Skip to main content

Home/ EET Learns/ Group items tagged 2010

Rss Feed Group items tagged

anonymous

Adopting Mobile: Reasons for Urgency | Academic Impressions - 0 views

  •  
    "Mobile Technologies in the Eyes of Students and Alumni In June 2010, Ball State University released a study showing that of college students owning phones, 49% owned smartphones. An ECAR report released a few weeks ago documented that this number has since risen to 62% -- showing a rapid rise in adoption. A study by the Pearson Foundation found that a quarter of college students owned a tablet as of January 2012, a population that has been growing at 400% yearly."
anonymous

Babson College Finds Video Success on the Small Screen -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  •  
    "Around fall 2010, the college began looking for a tool that could be distributed to faculty and students for user-generated content. Said Palson, criteria for evaluation focused on two areas: "It had to be accessible via mobile. And it had to be easy to use." Ease of use included the ability for a new user to "jump into it, create something, and it would be ready to go." The instructional technology staff began a pilot using Brainshark and, according to Palson, immediately saw that it was different from what had been used in the past."
  •  
    Brainshark - another tool for generating online presentations
anonymous

mobile-learning | MindShift - 2 views

  •  
    "Despite their ubiquity among students, mobile phones are still viewed as contraband in most classrooms. Students are told to turn their phones off, leave them in their lockers, or leave them at home. This response to what is arguably the most ubiquitous 1-to-1 computing device available in our schools today undoubtedly led many students to list bans on mobile phones as one of the biggest obstacles to technology use in the recent Speak Up 2010 report."
anonymous

EdNET Insight | Textbook Rental: Web-Rejuvenation Rocks Post-Secondary Market - 0 views

  •  
    "The Rental Phenomenon In the past two years, the post-secondary textbook rental market has exploded. Driven by the outcry over book prices, federal legislation, readily available pricing information on the Internet, and sophisticated web-based rental management platforms, old and new competitors are disrupting the $10 billion college textbook business. Book rental isn't really a new phenomenon-a few college stores have been renting books since the Civil War. The National Association of College Stores (NACS) proclaimed fall 2010 as the "Year of the Rental." Players include long-timers like Follett and Budgetext, institutional stores and fast-growing start-ups. BookRenter, started in 2008, netted $40 million from investors in a funding round this past February. Chegg, started in 2007, has raised $200+ million in venture capital and attracted senior management from Yahoo and Netflix. The same drivers are growing trade in used books, eBooks, and online instructional content. Rental is also driving new business models for sourcing and distributing educational materials that may carry the industry forward into digital. Having book inventory isn't necessarily required-at least one high-flying firm, BookRenter, exists mainly as an online marketplace. Read on to see how this change in distribution is impacting the higher education market. Next month we'll look at what all this means for K-12."
anonymous

Almanac 2011: Technology - Almanac of Higher Education 2011 - The Chronicle of Higher E... - 1 views

  •  
    "College technology went on the move in the 2010-11 academic year, venturing into mobile platforms like smartphones and tablets such as the iPad. The devices were used within classes and without for teaching, reading texts, student affairs, contacting alumni, and recruiting prospective students. But the movement-driven by the recognition that people were spending more time on mobile devices-went in fits and starts. Higher education, never a rapid adapter, struggled to figure out how best to make use of mobile devices and new capabilities."
anonymous

7 Essential Skills You Didn't Learn in College | Magazine - 3 views

shared by anonymous on 11 Jan 12 - No Cached
  •  
    This is very interesting - describes courses we should take to survive in the world today. Includes vidoes and visuals . . .
Connie Gross

Enemy Lurks in Briefings on Afghan War - PowerPoint - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Some problems in the world are not bullet-izable." "
Connie Gross

Christmas Songs Played Entirely With iPhones And iPads [VIDEO] - 0 views

  •  
    A little late - but still fun!
anonymous

Speak Up National Findings 2010 - 1 views

  •  
    "The New 3 E's of Education: Enabled, Engaged and Empowered How Today's Students are Leveraging Emerging Technologies for Learning"
anonymous

Presentation Methods | SlideRocket Online Presentation Software - 2 views

  •  
    "Many presenters, particularly novices, struggle to find a presentation style that works best for them. Luckily, throughout the years, after much trial and error, many successful techniques and methodologies for presentation creation and delivery have emerged, giving speakers a variety of existing approaches to "borrow" from. From top left: Lawrence Lessig, Masayoshi Takahashi, Seth Godin, Mino Monta Here, we'll describe and evaluate some of the most famous - and popular - presentation methods."
1 - 20 of 21 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page