Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb
Building an Internet Culture - 0 views
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ten conclusions that might guide a country's development of a culturally appropriate Internet policy
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Do not spend vast sums of money to buy machinery that you are going to set down on top of existing dysfunctional institutions. The Internet, for example, will not fix your schools. Perhaps the Internet can be part of a much larger and more complicated plan for fixing your schools, but simply installing an Internet connection will almost surely be a waste of money.
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Learning how to use the Internet is primarily a matter of institutional arrangements, not technical skills
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Google For Educators - Google Docs - 0 views
Myths and Legends from E2BN - 0 views
Paperless Tiger « buckenglish - 0 views
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Does this jettisoning of time-honored titles mean that the paperless classroom is also lacking a creator, controller and grader? Is the paperless classroom also a teacherless paradigm? The answer is in some regards, yes. I have removed myself from center stage. I have relinquished the need to control every class. I have stopped seeing work as stagnant…completed and submitted by students and then graded by me. I have let go of my need to pre-plan months at a time, in favor of following the path that unfolds as we learn together. My classes are not, however, teacherless, just less about the teaching and more about the learning. The students know that I am ready and willing to be student to their insights, that they can teach, create, control and even evaluate their own learning.
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In the absence of my control, the students have many choices to make
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Teachers often say that modern students are lazy. I have long felt that as the shifting winds of technology began to gain force, we teachers were the ones who were unwilling to do the work of rethinking our roles and meeting the students were they were learning already. Rethinking paper as the primary tool of class is a step in the right direction because it forces a rethinking of the how and why of teaching and learning.
Bridging Differences: 21st-Century Skills, Accountability, and Curriculum - 0 views
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We agree about “data informed, not data driven.” Data are in the saddle now, to the detriment of kids and their education. Data are being treated as objective facts, when they really are the numbers produced based on assumptions. If the assumptions are wrong, the data are useless. Our schools are now being evaluated and swamped by a tidal wave of useless data. We need to re-examine our assumptions.
Online Education - Introducing the Microlecture Format - Open Education - 0 views
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in online education “tiny bursts can teach just as well as traditional lectures when paired with assignments and discussions.” The microlecture format begins with a podcast that introduces a few key terms or a critical concept, then immediately turns the learning environment over to the students.
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“It’s a framework for knowledge excavation,” Penrose tells Shieh. “We’re going to show you where to dig, we’re going to tell you what you need to be looking for, and we’re going to oversee that process.”
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It clearly will not work for a course that is designed to feature sustained classroom discussions. And while the concept will work well when an instructor wants to introduce smaller chunks of information, it will likely not work very well when the information is more complex.
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Ideas and Thoughts from an EdTech » THIS is a 21st Century Skill - 0 views
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Video is indeed a 21st century skill
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t requires teacher training to make it as required as learning how to teach writing.
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Any job that features communication as a primary skill, will ask future employees to present themselves in this way.
Brainstorm: Junk Analysis of Higher Ed by the 'Times' - Chronicle.com - 0 views
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This isn’t good for anyone’s education: The only virtue of the arrangement is its cheapness, and that cheapness hasn’t lowered tuition; it’s simply served to provide money pots for high-rolling administrators to spend on favored projects and the expansion of the business curriculum. It’s also created a need to expand the ranks of management to train and supervise the constantly-churning mass of student and other casual workers.
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journalists are living the same permatemping as the faculty, under the same quality management gutting the public sphere under both Republicans and Democrats
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four decades of student casualization
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Weblogg-ed » "Social Media is Here to Stay." Just Not in Classrooms, Please - 0 views
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Social network sites may end up being a fad from the first decade of the 21st century, but new forms of technology will continue to leverage social network as we go forward.
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a systems problem
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Kids are being driven to become more private in a world where transparency and openness create huge learning opportunities for those that know what to do with them.
New Study Shows Time Spent Online Important for Teen Development - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views
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parents and their children came together around gaming or shared digital media projects, where both kids and adults brought expertise to the table.
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an effort to inject grounded research into the conversation about the future of learning in a digital world.
The Clever Sheep: Creative Commons Chaos - 0 views
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