Skip to main content

Home/ Education Revolutionaries/ Group items tagged skills

Rss Feed Group items tagged

digitalmantra1

5 Skills a Digital Marketer Needs to Succeed - DigitalMantra - Digital Marketing Traini... - 0 views

  •  
    Digital Marketing as a domain is very dynamic in nature. Working on the digital marketing landscape is like always being on your toes. There have always been new tools, platforms, and trends in this particular industry. As a result of these frequent changes, digital marketer's need a particular skill set that is not only unique, adaptable but also relevant. Here we are going to discuss the 5 Skills a Digital Marketer Needs to Succeed 5 Skills a Digital Marketer Needs to Succeed - DigitalMantra - Digital Marketing Training Centre in Noida Being a digital marketer is tough as he/she needs to understand the new web paradigms and how they interact. It is also about how the social and digital channels operate and interact with each other.
Sharon Elin

Has Ontario taught its high-school students not to think? | University Affairs - 1 views

  • most of the students I see are not so much disengaged as poorly trained for university expectations. Students' ability to do analysis and synthesis seems to have been replaced by rote memorization and regurgitation in both the sciences and the humanities. This is a complaint that I hear from instructors in senior high-school classes through to professors in the humanities.
  • students do not really understand what they are doing even when they have covered the material in high school.
  • More important is the ability to relate these facts in new ways, to see them in a new light, and to bring quite disparate ideas together to solve new problems or create new forms of art. This ability to analyze and synthesize is what makes good scientists, writers, philosophers and artists. It is the ability needed to drive a knowledge-based economy.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • Much of the new curriculum in the junior grades is considered by many experienced teachers to be beyond the mental development of students at that level. This encourages blind memorization rather than understanding.
  • Moreover, the new curriculum significantly reduces time spent on the visual arts, and was so content-heavy that it greatly limited the amount of time available for developing analytical and conceptual-understanding skills from kindergarten on
  • much of the teaching at the elementary level is now directed to passing those tests, as schools are rated publicly on the results
  • our students entering university are a year younger. The teenage brain is still developing its "executive functions" during this time, so students enter university with a year's less ability to analyze and plan ahead.
  • grade inflation is clearly present
    • Sharon Elin
       
      I agree this trend toward video and video games has reduced reading habits and turned the focus off text and onto multimedia delivery of information, but I'm not sure this trend alone has reduced analytical skills. Many video games require deep levels of analytical maneuvering to complete. A great book to read on this is Steven Johnson's book, "Everything Bad Is Good for You: How Today's Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter"
  • The trend among young people to move away from reading and towards video and video games, means they spend less time developing reading/writing/analytical skills
  • They do not appreciate that, even as students, they will be expected to develop new knowledge, not just regurgitate existing facts.
  • Students continue to demonstrate serious deficiencies in problem solving skills, basic math skills, and hands-on laboratory skills when they arrive at the university level
  • There may be 10 years of students who have been taught not to think, and reversing that effect will be not be easy without a determined effort.
Julian Ridden

Game developer David Braben creates a USB stick PC for $25 - Video Games Reviews, Cheat... - 0 views

  •  
    David Braben is a very well-known game developer who runs the UK development studio Frontier Developments, but is just as well known for being the co-developer of Elite. Over his career his studio has brought us the Rollercoaster Tycoon series, Thrillville, Lost Winds, and most recently Kinectimals. In the background, however, Braben has been trying to tackle another problem: getting programming and general learning of how computers work back into schools. Braben argues that education since we entered the 2000s has turned towards ICT which teaches useful skills such as writing documents in a word processor, how to create presentations, and basic computer use skills. But that has replaced more computer science-like skills such as basic programming and understanding the architecture and hardware contained in a computer.
Syed Amjad Ali

Soft-skills training for employees via E-learning - 0 views

Soft-skills training use full for employee what good looks like and giving the some introductory practice opportunities. Soft-skills are important port in a company culture. Please have a look at f...

Soft-skills training E-learning

started by Syed Amjad Ali on 06 Feb 15 no follow-up yet
Sharon Elin

Wake Up and Smell the New Epistemology - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher... - 1 views

  • "It is imperative that someone studying this generation realize that we have the world at our fingertips — and the world has been at our fingertips for our entire lives. I think this access to information seriously undermines this generation's view of authority, especially traditional scholastic authority." Today's students know full well that authorities can be found for every position and any knowledge claim, and consequently the students are dubious (privately, that is) about anything we claim to be true or important.
  • Of course, this new epistemology does not imply that our students have become skilled arbiters of information and interpretation. It simply means that they arrive at college with well-established methods of sorting, doubting, or ignoring the same. That, by itself, is not troubling. Many professors encourage students to question authority, and would welcome more who challenged and debated ideas. But this new epistemology carries some heavy baggage — indeed, it is inseparably conjoined with personal economics. Short of fame or a lottery win, today's students recognize that a college degree is the minimum credential they will need to attain their desired standard of living (and hence "happiness"). So this new epistemology produces a rather odd kind of student — one who appears polite and dutiful but who cares little about the course work, the larger questions it raises, or the value of living an examined life. And it produces such students in overwhelming abundance.
  • we must respect students as thinkers, even though their thinking skills may be undeveloped and their knowledge base shallow. Moreover, our respect must be genuine. Students have keen hypocrisy sensors and do not like being patronized.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • transparent
  • It is not just residential-college students who live in a bubble — many faculty members do as well.
Sharon Elin

Creativity in schools: 'Schools have the technology but lack the will to use it' | Reso... - 4 views

  • The obsession over the last decade with narrow, academic targets and tightly-drawn lesson plans has driven out much of the spontaneity and fun of learning, says Dickinson. "We are squandering children's creativity and we are almost wasting their childhood with this obsession with skill-based, academic education."
  • The obsession over the last decade with narrow, academic targets and tightly-drawn lesson plans has driven out much of the spontaneity and fun of learning, says Dickinson. "We are squandering children's creativity and we are almost wasting their childhood with this obsession with skill-based, academic education."
Kerry J

Social Invention Gorup - 0 views

  •  
    Keith helps people in organizations innovate and manage complexity by working with groups to unleash creativity, discover opportunities and build on momentum. A founding partner of the Social Invention Group, his eclectic skills are grounded in business management, organization development, complexity science, strategy development, and graphic facilitation... all with an improvisational twist.
Julian Ridden

"eLearning for Innovation" Keynote - 0 views

  •  
    This is a keynote I gave at the Tasmania Skills Conference on eLearning for Innovation
anonymous

Visuarios: broadcast your skills - 0 views

  •  
    Share your talents
1 - 20 of 23 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page