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Kasthuri Gopalaratnam

7 key questions to ask about ed technology, online learning - The Answer Sheet - The Wa... - 1 views

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    Seven questions to consider before you decide on online learning and educational technology. "Not all online learning is the same. Neither is all face-to-face learning."
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    This article presents a rough framework to work with from a district point of view.
Steve Henderson

Virtual World - 0 views

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    Here is a website with a virtual world game for kids. You travel around a world called miamiopia in the form of a balloon avatar. You come across questions from content domains and I think then you answer questions and earn coins. If you can't answer the questions, as happened to me when trying to earn coins by answering questions identifying dinosaurs, you are taken to a web site with the information so you can learn it.
Ashley Lee

The Big Question: Does the latest online technology pose an unacceptable threat to our ... - 2 views

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    facebook poses some serious threats to our privacy with its latest privacy control mechanisms.
James Glanville

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

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    NYTimes article critical of the current push for technology in schools.  Raises questions about lack of improvement in test scores, budget tensions between $$ for teachers vs technology, and dearth of research showing  improved engagement.  Features comments by Larry Cuban.
Ando Endano

Teaching With Twitter: Not for the Faint of Heart - Technology - The Chronicle of Highe... - 0 views

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    This video reports on one professor's use of Twitter in the classroom as a means for students to ask questions. Some students abuse the system, while the TAs are charged with answering the questions during class.
Jennifer Jocz

Web-based tool Hotseat taking students' questions - USATODAY.com - 0 views

  • That potential for instant feedback adds a new edge and depth to the class
  • Hotseat probably helps most in large classes, where he says it "can give voice to the silent student body and help stimulate discussion.
  • And because Hotseat allows anonymous posts, says senior Tim Cummings, 21, students are more likely to ask questions they wouldn't if they had to speak out in person.
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    Interesting article about Hotseat, a web-based tool that can be accessed by students through facebook, twitter, or cellphones, which allows them to ask questions and make comments during class.
Diego Vallejos

Virtual schools are multiplying, but some question their educational value - 1 views

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    "A Virginia company leading a national movement to replace classrooms with computers - in which children as young as 5 can learn at home at taxpayer expense - is facing a backlash from critics who are questioning its funding, quality and oversight."
Chris Johnson

Biology Lab Escape ("Escape the room" type flash game) - 0 views

    • Chris Johnson
       
      Try playing through this "escape the room" type flash game. You have to conduct an experiment as part of the solution. In this case the experiment is trivial and its validity is questionable, but couldn't we create a similar game as a performance assessment? If you get stuck, you can click "walkthrough" for help (including a video of the solution). Yes, I know there are many advertisements.
    • Xavier Rozas
       
      Chris don't you find the spastic picking up and inspecting of random artifacts laying around the castle, maze, forest, etc..hoping for a dialogue box to blurt out '..Just a regular newspaper...But what's this, a secret code puzzle left unfinished?!' is a flat experience. Don't get me wrong, I love easter eggs, but the hunt is a pain in clunky 2D.
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    Consider the possibilities for a performance assessment while playing through this simple "escape the room" game. The validity of the experiment involved in the solution is questionable.
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    Escape games are very big in the publishing industry right now due mostly to their inquiry based assessment and the low development cost compared to highly immersive first-person games. The biology lab escape is one of the better ones that I've seen out there. Thanks Chris!
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    I played for about 8 minutes and then grew tired of the game. I am curious how assessors would have graded my performance. I found the easier way to "escape the room" was to close the browser window.
Uche Amaechi

Project 'Gaydar': An MIT experiment raises new questions about online privacy - The Bos... - 0 views

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    Really? Social Analytics to discover whether you're gay. Their methodology seems like common sense. but I still question the conclusions. Especially since it wasn't tested.
Maung Nyeu

Quora - 0 views

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    "A continually improving collection of questions and answers created, edited, and organized by everyone who uses it."
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    #HGSET561 A continually improving collection of questions and answers created, edited, and organized by everyone who uses it.
Brandon Pousley

Pearson unveils OER search engine | Inside Higher Ed - 4 views

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    Pearson gets into the MOOC action by creating a search engine for content.
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    Pearson makes an interesting business move by recognizing and organizing Open Educational Resources. I often wonder how the questions of academic integrity, quality, etc will be answered in the marketplace.
Sunanda V

Sivi Answers Questions and Does Research For You, Is Your Personal Concierge - 0 views

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    ...yet another reason why we need to equip students with information literacy skills! ><
Tomoko Matsukawa

Top Ed-Tech Trends: What's Changed from 2011 to 2012? - 1 views

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    Before he publishes the actual 2012 review, is reflecting on what he wrote one year ago. (the ten things he highlighted last year was the ipad, social media, text-messaging, data, the digital library, khan academy, STEM, higher education bubble, "open", the business of ed-tech) Personally interested in programming literacy part that is expected to be mentioned. Also like the questions presented at the end. 
Adrian Melia

How Google Plans to Find the UnGoogleable - 1 views

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    Google is building a new search tool that pre-guesses what you are looking for. This is a step beyond children being able to look up answers to any questions they have without thinking.
Junjie Liu

A class open to the world | Harvard Gazette - 0 views

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    Tapping into the Internet and using several iPads as video cameras, Sandel, the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government, connected his Harvard students in Sanders Theatre on Friday with students in Japan, China, Brazil, and India for a wide-ranging discussion that explored the complicated question of the ethics of solidarity and the dilemmas associated with patriotism, membership, and collective responsibility.
Daniel Melia

Saying Goodbye to Now: How Do iPhone Photos Impact Our Experience? : The New Yorker - 0 views

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    No hard news here; but this reminded me of Sherry Turkle and her (misguided, I think) argument that parents are too caught up with their phones to pay attention to their kids. There's a lot more subtlety in this piece. And even though this is literary and not academic, I think there's valuable food for thought re: T561 because of big questions about "real" experience vs. digital or "virtual" experience.
Laura Johnson

Media Literacy | EdSurge - 1 views

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    Articles on media literacy -  an excerpt from their newsletter:  Here's how George Mason history professor Mills Kelly teaches media literacy. "'We will work together as a group to create an online historical hoax that we will then turn loose on the internet to see if we can actually fool anyone.'" His students have created stories that have fooled Wikipedia (but not Reddit) and provoked the ire of Jimmy Wales himself. We're delightedly amused at this intriguing piece from Brendan Fitzgerald, which examines the tradition of published hoaxes within the larger discussion over media transparency and credibility. While we agree that planting deliberate lies makes our job a little tougher, there's definitely value in its effort to challenge the largely assumed reliability of Wikipedia and other crowdsourcing efforts. It begs the question: are today's kids digital natives or "digital naives?"
Uche Amaechi

Film Technology Advances, Inspiring a Sense of Loss - NYTimes.com - 3 views

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    Looks like we're not the only ones questioning the virtues of technological advances
Maung Nyeu

Tom Vander Ark: Questions About Digital Learning - 4 views

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    An conversation with Tom Vander Ark, author of "Getting Smart: How DIgital Learning is Changing the World". " It confirms what we discussed in class - technology is an amplifier, "technology amplifies parenting: good parents manage it and make the most of it, but less well supported students sit in front of screens in unsupervised and unproductive activities for far too long. "
Maung Nyeu

We Live in a Mobile World - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    We live in digital and mobile world. Mobile learning forces us to rethink how to best utilize our time in school. We can focus more on questions that require collaboration, synthesis, critical thinking and creativity, and not just memorization of facts.
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