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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Jorge Acosta

Jorge Acosta

Will Blackboard be disrupted? | Digitopoly - 1 views

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    "It was about 12 or 13 years ago, that we decided to design a class website template. It seemed that student materials were heading online and at Melbourne Business School we opted for a faculty-designed solution. For those days, it was pretty slick and it was the main template used for about a decade. A few years ago, wanting more features the School moved to Blackboard. And when I got to the University of Toronto there Blackboard was again. My kids' school uses Blackboard. It is everywhere and it is terrible. While it has all the features you could want and it has some integration with University systems, it is very cumbersome to use. So much so that I kept its use to a minimum for my course this semester and opted for my own WordPress hosted solution."
Jorge Acosta

e-Learning in Korea in 2011 and beyond | A World Bank Blog on ICT use in Education - 1 views

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    "Each year the World Bank helps sponsor an annual global symposium on ICT use in education for senior policymakers and practitioners in Seoul, together with the Korean Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) and the Korea Education Research & Information Service (KERIS). This is one important component of a strong multi-year partnership between the World Bank education sector and the Republic of Korea exploring the use of ICTs in the education sector around the world. This year's event, which focused on Benchmarking International Experiences and was about half the size of 2010's Building national ICT/education agencies symposium, brought officials from 23 countries to Korea to explore how technology is being used in schools around the world (previous blog post: Eleven Countries to Watch -- and Learn From), with a special emphasis on learning about and from the Korean experience."
Jorge Acosta

What Is the Future of Knowledge in the Internet Age?: Scientific American - 1 views

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    A conversation with David Weinberger about facts, fiction and forecasts
Jorge Acosta

» Key social learning resources: part 12 #sociallearning Learning in the Soci... - 0 views

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    Here's this week's round up of resources that look at social learning and the use of social media for working and learning:
Jorge Acosta

Twitterology - A New Science? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    DENIZENS of the Twitter-verse, please be advised: Whether you are a Libyan celebrating the demise of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, a New Zealand office worker sleepily starting your day or a California teenager trying out the latest slang, your words are being analyzed.
Jorge Acosta

Wiki:Welcome from the instructor | Social Media CoLab - 0 views

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    Welcome! This course is going to be fun and enriching for those who choose to get involved in doing classwork in new ways. We're going to experiment.  The success of our experiment will depend on our work together as a learning community - in class and online. (Please click and read each link on this page - and ask yourself if you are ready to continue at this level of commitment through the rest of the quarter). Each one of us will be required to work differently than we usually do. Most courses focus on the delivery by a teacher of a specific body of knowledge to students, who are held accountable as individuals for retaining and comprehending that knowledge. In this learning community, we're going to be inquiring and reflecting more than delivering and memorizing, and we're going to be thinking, discussing, learning as a group as well as learning individually -- we're going to be both cooperative (working together on projects) and collaborative (co-responsible for each other's learning). That part alone is going to require more work on your part than you might think.
Jorge Acosta

Oxford Internet Institute - Research - 0 views

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    The Oxford Internet Institute is a research department of the University of Oxford, focusing on the social implications of the Internet and other advanced ICTs. Our multidisciplinary research faculty include political scientists, sociologists, lawyers, and economists who are engaged in a variety of research projects covering the themes of: Everyday Life, Governance and Democracy, Network Economy, Science and Learning and Shaping the Internet. One of our key missions is to stimulate and inform debate about the Internet, and to shape policy and practice around its (re)invention and use.
Jorge Acosta

Visualizing Data at the Oxford Internet Institute - Mapping Flickr - 0 views

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    Images are an important form of knowledge that allow us to develop understandings about our world. Flickr is the world's most used and most popular public repository of photographs and currently hosts over five billion images. This map reveals the global geographic distribution of geotagged images on the platform, and thus reveals the density of visual representations and locally depicted knowledge of all places on our planet.
Jorge Acosta

How we used the internet to tell the story of the internet | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

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    Our interactive people's history of the internet brings together your stories, alongside our own research and video interviews with key figures
Jorge Acosta

