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George Bradford

alpha lab research network - Persistence - 0 views

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    "PRODUCTIVE PERSISTENCE: A "PRACTICAL" THEORY OF COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS SUCCESS The Carnegie Foundation's Productive Persistence initiative is a practical theory of the causes of successfully completing coursework at a community college-or, in our terms, the "drivers" of successful course completion.  The term "Productive Persistence" refers to both the tenacity to persist, and also the ability to use good strategiesto productively engage with the course materials. "
George Bradford

Learning Analytics: Ascilite 2011 Keynote - 0 views

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    Learning Analytics: Dream, Nightmare, or Fairydust? From today's keynote at Ascilite 2011, here's the podcast plus the slides. I am grateful to Gary, Renee and everyone else at Ascilite for their understanding and flexibility, since after months of planning this trip, unfortunately I could not be there in person after my father passed away last weekend. For those of you who like to download and watch offline: podcast [Hi-Res version: 93.3Mb] + slides [PPTX/PDF] For detailed descriptions of work presented here, see other posts tagged learning analytics and the references below.
George Bradford

Learning networks, crowds and communities - 1 views

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    Learning networks, crowds and communities Full Text: PDF Author: Caroline Haythornthwaite University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC Who we learn from, where and when is dramatically affected by the reach of the Internet. From learning for formal education to learning for pleasure, we look to the web early and often for our data and knowledge needs, but also for places and spaces where we can collaborate, contribute to, and create learning and knowledge communities. Based on the keynote presentation given at the first Learning Analytics and Knowledge Conference held in 2011 in Banff, Alberta, this paper explores a social network perspective on learning with reference to social network principles and studies by the author. The paper explores the ways a social network perspective can be used to examine learning, with attention to the structure and dynamics of online learning networks, and emerging configurations such as online crowds and communities.
George Bradford

A unified framework for multi-level analysis of distributed learning - 0 views

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    A unified framework for multi-level analysis of distributed learning Full Text: PDF Authors: Daniel Suthers University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI Devan Rosen School of Communications, Ithaca College, Ithaca, NY Learning and knowledge creation is often distributed across multiple media and sites in networked environments. Traces of such activity may be fragmented across multiple logs and may not match analytic needs. As a result, the coherence of distributed interaction and emergent phenomena are analytically cloaked. Understanding distributed learning and knowledge creation requires multi-level analysis of the situated accomplishments of individuals and small groups and of how this local activity gives rise to larger phenomena in a network. We have developed an abstract transcript representation that provides a unified analytic artifact of distributed activity, and an analytic hierarchy that supports multiple levels of analysis. Log files are abstracted to directed graphs that record observed relationships (contingencies) between events, which may be interpreted as evidence of interaction and other influences between actors. Contingency graphs are further abstracted to two-mode directed graphs that record how associations between actors are mediated by digital artifacts and summarize sequential patterns of interaction. Transitive closure of these associograms creates sociograms, to which existing network analytic techniques may be applied, yielding aggregate results that can then be interpreted by reference to the other levels of analysis. We discuss how the analytic hierarchy bridges between levels of analysis and theory.
George Bradford

Data Visualization: Modern Approaches - Smashing Magazine | Smashing Magazine - 0 views

  • 2. Displaying News
  • Digg Stack 15: Digg stories arrange themselves as stack as users digg them. The more diggs a story gets, the larger is the stack.
  • Let’s take a look at the most interesting modern approaches to data visualization as well as related articles, resources and tools.
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  • an application that visually reflects the constantly changing landscape of the Google News news aggregator. The size of data blocks is defined by their popularity at the moment.
  • Digg stories arrange themselves as stack as users digg them. The more diggs a story gets, the larger is the stack.
  • a typographic book search, collects the information from Amazon and presents it in the form of keyword you’ve provided.
  • uses visual hills (spikes) to emphasize the density of American population in its map.
  • lets you explore the behavior of your visitors with a heat map. More popular sections, which are clicked more often, are highlighted as “warm” – in red color.
  • Eric Blue provides some references to unusual Data Visualization methods.
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    Data presentation can be beautiful, elegant and descriptive. There is a variety of conventional ways to visualize data - tables, histograms, pie charts and bar graphs are being used every day, in every project and on every possible occasion. However, to convey a message to your readers effectively, sometimes you need more than just a simple pie chart of your results. In fact, there are much better, profound, creative and absolutely fascinating ways to visualize data. Many of them might become ubiquitous in the next few years.
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