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UKED Magazine - June 2015 - 0 views

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    Read the open access magazine online. This month's issue has a 'Learning For All' theme, with articles about special education, inclusion, behaviour management, feedback techniques, and EdTech for your lessons.
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UKED Magazine April 2015 - 0 views

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    April's issue of UKED Magazine - Read online for free
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Thompson Announces Web Site Redesign - 0 views

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    We have listened to comments on the old website and hope that the new one corrects problems and oversights," said Thompson. "In this age of instant information, it is crucial to bring you the most up-to-date site that we can.  This new site contains an issues page and real-time multi-media access to things like Facebook and Twitter.
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Discussion: 2: Building a conceptual framework to represent teacher expertise (Andrew P... - 7 views

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    "This Commentary is thus based on the idea that concepts concerning curriculum, pedagogy and assessment can be organised through the 'work' which they do in enabling discussion and understanding of enduring classroom issues. Perhaps, we reasoned, making this logic explicit could enable progress towards a more robust and sustainable conceptual framework for the professional expertise of teaching. "
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Facebook Places: Another Privacy Concern - 7 views

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    Facebook Places - a location-based service introduced by Facebook last month has been marred by privacy issues.
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UNESCO-UNEVOC - 0 views

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    TVETipedia is an internet portal where users can - exchange information and share knowledge on Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) issues; - showcase good practice examples and lessons learned; - collaborate on TVET projects.
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Dr. Merrilea Mayo - 0 views

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    Merrilea Mayo, a materials scientist and serious games expert, brings a wide range of public policy, research, fiscal management, and academic experience to the Kauffman Foundation. Prior to joining the Foundation she was the director of the Government-University-Industry-Research Roundtable (GUIRR), National Academies in Washington, D.C. Merrilea led GUIRR in its efforts to define national strategic issues for action by federal science agency heads, industry CEOs and university presidents. During her career she has also served as the founding director of the Alliance for Science and Technology Research in America, and as the Congressional Science and Engineering Fellow for the Office of Senator Joseph Lieberman. Merrilea is a long-time member and past-president of the Materials Research Society and has led workshops and been an advisor for the serious games community. She received her undergraduate degree from Brown University and went on to earn both her Masters and Doctorate in materials science and engineering from Stanford University. She has been an assistant professor and associate professor with Pennsylvania State University. Her work has been published in numerous professional journals, books, and conference proceedings and has earned a U.S. patent and a variety of awards in the materials science field.
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Main Articles: 'New Schemas for Mapping Pedagogies and Technologies', Ariadne Issue 56 - 0 views

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    There is an inherent tension between the rhetoric of Web 2.0 and current educational practices. For example, today's digital environment is characterised by speed and immediacy; the ability to access a vast amount of information at the click of a mouse, coupled with multiple communication channels and social networks. This seems contradictory to traditional notions of education; the need to reflect, to build cumulatively on existing knowledge and develop individual understanding over time.
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SocialLearn: Bridging the Gap Between Web 2.0 and Higher Education at e-Literate - 0 views

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    Higher education faces a challenge. It may not now it yet, but it does. And the challenge is this - when learners have been accustomed to very facilitative, usable, personalisable and adaptive tools both for learning and socialising, why will they accept standardised, unintuitive, clumsy and out of date tools in formal education they are paying for? It won't be a dramatic revolution (students accept lower physical accommodation standards when they leave home for university after all), but instead there will be a quiet migration. The monolithic LMSs will be deserted, digital tumbleweed blowing down their forums. Students will abandon these in favour of their tools, the back channel will grow and it will be constituted from content and communication technologies that don't require a training course to understand and that come with a ready made community. This may seem like just a technological issue, but it runs deeper than this.
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CEUR-WS.org - CEUR Workshop Proceedings - 0 views

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    recognised online publication series ISSN 1613-0073 of more than 300 IT related workshop proceedings.\nSpecial issue for the iCamp organised Workshop on Mash-up personal learning environments within EC-TEL conference is planned for Fall 2008.
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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.
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Nelson (2008) "E-Books in Higher Education: Nearing the End of the Era of Hype?" - Educ... - 0 views

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    As colleague Rhonda Epper described, "There is also an excellent article in this month's issue of Educause Review on Ebooks in Higher Education. The author speculates more widespread adoption in the next several years, but he says there needs to be an "iPod equivalent" for the e-reader, which has not yet arrived. He also talks about the cultural shift that is happening from print to digital. "
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http://www.ncolr.org/jiol/issues/viewarticle.cfm?volID=2&IssueID=9&ArticleID=27 - 1 views

  • In support of research examining relationships between learner characteristics and the quality of online discussions, this paper surveys different methods for evaluating discussions. The paper will present coding methods used in our own research as well as methods used by others interested in quality online discussions. Key topics include what constitutes quality in online discussions and how that quality can be measured?
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    Defining and measuring quality in online discussions.
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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:
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Knowledge-at-work: Boundary objects and KM - 5 views

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    " Boundary object (BO), originally introduced by Starr (1989), is a concept to refer to objects that serve an interface between different communities of practice. Boundary objects are an entity shared by several different communities but viewed or used differently by each of them. As Star points out, boundary objects in an organization work because they necessarily contain sufficient detail to be understandable by both parties, however, neither party is required to understand the full context of use by the other - boundary objects serve as point of mediation and negotiation around intent. Boundary objects are flexible enough to adapt to local needs and have different distinct identities in different communities, but at the same time robust enough to maintain a common identity across the boundaries to be a place for shared work. Boundary objects are not necessarily physical artifacts such as a map between two people: they can be a set of information, conversations, interests, rules, plans, contracts, or even persons. It is around BOs that Communities of Practice (CoPs) often gather. BOs are 'used' by members of different communities in very different ways, although the representation is shared. BOs are an important class of knowledge artifacts. They are center stage in the dynamics of knowledge exchange. BOs are also known as CISs (common information spaces). Examples: Reports are a classic example of traces as boundary objects that the professionals and other members share. Faxed documents and email massages are also the boundary object among distributed members. Information spaces, where particpants gather to exchange information, co-ordinate activites and create knowledge are another example of BOs A library catalog, an order entry process, travel assistance request form, an organizational knowledge map, i.e. one of the products from your knowledge mapping project! Mapping BOs: Boundary objects are a very useful way to structure and

Help Gurus Awesome Microsoft Help and Support - 2 views

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