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lu go

Agile learning, Agile Software development and the Mobile Internet | ToolsAndTaxonomy.com - 0 views

  • I attempt to map the agile development manifesto themes onto a agile learning theme
  • In software development, the ‘agile’ movement was as a reaction against large scale development projects governed by a monolithic organisational standard perceived to be overly bureaucratic, costly and slow
  • Learner satisfaction by rapid attainment of learning concepts that can be applied
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • The ability to change particular learning goals as understanding or issues arise
  • Close relationship between educators and learners (often with blurred roles)
  • mixing synchronous and asynchronous communication as a key feature, and augmented via technology
  • There has to be shared vision and common goal for the learning activity
  • Self organising teams of 5-9 to facilitate development
  • No one method or way of being an agile learner or supporting Agile Learning, but they require a goal and some organisation
  • the internet, promotes self-directed learning — be it formal, informal or recreational.
  • recipes, plus a learning goal, can form the basis of significant learning and development programmes.
  • core agile skills
  • Having clear criteria that define the end of a learning iteration can only be a good thing
Jennifer Garcia

5 Innovative Classroom Management Tools for Teachers - 32 views

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    innovative Classroom management tools for teachers
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    Some cool classroom management tools for teachers
cristina costa

The Job of Personal Learning | injenuity - 2 views

  • challenges faced by people joining digital personal learning spaces.
  • the introduction of the PLN must take into account individual and self.
  •  To make the experience valuable, participants need technical skills, social maturity, emotional stability, self-control, professionalism, empathy, critical thinking ability, and common sense.
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  • conceptual understanding of social media
  • ability to select appropriate tools for individual situations
  • Environment
  • consider
  • hysical spaces in which the work will occur, technical specifications, administrative support, and the design of the tools
  • It is worth the battle to convince others these barriers need to be removed
  • Technical Skills
  • We need to be aware of these people in our audience when presenting these tools, so we can offer solutions and help them get up to speed
  • Social Maturity
  • Emotional Stability and Self Control
  • everyone already has a personal learning network
  • It is usually comprised of people in their face to face world, along with some they connect with digitally
  • not everyone is able to recognize when they are learning
  • encouraging the individual to recognize their own learning and identify their existing network connections
  • My final thought is that we cannot expect others to be able to make the types of connections we made in the field of educational technology
  • I am searching for solutions to make this process more transferrable across disciplines and roles.
Gianto Widianto

Education Week: Backers of '21st-Century Skills' Take Flak - 0 views

  • Broadly speaking, it refers to a push for schools to teach ­­­critical-thinking, analytical, and technology skills, in addition to the “soft skills” of creativity, collaboration, and communication that some experts argue will be in high demand as the world increasingly shifts to a global, entrepreneurial, and service-based workplace.
cristina costa

The Educational Technology Site: ICT in Education: --> As if I didn't have enough to do, now I may have to learn Portuguese - 0 views

  • Posting everyday and inviting people personally to answer to some challenges, topics..."
    • cristina costa
       
      Mentoring, guiding by example
Nergiz Kern

Online Copyright Activity - 0 views

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    Aim The aim of the activity is to inform and educate practitioners in the FE and HE sectors in the UK some of the key issues about using copyrighted material in a digital online environment and the role of JISC Collections (and the JISC Model licence) in the provision of solutions to these issues. Audience The activity is targeted at teachers and lecturers in FE and HE. It will also be useful for curriculum managers, learning technologists, learning resources staff and any staff who deal with digital resources.
Teachers Without Borders

Parents to be shown how to protect children online | Technology | The Guardian - 0 views

  • Her report, treading a delicate line between tighter regulation and better coordinated parental education, will argue that industry and government must do more to provide information to parents on how to set timers on computers, video games and console games. She will propose:
  • She will also concede that academic research on the impact of the net on children and their lifestyles is inadequate.
  • · New codes of practice to regulate social networking sites, such as Bebo and Facebook, including clear standards on privacy and harmful content;· A gold standard for the use of console games, including clear set-up guidance for parents on issues such as pin codes and locks;· Better information for parents on how to block children accessing some websites. Byron has been struck that the technology exists to impose timers and filters, but there has been little take-up, knowledge or development of the technology;
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  • Her research has shown that parents are most worried by predators and children are most concerned by cyberbullying.
James OReilly

ThinkBalm publishes business value study « ThinkBalm: Immersive Internet insights & expertise - 0 views

