the United States at the level of today's Chile, Portugal, and Slovenia.
  • Other demographic transformations. A range of additional changes have transformed the American family since the 1960s--fewer marriages, more divorces, fewer children, lower real wages, and so on. Each of these changes might account for some of the slackening of civic engagement, since married, middle-class parents are generally more socially involved than other people. Moreover, the changes in scale that have swept over the American economy in these years--illustrated by the replacement of the corner grocery by the supermarket and now perhaps of the supermarket by electronic shopping at home, or the replacement of community-based enterprises by outposts of distant multinational firms--may perhaps have undermined the material and even physical basis for civic engagement.
  • The technological transformation of leisure. There is reason to believe that deep-seated technological trends are radically "privatizing" or "individualizing" our use of leisure time and thus disrupting many opportunities for social-capital formation. The most obvious and probably the most powerful instrument of this revolution is television. Time-budget studies in the 1960s showed that the growth in time spent watching television dwarfed all other changes in the way Americans passed their days and nights. Television has made our communities (or, rather, what we experience as our communities) wider and shallower. In the language of economics, electronic technology enables individual tastes to be satisfied more fully, but at the cost of the positive social externalities associated with more primitive forms of entertainment. The same logic applies to the replacement of vaudeville by the movies and now of movies by the VCR. The new "virtual reality" helmets that we will soon don to be entertained in total isolation are merely the latest extension of this trend. Is technology thus driving a wedge between our individual interests and our collective interests? It is a question that seems worth exploring more systematically.
  • who stress that closely knit social, economic, and political organizations are prone to inefficient cartelization and to what political economists term "rent seeking" and ordinary men and women call corruption.
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    An article about the loss of social capital in America
Lisa Luciano

Student Reflection Questions for Multimedia Projects - 3 views

Below is a site I came across while working on an online collaborative project inspired by the My Hero site (www.myhero.com). It might help if you need to design student reflection questions for mu...

web2.0 technology resources reflection multimedia questions

started by Lisa Luciano on 08 May 11 no follow-up yet
yuvi987

DevOps Online Training - 1 views

Learning During Workshop-DevOps Online Training WorkshopLearning During Workshop The workshop is designed to help the participants get started as a DevOps practitioner. We start the workshop by di...

DevOps Online Training Education technology learning Tools

started by yuvi987 on 29 Jul 20 no follow-up yet
Company Registration

Limited Company Registration, Procedure and Steps for Ltd Company - 1 views

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    If you want to start a business that can grow and expand on a large scale, then registering your company as a Public Limited Company (PLC) could be the way to go. Get all for limited company registrations in India and abroad; given are all steps and procedure for ltd company registration (for both private and public company formation)
buy5starshop4165

Buy Sendgrid Accounts - Premium Accounts - 0 views

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    Benefits of Buy Sendgrid Accounts SendGrid is a cloud-based email platform that helps businesses to send and receive emails. It is used by more than 100,000 companies, including Airbnb, Amazon, Netflix and Uber. SendGrid allows you to send transactional emails such as receipts or confirmations through your website or app with ease. It also provides advanced analytics tools so you can track the performance of your campaigns in real time.
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    SendGrid is an email service provider that offers reliable and scalable email services. It has been around since 2010, and it specializes in transactional emails sent by businesses. If you have a business, the SendGrid's advanced features will help you send marketing campaigns and communicate with your customers more effectively. In this article we will talk about what SendGrid accounts are, how to set up WP Mail SMTP on your website, and why you should buy Sendgrid accounts from us (www.sendgrid.com).
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    Save time and money. It doesn't matter if you're an individual or a large company; if you have multiple emails to send, then SendGrid is a great way for you to save both time and money. It's much cheaper than other services out there, but that doesn't mean it lacks quality. On the contrary! SendGrid has been around for years now (they launched in 2010), so they have plenty of experience under their belt when it comes down to sending emails at scale.
Neural Design Work LLP

Digital Marketing 2025: Your All-in-One Playbook - 1 views

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    The Ultimate Digital Marketing Guide 2025 is your go-to resource to master the modern marketing landscape. As the rules of digital engagement evolve, this guide helps you stay ahead by breaking down the latest strategies in SEO, social media, paid advertising, and content marketing all in one place. You'll discover how to create high-performing marketing campaigns, choose the right channels for your business, and apply data-driven insights that lead to real growth. Designed for business owners, marketers, and agency teams, this guide simplifies complex concepts into actionable steps you can implement immediately. Ready to scale your marketing with confidence? Grab the Ultimate Digital Marketing Guide 2025 and start building strategies that actually move the needle.
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