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Garron Hillaire

Foursquare: A Glimpse at the Future - 1 views

  • As the web and mobile continue to get more personalized, we’re seeing more and more services tailoring their offerings to individual users — Foursquare is no exception. Crowley discussed the possibility of a smarter algorithm that would make customized recommendations based on a user’s checkin history
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    another example of customized experience on the web. Perhaps these algorithms will one day serve educational purposes. Could we transfer from visiting physical locations to visiting learning locations?
Ando Endano

Junaio - You - Here - Now - 1 views

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    Another AR app for the Iphone. Allows placing location based objects on screen which are then seen by others who visit the same location.
Janet Dykstra

Google's Ingress and Location-Based Learning - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Edu... - 0 views

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    November 26, 2012, 11:00 am This month Google's Niantic Labs quietly released a location-based game called Ingress that plays with data on multiple levels. The game, currently in invite-only beta, invites players to join either the Enlightenment or the Resistance and move through the physical world hunting "Exotic Matter", and coincidentally generating data and pictures for Google on the way. This looks similar to EcoMobile!
Jennifer Bartecchi

http://www.youtube.com/v/rigCbMtsYYI&?autoplay=1 - 0 views

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    Here's video examples of some of the MIND Institute's games... I'm not sure how the reveal of locations behind the iPad really come into play... SURELY they could have come up with more functional examples that relate content to real life?
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    Can you think of more functional & relative locations to showcase?
Liz Huttner

Have a Free Flight to Mexico With Your Taco? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    These location based programs are a mixture of awesome and scary.
Angela Nelson

Technology helps make speech therapy easier | eSchool News - 0 views

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    PresenceLearning allows students to receive speech therapy services online. Willows is a tiny farming town in Northern California about 20 miles from where I grew up. Imagine my surprise as I read this article and realized that the superintendent they were quoting, Vicki Shadd, was actually my Jr. High School volleyball coach. The real benefit of distance therapeutic services in this instance is the ability to provide services to rural students who would would otherwise be neglected due to the school's location and budget. 
Roshanak Razavi

University of Phoenix to Shutter 115 Locations - 2 views

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    This article on the NYT is timely with one of the reading articles assigned for this week - "Disrupting College".
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    Speaking of For-Profit institutions, check out this scathing review: Corporate U: Higher Ed the Bain Way, Part 2: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/10/21/1143219/-Corporate-U-Higher-ed-the-Bain-Way-part-2
Cole Shaw

Startup wants to integrate other ed tech platforms - 0 views

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    This startup, Clever, has a platform to enable the easy integration of other ed tech into the classroom--it stores student data in a single location. Maybe this will also help track student information as they move up grade levels and enable things like mastery-based learning instead of seat-based? They already have 2000 schools and a waiting list!
James Glanville

Expand Horizons Through Expanded Learning Time - Global Learning - Education Week - 1 views

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    The role technology can play in expanding the time during which learning can take place.
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    Another article about "expanded learning time" both online and via community-based "brick and mortar" locations like libraries, YMCA, and Boys & Girls Clubs. "Out-of-school programs can be strong partners for schools who want to leverage expanded learning time to help their students achieve global competence. Youth-serving organizations share the broad mission to promote student success in work and life in the 21st century. Out-of-school program organization and management is often based on an asset model that values diversity. In order to attract and retain participants, out-of-school programs are centered around youth engagement through hands-on and experiential learning, often with a focus on 21st century skills, service learning, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education, and others."
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    I wonder what Helen Haste would think of this organization . . .
Jennifer Jocz

Could Tag Technology Replace Google Search? | InventorSpot - 0 views

  • Many believe AR is the tipping point for mobile phones to supplant desktop searches in the next few years.


  • Tagword search on cellphones, like keyword search on desktops might become the dominant format to search for items in real-time.
  • Things in our real-world tagged with barcodes could provide much more information, which could Internet of Thingsthen be updated without having to change the original tag
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    An article describing how AR apps for cellphones could provide users with location-based data using barcode tagging.
anonymous

Gardening: Learning Doesn't Always Come out of A Book - Millburn-Short Hills, NJ Patch - 0 views

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    Location-based cell phone use
Cameron Paterson

