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Blair Peterson

Rethinking Success: From the Liberal Arts to Careers in the 21st Century | Rethinking S... - 0 views

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    Universities are re-thinking their role and questioning a liberal arts education. 
Shabbi Luthra

WGU Online University | Degree Programs, Accredited Bachelor's and Master's - 0 views

shared by Shabbi Luthra on 23 Feb 11 - Cached
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    Here is the university that does not offer courses, but rather assessments to test student knowledge.
Blair Peterson

Revolution Hits the Universities - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Thomas Friedman's op-Ed on the MOOC trend in higher ed
Shabbi Luthra

University of the People - The world's first tuition-free online university - 0 views

shared by Shabbi Luthra on 23 Feb 11 - Cached
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    using all open courses. People get together in groups to study, then pay only for the exam. Payment is on a sliding scale based on your country. For example, if you live in Bangladesh, you might pay very little compared to someone from a more developed country.
Blair Peterson

UNSW Library Throwing Away 'Extremely Good Books' - 0 views

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    The transformation of the University of New South Wales library.
Blair Peterson

Lafayette conference focuses on shifting conversation about liberal arts' value | Insid... - 0 views

  • Rosenberg said colleges probably have to do a better job of connecting what students are learning in the classroom to what’s going on in the world around them, to further the argument that liberal arts colleges provide a social good.
  • And they acknowledged that liberal arts colleges, which bill themselves as being the best form of undergraduate education, should constantly be striving to be on the cutting edge of good instruction.
    • Blair Peterson
       
      Interesting comment. Wonder how this will be used 10 years from now.
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  • But liberal arts colleges are reluctant to expand in size out of fear of diminishing the quality of their experience. Their small-class and residential-campus models are expensive to provide, as are the financial aid programs they deploy to ensure diverse student bodies. Administrators fear breaking down the four-year, full-time model, which they believe is crucial to developing well-rounded students. And the liberal arts curriculum isn’t necessarily tied to preparing students for a specific career, and certainly not a single job
  • Despite significant looming challenges related to affordability, access, public skepticism about value, changing student demographics, and the influence of technology on students and education -- which all the attendees readily acknowledged -- most of the presidents of the liberal arts colleges here this week aren’t planning on substantively changing to how their institutions operate or their economic models.
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    Interesting comments from liberal arts colleges. Some think that the liberal arts colleges are not preparing kids for the future. I had no idea that they only enroll 5% of all students. Many are small elite universities. 
smenegh Meneghini

Creating Active Minds in our Science and Mathematics Students - 2 views

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    Conference article from the University of Sydney. It discusses how university students rote learn facts and how important it is for them to actually manipulate concepts, so the use of what they call "slowmation" (slow animation) provides that manipulation factor.
Blair Peterson

3D GameLab Guildsite - Let the journey begin! - 0 views

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    Work from Boise State University.
Blair Peterson

Education Week: Framework Crafted for Student Use of Mobile Devices - 0 views

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    Resources for developing policies for mobile devices. Information comes from the Center for Education Policy and Law at the University of San Diego.
Blair Peterson

Building a New Culture of Teaching and Learning - 0 views

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    Lecture from Dr. Tae, a professor at Northwestern University.
Blair Peterson

Avoid Plagiarism by Paraphrasing Correctly - 1 views

  • he two most important points to consider when paraphrasing are: 1) you must cite the source of the paraphrased text both in the body of your article, and in the reference list, and 2) you must express the original concepts using different words.
  • f you’re still not sure what constitutes plagiarism, see the comparisons put together by the School of Education at Indiana University, Bloomington.
  • The University of Wisconsin also offers practical tips and exercises to help you paraphrase, including, “Look away from the source; then write,” and “While looking at the source, first change the structure, then the words.”
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  • Carol Rohrbach and Joyce Valenza of the School District of Springfield Township have put together a bulleted list to help you understand when it’s preferable to paraphrase, summarize and quote.
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    Specifics on how to paraphrase ideas.
Blair Peterson

