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http://med.ubc.ca/files/2012/03/Interactive-Lecturing-Strategies.pdf - 0 views

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    This article explores a few good ways to make your lectures more interactive.
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Assessment and Rubrics - 0 views

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    "A collection of rubrics for assessing portfolios, cooperative learning, research process/ report, PowerPoint, oral presentation, web page, blog, wiki, and other social media projects."
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How to Overcome What Scares Us About Our Online Identities - The Chronicle of Higher Ed... - 0 views

  • Surprisingly, it turns out that sharing work online can be a proactive way to prevent it from being stolen. By publicizing what you are engaged in, you stake a claim on your scholarship. If someone tried to reproduce your work, having a record of it online clearly establishes that it belongs to you by right and by copyright.
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    This is one of the main reasons that I have a blog, which includes my reflections, information about what I've been working on, my CV, etc.
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Open Textbooks Toolkit | BCcampus OpenEd Resources - 0 views

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    "The BCcampus Open Textbook Toolkit is your starting point on how to change education with just one textbook. It provides a list of our open textbooks, information and guidelines for adopting and assigning an open textbook."
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Find Open Textbooks | BCcampus OpenEd Resources - 1 views

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    Open textbooks listed by BCcampus OpenED from a variety of disciplines.
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Missouri State U Improves Learning Outcomes with Flipped Classroom -- Campus Technology - 1 views

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    "Missouri State University (MSU) has implemented a flipped classroom model for its Introductory Psychology course, resulting in dramatic improvements in student learning outcomes and course completion rates."
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How To Add Evernote Web Clipper To Safari On iOS - Macdaily - 0 views

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    Handy tip for clipping to Evernote from an iPad.
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Rethinking Final Year Projects and Dissertations: Creative Honours and Capstone Projects. - 0 views

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    "Our aim is to help transform institutional practices and assessment strategies through creative solutions for developing alternative and additional honours and capstone projects to meet the needs of students from different backgrounds, different subjects and different kinds of institution. "
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Introduction to Learning Technologies | An Open Course From the Gwenna Moss Centre for ... - 1 views

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    Open online course from the GMCTE aimed at novices interested in learning technologies.
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Open Learning - OpenLearn - Open University - 0 views

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    The home of free learning from The Open University Creative Commons licensed materials that can be used freely.
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My Open Textbook: Pedagogy and Practice - actualham - 0 views

  • People often ask me how students can create textbooks when they are only just beginning to learn about the topics that the textbooks cover.  My answer to this is that unlike many other scholarly materials, textbooks are primarily designed to be accessible to students– to new scholars in a particular academic area or sub-specialty.  Students are the perfect people to help create textbooks, since they are the most keenly tuned in to what other students will need in order to engage with the material in meaningful ways.  By taking the foundational principles of a field– most of which are not “owned” by any prior textbook publisher– and refiguring them through their own lens, student textbook creators can easily tap their market.  They can access and learn about these principles in multiple ways (conventional or open textbooks, faculty lecture and guidance, reading current work in the field, conversations with related networks, videos and webinars, etc.), and they are quite capable, in my opinion, of designing engaging ways to reframe those principles in ways that will be more helpful to students than anything that has come before.
  • My answer to this is that unlike many other scholarly materials, textbooks are primarily designed to be accessible to students– to new scholars in a particular academic area or sub-specialty.  Students are the perfect people to help create textbooks, since they are the most keenly tuned in to what other students will need in order to engage with the material in meaningful ways.  By taking the foundational principles of a field– most of which are not “owned” by any prior textbook publisher– and refiguring them through their own lens, student textbook creators can easily tap their market.  They can access and learn about these principles in multiple ways (conventional or open textbooks, faculty lecture and guidance, reading current work in the field, conversations with related networks, videos and webinars, etc.), and they are quite capable, in my opinion, of designing engaging ways to reframe those principles in ways that will be more helpful to students than anything that has come before.
  • As students and alums worked with me over the summer to create that first skeletonic text, it was clear something amazing was happening.  The students immediately seemed invested in the project– almost like they were, well, writing a book with me. To me, the work seemed sort of second nature, since I often write for publication. But for my students, the idea that they were creating something that would be read/used by a different cohort of students a few months later was a truly novel and thrilling concept. They repeatedly volunteered to work for free (I resisted this), and they still sometimes inquire about whether there are roles they can play now that the book is at its next stage of development. When the students in the class started working with and contributing to the book, they often made comments about liking our textbook! But by getting to contribute to the book, make curatorial decisions about the kinds of texts to include, and frame the work in their own words, they seemed more connected to the textbook itself, more willing to engage with it. Here’s a short video featuring several of my students, which explores their experience of using OER and engaging in open pedagogy-based learning.
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Evaluating digital services: a visitors and residents approach | Jisc - 0 views