  • Nearly 30% of survey respondents (19 of 66) said their organization recouped their investment in immersive technologies in less than nine months, once their project(s) launched.
  • The top motivations for investment in immersive technology in 2008 /1Q 2009 were enabling people in disparate locations to spend time together, increased innovation, and cost savings or avoidance.
  • Early implementers are choosing the simplest use cases first. The most common were learning and training (80%, or 53 of 66 respondents focused on this use case) and meetings (76%, or 50 of 66 respondents). Some intend to take on more complex use cases in 2010 or 2011.
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  • Immersive technology won out over a variety of alternatives primarily due to low cost and the increased engagement it delivers. The leading alternatives were Web conferencing and in-person meetings, followed by phone calls.
  • Work-related use of the Immersive Internet is in the early adopter phase. Before it can pass into the early majority phase, practitioners and the technology vendors who serve them must “cross the chasm.” The most common barriers to adoption are target users having inadequate hardware, corporate security restrictions, and getting users interested in the technology.
cristina costa

eLearn: Opinions - 0 views

  • command would require educational agents agree that learning should be open to all, allowing everyone with some interest in a subject to be able to learn, discuss, and use it.
  • chmod 777 education advocates embrace the full openness of educational tools and contexts, allowing students, teachers, and the larger learning community to enroll in collective knowledge construction activities, without restrictions.
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    chmod 777 education advocates embrace the full openness of educational tools and contexts, allowing students, teachers, and the larger learning community to enroll in collective knowledge construction activities, without restrictions.
Mike Fandey

Podcasts « Social Enterprise Blog - 0 views

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    Collection of podcasts focused on social media for learning and knowledge management.
George Roberts

Journals | ITLS @ USU - 0 views

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    OPML file with a list of RSS feeds for various research journals related to education, psychology, and technology and... Making the full text of educational research articles available only to those who pay a subscription is a controversial issue. Researchers in the medical and science communities are taking a lead on this issue. Here are some links to more readings:
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    OPML file with a list of RSS feeds for various research journals related to education, psychology, and technology:
Joachim Niemeier

The state of social learning and some thoughts for the future of L&D in 2010 - 11 views

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    Five different categories of social learning:\n 1. Formal Structured Learning\n 2. Personal Directed Learning\n 3. Group Directed Learning\n 4. Intra-Organisational Learning\n 5. Accidental & Serendipitous Learning\n
Lisa M Lane

Open for Learning: The CMS and the Open Learning Network | in education - 2 views

  • technology has failed to transform learning
    • Lisa M Lane
       
      Technology does not transform learning -- people developing and using technology to transform learning does that. Does one blame the technology, its design, or the uses to which it's been put?
  • these disruptions are likely to come from educational technologists and leaders exploring new tools and new approaches to learning.
    • Lisa M Lane
       
      or, what would be even better from a pedagogical perspective, change could come from innovative faculty, as they use new tools to achieve their teaching goals
  • should also be taken as critiques of the predominant pedagogical model in higher education
    • Lisa M Lane
       
      It is, I think, primarily a critique of the pedagogical model.
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  • Because there is some confidential and proprietary data in the CMS, we have traditionally locked all course data behind a login screen, viewable only by an instructor and the officially enrolled members of his or her class
    • Lisa M Lane
       
      An excellent point! This can be solved with selective use of CMS elements, and entering as little as possible into the LMS. Linking out is significant as a practice and a philosophy. I try to teach faculty to do that regardless of which CMS they are using.
  • the vast majority of instructors who adopted the CMS largely ignored Bloom's challenge to make an "educational contribution of the greatest magnitude," instead focusing on increasing the administrative efficiency of their jobs
  • In practice, the vast majority of instructors who adopted the CMS largely ignored Bloom's challenge to make an "educational contribution of the greatest magnitude," instead focusing on increasing the administrative efficiency of their jobs.
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    commented and annotated by several people, including me -- Jared Stein's comments particularly helpful
cristina costa

Brown - 17 views

  • We need to see the way documents have served not simply to write, but also to underwrite social interactions; not simply to communicate, but also to coordinate social practices
  • new forms of document allowed new forms of community
  • These groups can look surprisingly like modern equivalents of the scholarly communities that formed throughout the world in the Renaissance
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  • The role of documents in linking people
  • he importance of documents to the formation of communities.
  • document forms both old (like the newspaper) and relatively new (like the television program) have underwritten a sense of community among a disparate and dispersed group of people
  • Marginal notes, footnotes, and conventional commentaries are merely the clearest examples of the ways that writing continually provokes more writing and that texts provide context for each other
  • Indeed, writing on writing is both literally and metaphorically an important part of the way meaning is negotiated.
  • Annotation is a rich cultural practice which helps, if only by the density of comment attached,
  • he appearance of entire conventional books at Web sites now supports intertextual research and practices.
  • Almost every day a new site appears with searchable and downloadable texts. Some allow commentary, too.
  • More generally, creative use of new documents no longer involves direct challenges to old ones
  • Rather, these new forms appear to reinvigorate the old, extending their useful social life not ending it.
  • primary characteristic of documents is their mobility
  • Documents quickly pass beyond the reach and protection of their maker and have to fend for themselves.
Dianne Rees

ZaidLearn: Buzzing with Social Curation Tools! - 12 views

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    Social curation tools (includes some bookmarking tools)
Dennis OConnor

