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Why the iPad Will Not Reform Higher Education Anytime Soon - 1 views

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    An opinion piece addressing the iPad in higher education hype: Lindsay Pund is a junior studying English and Business at Whitworth University. She is completing several writing assignments for a class and was given the topic by the Tech.pinions columnists of forming an opinion on iPad and higher education from a college students perspective.
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National Museum of Play - 1 views

shared by pradeepg on 05 Apr 12 - Cached
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    It's nice to know that there is actually a "museum of play".
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Education Week: In Neb. School, Kindles Spark Interest in Reading - 1 views

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    In a world dominated by iPad news , a story on Kindle - motivating kids to read
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Rational Design: The Core of Rayman Origins - 0 views

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    This longer gamasutra article talks about Macro Flow and Micro Flow, complete with Csikszentmihalyi's flow diagrams. "Macro flow is the constant rise in difficulty to compete with the player's increasing skill level, maintaining the balance between boredom and anxiety. Macro flow refers to the entire gameplay experience from the beginning of the game until the end, and having a good macro flow will likely result in constant interest and intrinsic motivation on the part of the player throughout the course of the game." "Micro flow is short intense periods of flow that happen frequently, as well as the constant adaptation of the game's challenges to the player's increase in skill level. It is perpetuated by repeated successes in rapid succession, which provides positive emotional and tangible feedback encouraging the player to continue in the micro flow; this is known as a virtuous cycle."
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    Thanks for posting, Stephanie. I wonder if these instances of "micro flow' interfere with a gamer's chances of experiencing macro flow. I'm imagining instances of micro flow to be like interesting pit stops along a road trip, while macro flow would be equivalent to the exhilaration of cruising down an open road without any interruption. Not sure if that's the right way to think about it though...
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Note the Smile - Blog - "Activity oriented toward intrinsic goals, almost by ... - 1 views

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    "Activity oriented toward intrinsic goals, almost by definition, is play." - Peter Gray I was struck by this quote because I've thinking a lot about motivation and engagement in terms of games, but haven't really been thinking about EMF in terms of play.
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Mobile learning in schools - 3 views

shared by pradeepg on 04 Apr 12 - No Cached
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    This optimistic article covers a range of topics related to mobile learning and quotes Prof.Dede as well.
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Ele Home - 1 views

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    For those interested in Early Learning, here's a handy library of digital media resources curated by the Fred Rogers Center.
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Using Piazza to Encourage Interaction - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 3 views

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    Piazza is a Web 2.0 tool that allows students to ask questions and engage in dialogue on the Internet with teacher and each other.
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'Plantville' Now Challenges Players to Compete on Industrial Productivity | Sustainable... - 0 views

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    Another Game for Learning- Plantville.
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A Picture of Language - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  • It was more than 300 pages long,
  • unipersonal
  • rhetorico-grammatical figures
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    this article reminded me how unengaged I was/am by the idea of diagramming sentences in spite of some people I know who thrill in the memories. It seems to me that the ipad offers some ap capability to reinvent this idea and make it even more visual.
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A New Community and Resources for Games for Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

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    yet another resource for games and learning
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TECHNOLOGY SPECTATOR: Digital education revelations | Nate Cochrane | Commentary | Busi... - 0 views

  • Such IT problems risk Australia's $16.3 billion a year export income in the competitive global race for lucrative international students.
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    Australia has been aggressively pursuing technology in education for a decade. I taught in Armidale, a large country town with a major university. It serves as an ideal location to work out the bugs because it is large enough to gather good research but small and contained enough to minimize complications.
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Microsoft in education featured video - 0 views

shared by pradeepg on 29 Mar 12 - No Cached
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    This ~3min video is a description of how a school integrates the use of games (eg. guitar hero) into their curriculum. It utilizes this game as a starting point for multiple explorations in music. I am very unsure of the value of incorporating the game. Any thoughts ?
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    I'm not sure how I feel about the commercial aspect of this... it feels a bit like a marketing tool for Guitar Hero. But, I do think that it sounds like they're doing interesting things with the surrounding curriculum. When I was in grade school I remember participating in a special unit on the Oregon Trail where we did related activities in every subject: managing our money and supplies in math class, learning about atmospheric conditions/obstacles in science class, and negotiating through historically-situated group decisions in social studies. I found this particular unit so much more engaging than everyday coursework, as I was able to both employ my imagination and see real-world application for skills that I was building. The Microsoft program stuck me as a 21st century adaptation of this (albeit grounded in a commercial product), where students were building various skill sets across subjects that were all tied together by a common narrative.
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Students vie for spots at the Kootenai Technical Education Campus | North Idaho - KXLY.com - 0 views

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    I think vocational schools give students the means for making time spent in school relevant and useful to them. They pursue an interest and see it connected to a relevant future. In the current age where interdisciplinary work is the norm, jobs are mutable, and careers are evolutionary, vocational education is no longer preparing students for a job or career; just their first one.
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    I completely agree! I have a good friend who dropped out of high school, earned his GED the same week, and went on to a technical vocational school to study IT/systems management. Turned out that once he got to the vocational school, he became the top student in most of his classes, and well-known for staying after class to engage instructors in intellectual debate. I find it disappointing that our society tends to devalue vocational schools; it seems to me that we should instead be focusing on what fits each student best.
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Computer Science for Non-Majors Takes Many Forms - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Is computational thinking a fundamental skill that should be added to every student's analytical ability?
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    As I read this article, I thought about how many friends I have that are in non-technical professions, but who have been asked to take on technical tasks as part of their roles (managing databases, building organization websites, etc.) They've all been able to figure out how to do these things, but have found it very challenging to do so on their own and without any prior experience/contextual knowledge. So while I'm not sure that it's an absolute necessity, I do think that an increasingly broad range of vocations expect some level of technological fluency that could be built upon a computational thinking foundation. (There was a nice quote from a librarian in a NY Times article posted by Tom Keffer that illustrates this as well - the librarian says that all librarians rely upon software now, and that it's up to them to become technically empowered if there is something IT-related that their library needs.)
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Clark Aldrich Designs - 0 views

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    ...and, here is the link to Alrich's website.
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