Embedded Librarians: Three Models - ACRL 2011 - 1 views

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    Interesting concept of Embedded Librarians for universities. Slide show presentation.
Blair Peterson

big-summit-right-to-learn-whitepaper.pdf - Powered by Google Docs - 0 views

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    Whte paper on learning by Bruce Dixon and Susan Einhorn from AALF. Looks like a good read. Notice that Eduardo Chaves - Professor of Philosophy and Education, Salesian University of São Paulo, was on the committee.
Blair Peterson

A Bill of Rights and Principles for Learning in the Digital Age | Digital Pedagogy | HY... - 0 views

  • Courses should encourage open participation and meaningful engagement with real audiences where possible, including peers and the broader public.
  • Students have the right to understand the intended outcomes--educational, vocational, even philosophical--of an online program or initiative.
  • n an online environment, teachers no longer need to be sole authority figures but instead should share responsibility with learners at almost every turn.
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  • Online learning should originate from everywhere on the globe, not just from the U.S. and other technologically advantaged countries.
  • The best online learning programs will not simply mirror existing forms of university teaching but offer students a range of flexible learning opportunities that take advantage of new digital tools and pedagogies to widen these traditional horizons, thereby better addressing 21st-century learner interests, styles and lifelong learning needs.
  • This can happen by building in apprenticeships, internships and real-world applications of online problem sets. Problem sets might be rooted in real-world dilemmas or comparative historical and cultural perspectives. (Examples might include: “Organizing Disaster Response and Relief for Hurricane Sandy” or “Women’s Rights, Rape, and Culture” or “Designing and Implementing Gun Control: A Global Perspective.”)
  • The artificial divisions of work, play and education cease to be relevant in the 21st century.
  • Both technical and pedagogical innovation should be hallmarks of the best learning environments. A wide variety of pedagogical approaches, learning tools, methods and practices should support students' diverse learning modes.
  • Experimentation should be an acknowledged affordance and benefit of online learning. Students should be able to try a course and drop it without incurring derogatory labels such as failure (for either the student or the institution offering the course).
  • Open online education should inspire the unexpected, experimentation, and questioning--in other words, encourage play. Play allows us to make new things familiar, to perfect new skills, to experiment with moves and crucially to embrace change--a key disposition for succeeding in the 21st century. We must cultivate the imagination and the dispositions of questing, tinkering and connecting. We must remember that the best learning, above all, imparts the gift of curiosity, the wonder of accomplishment, and the passion to know and learn even more.
Blair Peterson

Innovation pessimism: Has the ideas machine broken down? | The Economist - 0 views

  • There will be more innovation—but it will not change the way the world works in the way electricity, internal-combustion engines, plumbing, petrochemicals and the telephone have. Mr Cowen is more willing to imagine big technological gains ahead, but he thinks there are no more low-hanging fruit. Turning terabytes of genomic knowledge into medical benefit is a lot harder than discovering and mass producing antibiotics.
  • But Pierre Azoulay of MIT and Benjamin Jones of Northwestern University find that, though there are more people in research, they are doing less good. T
  • One factor in this may be the “burden of knowledge”: as ideas accumulate it takes ever longer for new thinkers to catch up with the frontier of their scientific or technical speciality. Mr Jones says that, from 1985 to 1997 alone, the typical “age at first innovation” rose by about one year.
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  • We wanted flying cars, instead we got 140 characters.” A world where all can use Twitter but hardly any can commute by air is less impressive than the futures dreamed of in the past.
  • e notes that, for all its inhabitants’ Googling and Skypeing, America’s productivity performance since 2004 has been worse than that of the doldrums from the early 1970s to the early 1990s.
  • esearch by Susanto Basu of Boston College and John Fernald of the San Francisco Federal Reserve suggests that the lag between investments in information-and-communication technologies and improvements in productivity is between five and 15 years. The drop in productivity in 2004, on that reckoning, reflected a state of technology definitely pre-Google, and quite possibly pre-web.
  • nnovation is what people newly know how to do. Technology is what they are actually doing; and that is what matters to the economy.
  • n the end, the main risk to advanced economies may not be that the pace of innovation is too slow, but that institutions have become too rigid to accommodate truly revolutionary changes—which could be a lot more likely than flying cars.
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