ALA | Interview with Keith Curry Lance - 0 views

  • The basic question tackled in school library impact research to date have been if school libraries or librarians make a difference? And, if so, how much and how? At least in recent years, more attention has gone to measuring the impact of school libraries than to explaining how that impact is achieved; but, the focus is beginning to move from the former to the latter. Four studies, or sets of studies, illustrate the formative history of this line of research.
  • The findings documented, and elaborated upon, the SchoolMatch claim that [the level of] school library expenditures was a key predictor of academic achievement, as measured by standardized tests, specifically in Colorado, scores on the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (ITBS).
  • other key library predictors, including the amount and level of library staffing, collection size, and the amount of time the school librarian spends playing an instructional role.
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  • by 2005, the Colorado study model had been replicated and elaborated upon to a greater or lesser extent in Colorado and more than a dozen other states by five different researchers or research teams. Collectively, they have studied the impact of school libraries in approximately 8,700 schools with enrollments totaling more than 2.6 million students.
  • using this research to advocate for school library programs has affected the relationships of school librarians with both principals and teachers. Four out of five respondents (81 percent) reported that they shared the research with their principals. (Between one-third and half also reported sharing this research with their superintendents, other administrators, technology staff, and/or parents.) Almost two out of three respondents (66 percent) reported sharing the research with teachers. As a result, approximately two-thirds of respondents report that sharing the research improved their relationships with their principals (69 percent) or teachers (66 percent).
  • Krashen suggests quite the reverse. Reading and library use are not direct consequences of students being from more prosperous homes, but rather from the fact that more prosperous homes tend to offer more books and other reading materials, and, thereby, to encourage reading and library use. Thus, he hypothesizes, libraries—both public and school—have an important role to play in equalizing access to books and other reading materials for disadvantaged students.
  • Overall, students and teachers confirmed that the school libraries studied helped students by making them more information- and computer-literate generally, but especially in their school work, and by encouraging them to read for pleasure and information—and, in the latter case, to read critically—beyond what they are required to do for school.
  • their core results were remarkably consistent. Across states and grade levels, test scores correlated positively and statistically significantly with staff and collection size; library staff activities related to learning and teaching, information access and delivery, and program administration; and the availability of networked computers, both in the library and elsewhere in the school, that provide access to library catalogs, licensed databases, and the World Wide Web. The cause-and-effect claim associated with these correlations was strengthened by the reliability of the relationships between key library variables (i.e., staffing levels, collection size, spending) and test scores when other school and community conditions were taken into account.
  • A series of studies that have had a great deal of influence on the research and decision-making discussions concerning school library media programs have grown from the work of a team in Colorado—Keith Curry Lance, Marcia J. Rodney, and Christine Hamilton-Pennell (2000).
  • Recent school library impact studies have also identified, and generated some evidence about, potential "interventions" that could be studied. The questions might at first appear rather familiar: How much, and how, are achievement and learning improved when . . . librarians collaborate more fully with other educators? libraries are more flexibly scheduled? administrators choose to support stronger library programs (in a specific way)? library spending (for something specific) increases?
  • high priority should be given to reaching teachers, administrators, and public officials as well as school librarians and school library advocates.
  • Perhaps the most strategic option, albeit a long-term one, is to infiltrate schools and colleges of education. Most school administrators and teachers never had to take a course, or even part of a course, that introduced them to what constitutes a high-quality school library program.
  • Three factors are working against successful advocacy for school libraries: (1) the age demographic of librarians, (2) the lack of institutionalization of librarianship in K–12 schools, and (3) the lack of support from educators due to their lack of education or training about libraries and good experiences with libraries and librarians.
  • These vacant positions are highly vulnerable to being downgraded or eliminated in these times of tight budgets, not merely because there is less money to go around, but because superintendents, principals, teachers, and other education decision-makers do not understand the role a school librarian can and should play.
  • If we want the school library to be regarded as a central player in fostering academic success, we must do whatever we can to ensure that school library research is not marginalized by other interests.    
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    A great overview of Lance's research into the effectiveness of libraries.  He answers the question: Do school libraries or librarians make a difference?  His answer (A HUGE YES!) is back by 14 years of remarkable research.  The point is proved.  But this information remains unknown to many principals and superintendents.  Anyone interested in 21st century teaching and learning will find this interview fascinating.
Dennis OConnor

E-Learning Graduate Certificate Program: Problem solving in an online constructivist classroom. - 0 views

  • If you come across a question you can't answer, be honest. Don't bluff or portray yourself as an expert when you aren't. Instead model the collaborative skills you've developed and work together with the student to solve problems.
  • By sharing power you enhance the learning community. 
  • 1. Wait time.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Here are some problem solving tips.
  • 2. Admit when you're uncertain.
  • 3. Practicum Interns should consult with your cooperating instructor on anything that might get sticky.
  • In an internship,  go to your cooperating cooperating instructor first.  
  • When you're teaching online for a company or university use the chain of command.
  • 4. Use your search skills.
  • Problem solving is an ongoing process. 
  • See our NEW Checklist for Online Instructors for a comprehensive guide to best practices in e-learning! 
Denis S

18 and Under - Texting, Surfing, Studying? - NYTimes.com - 5 views

  • But if you ask the experts, they are pretty unanimous that we don’t know much.
  • So are teenagers any better at oscillating?
  • “If they’re doing well, permitting them to have some choice permits them to find their own style.”
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    "But if you ask the experts, they are pretty unanimous that we don't know much. "
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