Pedagogical enhancement of open learning - 1 views

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    A small but very pertinent article in the recent edition of the International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL) by Seth Gurell, Yu-Chun Kuo and Andrew Walker called The Pedagogical Enhancement of Open Education: An Examination of Problem-Based Learning1 is a real gem. The Pedagogical Enhancement of Open Education is a gem because it is focussed on pedagogy and online open learning. Gurell et al argue from a review of the literature and practical experience that problem based learning can work well with online open education. For example, traditional problem-based learning requires the learner to find and review resources which are usually print based materials such as books, journals, newspapers and so on, many of which take time to locate and access. However, using problem-based online learning using open education resources can remove much of the distraction of finding resources and enable greater attention to the learning task. Although problem-based learning (PBL) may not be suitable for all types of learning, a review of the research does indicate that students perform equally well using PBL as they do in traditional learning. Students engaged with PBL also perform better on retention tasks and on explanatory tasks, reveal Gurell et al. There are many sources of open educational resources. Two such examples that are well known are the Open Education Resource (OER) Commons, the Open Courseware Consortium. However, others such as Academic Earth, Scientific Commons, and Project OSCAR are also interesting. The Pedagogical Enhancement of Open Education is a very succinct review of online PBL and its fit with open online learning. Gurell et al have provided an excellent review of the versatility of online open education and how to maximise pedagogy to achieve improved learner outcomes.
Jennifer Hern

Augmented Reality: Not That Real Yet - BusinessWeek - 1 views

  • In theory, a service should be able to take your latitude, longitude, and orientation and tell you exactly what you are looking at. Alas, the data aren't nearly accurate enough for that.
  • There's an even bigger conceptual problem with augmented reality as it is used today by a variety of search apps such as the Layar Reality Browser, Wikitude World Browser, or Presselite's Bionic Eye.
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    AR not ready for prime time because of inaccurate GPS data and apps that only provide information about locations within the user's line of sight.
Chris Johnson

WatchKnow - Videos for kids to learn from. Organized. - 3 views

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    This is a website that allows users to find videos from which children (3-18) can learn. All videos are hosted by other sites like YouTube, but content is approved and moderated separately. Comments and discussions are separate from the comments on the original post (i.e. WatchKnow comments do not get added to YouTube and YouTube comments do not appear on WatchKnow). There is heavy emphasis on transparent, widespread monitoring of content. This is accomplished in ways very reminiscent of Wikipedia's moderation methods. Right now, the site has a good number of videos, but lacks a rich community of active users. This means that it is harder to locate quality videos since few users have rated and discussed content.
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    This website is very similar to an idea I've been brewing for a while (though I believe this site is missing some of the more promising features). I was pleasantly surprised to see professor Dede's name on the Advisory Committee.
David Chen

Official Google Blog: Transparency, choice and control - now complete with a Dashboard! - 0 views

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    Now you can see exactly how much information Google has on you with the launch of Google Dashboard - "Today, we are excited to announce the launch of Google Dashboard. Have you ever wondered what data is stored with your Google Account? The Google Dashboard offers a simple view into the data associated with your account - easily and concisely in one location."
Katherine Tarulli

Grockit Raises Money for Online Test Prep - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This company has raised $7 million dollars in venture capital money to develop an online test prep web site that hopes to encourage students to spend time preparing for tests such as the SAT by eliminating deterrents such as scheduling conflicts and location issues and adding a social networking aspect.
Bharat Battu

See Rome as it is and as it was | TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog - 1 views

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    Relating to the discussion last class about potential directions AR and mobile apps may go -- this iPhone app allows users to experience a location (in this case, Rome) as it existed in the past.  Provides images and historical info for all users, but if the user is actually at the Coliseum, it uses the iPhone camera + gps and presents actual 3D renditions of the past of whatever is in the user's viewfinder
Rupangi Sharma

The SPINNER project from the Responsive Environments Group at MIT Media Lab - 0 views

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    The SPINNER project from the Responsive Environments Group at MIT Media Lab is the first research platform designed to investigate the world of ubiquitous video devices. The Spinner can automatically edit video to fit a narrative structure. It uses video from cameras installed at the Media Lab and sensor data from people generated by wearable smart badges to track their activity and location. The system then creates a video using the characteristics detected from the sensor data with the video captured by the cameras.
Janet Dykstra

School/District Profile Locator - 0 views

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    This tool uses Google maps to link educators for the purposes of collaboration. A clever use of this affordance, and one that those of us in IB Connect (Dock's class) may want to consider.
Matthew Ong

How to separate fact and fiction-lessons from journalism for educators? - 0 views

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    This is an interesting talk which shares techniques that journalists use to determine fact from fiction. Could be very useful for teaching critical thinking skills.
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    Really interesting and definitely related to developing critical thinking skills. However, the idea that someone can crosscheck sources using Google maps to identify locations makes me wonder about how journalism in a web 2.0 ecology impacts privacy.
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