Classes and academic research help launch companies - MIT News Office - 0 views

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    Over the years, MIT students have created an array of clubs, workshops and competitions to foster entrepreneurship and help those who aim to start businesses. Increasingly, though, entrepreneurship is not just an extracurricular activity but - in many cases - an integral part of students' academic work. In other cases, student research ends up becoming the core of a spinoff company.
Jorge Acosta

Good at Chess? A Hedge Fund May Want to Hire You - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Boaz Weinstein's opening move on Wall Street came as a result of chess.
Jorge Acosta

Outside the classroom, students create future businesses - MIT News Office - 0 views

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    At a recent meeting of the 23-year-old MIT Entrepreneurs Club, one recent graduate of the Sloan School of Management described his plans for a business - one based on his solution to a little-recognized problem that currently costs airlines $10 billion a year. Another alumnus, an engineer who recently retired after a career in the telecom business, talked about his patented approach to fighting wildfires in remote locations. A new MIT graduate student, who just earned his undergraduate degree from the Institute this spring, spoke of three different startup businesses he's currently cultivating in his spare time - one of which he co-founded during his freshman year at the Institute.
Jorge Acosta

About Exploratree & Enquiring Minds - Exploratree by FutureLab - 0 views

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    The Exploratree web resource has been developed by Futurelab and emerged out of our work on the Enquiring Minds project. It provides a series of ready-made interactive 'thinking guides' or 'frameworks' which can support students' projects and research. Thinking guides support the thinking or working through of an issue, topic or question and help to shape, define and focus an idea and also support the planning required to investigate it further. Exploratree guides can be used as a basis for whole class discussion, or emailed to individuals or groups to complete. They can also be used as a presentation tool to share your findings and thinking with others. As well as providing a set of ready to use thinking guides, which are completely customisable and shareable, Exploratree also enables teachers and students to create their own simply and easily.
Jorge Acosta

educational-origami - Bloom's Digital Taxonomy - 0 views

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    This is the introduction to Bloom's Digital Taxonomy. The different taxonomical levels can be viewed individually via the navigation bar or below this introduction as embedded pages.
Jorge Acosta

educational-origami - home - 0 views

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    Bloom's Digital Taxonomy - This is my attempt at updating Bloom's Revised Taxonomy to include emerging activities and be more inclusive of technology. EduTeka has created a Spanish translation of Bloom's Digital Taxonomy. The PDF version can be downloaded from the Bloom's Digital Taxonomy Page.
Jorge Acosta

Computadoras, ¿para qué? - 01.10.2011 - lanacion.com - 0 views

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    Frente a la fuerte apuesta de entregar una netbook por alumno del programa nacional Conectar Igualdad los especialistas plantean sus dudas sobre la preparación de los docentes para poder aprovecharlas en sus clases, y alertan sobre la necesidad de generar un cambio profundo en el modelo de enseñanza
Jorge Acosta

What Will School Look Like in 10 Years? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Computers, electronic whiteboards and other interactive technologies are fundamentally changing American education . That's the view of the experts whom The Times spoke with about what the classroom will look like ten years from now. Listen to excerpts from their predictions below, and share your own thoughts in the comments section. "
Jorge Acosta

Technology in Schools Faces Questions on Value - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "CHANDLER, Ariz. - Amy Furman, a seventh-grade English teacher here, roams among 31 students sitting at their desks or in clumps on the floor. They're studying Shakespeare's "As You Like It" - but not in any traditional way. "
Jorge Acosta

Eduteka - Taxonomía de Bloom para la Era Digital - 0 views

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    El Doctor Andrew Churches, es co director del área de Estudios de Informática del Kristin School de Auckland, Nueva Zelanda, donde ha trabajado durante muchos años. Declara abiertamente ser un entusiasta de las TIC y del poder que estas tienen para transformar la educación. Argumenta que educar a los estudiantes para el futuro es educarlos para el cambio, educarlos para hacer buenas preguntas y para pensar, para adaptar y modificar, para escoger y seleccionar. 
Jorge Acosta

Social Media's Slow Slog Into the Ivory Towers of Academia - Josh Sternberg - Technolog... - 0 views

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    "Underpinning a disdain for social media in higher education is the assumption that incoming students have an inherent aptitude for new technologies"
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