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    "This guide contains advice on evaluating the services you offer to your users. The focus is primarily on digital/online services but set within the broader context of more traditional services, exploring the relationship between the two."
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OpenStax | OER Commons - 0 views

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    OpenStax has launched their "working groups" for participants to collaborate on and share resources related to OpenStax textbooks. It's free to take part and you may find something useful (even if it's a connection with a potential collaborator). There are groups for all of the OpenStax textbooks including the two Biology books, Principles of Economics, Introduction to Sociology, two Chemistry books, Anatomy and Physiology, Psychology, and several other subjects.
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Giving Faculty the Freedom to Fail | Vitae - 0 views

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    There are many gems in this brief piece, including the benefits of giving faculty the chance to fail, as well as a bit of an introduction to the tools Hypothes.is and Scalar.
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Converting Student's History Essays into Wikipedia Articles - John Stewart - 0 views

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    "Moving from a disposable research essay to a Wikipedia essay carries several benefits: Students gain a sense of confidence in their knowledge by contributing to a source that they know and use. Students trade the audience of one instructor for a broad readership (one of the students this semester revised an article on Japan's military Unit 731 that got more than 70,000 views in just December) Students improve their digital literacy through a better understanding of Wikis a medium. Students learn about source authority, especially the increasingly common semi-anonymous and anonymous web sources which so often fill their bibliographies. Instructors trade a stack of homogenous research papers for a variety of formatted essays. Essays are subject to open-review on the web."
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red - Wikipedia - 0 views

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    Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR), a WikiProject whose objective is to turn "redlinks" into blue ones within the project scope. The project scope includes women's biographies (real women, fictional women), women's works (broadly construed, such as their paintings, books, schools, conferences), and women's issues (such as health, activism, and so on). In November 2014, just over 15% of the English Wikipedia's biographies were about women. Since then, we have brought the figure up to 16.78%, as of 1 January 2017. But that means, according to WHGI, only 240,445 of our 1,432,907 biographies are about women. Not impressed? "Content gender gap" is a form of systemic bias, and WiR addresses it in a positive way.
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Open Educational Resource 2017 Textbook List - 0 views

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    Extensive list of OER via Sacred Heart University.
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Guidebook to Research on Open Educational Resources Adoption - 0 views

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    Produced by the Open Education Group for the Open Textbook Network. Good guide for those interested in getting started on research related to OER.
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Open Educational Resources Used in Various Colleges - 0 views

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    "These lists and links are harvested from the Community College Consortium for Open Educational Resources list serve (http://cccoer.org ) conversations and a few other sources.  This is a work in progress and will grow as more suggestions come in."
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Welcome to the Digital Polarization Initiative [The Digital Polarization Initiative] - 0 views

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    "The Digital Polarization Initiative is an attempt to build student web literacy by having students participating in a broad, cross-institutional projects around issues of digital polarization. The primary purpose of this wiki is to provide a place for students to fact-check, annotate, and provide context to the different news stories that show up in their Twitter and Facebook feeds. It's like a student-driven Snopes, but with a broader focus: we don't aim to just investigate myths, but to provide context and sanity to all the news - from the article about voter fraud to the health piece on a new cancer treatment."
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