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Jason Hammon

The Engine behind WGU - 0 views

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    Western Governor's University shows what software it uses to keep up with its competency based model
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.
Douglas Harsch

New Guides Aim to Become the Yelp for MOOC's - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher E... - 2 views

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    Websites are springing up that sort and collect reviews of MOOC courses. Meta-MOOC's essentially. Interesting how quickly an ecosystem can begin to develop around a new technology.
Tomoko Matsukawa

Why Students Should Run Professional Development For Teachers - 3 views

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    not sure students 'should' run PD but teachers need to be more comfortable with the idea of giving up power to some extend and be more willing to learn from students at times
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    I think it does make sense to include students, too. Also re-enforces the idea that you don't truly understand a topic until you teach it, so I think empowering students somewhat works towards that goal.
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.
Steve Henderson

School Reform for Realists - 0 views

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    Lessons learned from Cisco's experience indicate that business-education partnerships should: * Be set up so that all aspects of the project are transparent to outsiders, even if corporations profit from the R&D * Foster experimentation, because it is not always clear in advance which ideas and projects will work best * Establish in-depth training for every new technology, with businesspeople and educators learning from each other
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. 
Jason Hammon

Warming Up to MOOC's - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    Flipping the College classroom using MOOCs
Cole Shaw

MOOC feedback - 3 views

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    The Knight Center's MOOC on data visualization was a bit smaller than traditional MOOCs (it actually capped enrollment at 2000), but the second version of the same class already has 4000 students registered. It sounds like the professor gave a lot of attention to the students and the projects, and the fact that the numbers went up is a good sign.
Jennifer Bartecchi

An Odd Couple of Measuring 21st Century Skills - Getting Smart by Tom Vander Ark - blen... - 1 views

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    Has this article about Chris Dede & EcoMuve been shared yet? I like its take on stepping up field trips...
Kasthuri Gopalaratnam

Raspberry Pi, a Computer Tinkerer's Dream - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Raspberry Pi may sound like the name of a math-based dessert. But it is actually one of the hottest and cheapest little computers in the world right now. Almost one million of these $35 machines have shipped since last February, capturing the imaginations of educators, hobbyists and tinkerers around the world. One Pi owner, Dave Akerman, of Brightwalton, England, even sent a Raspberry Pi to the upper atmosphere, floating it 40,000 meters up using a weather balloon. There he was able to take live video, photos and measurements. "Now every primary school in the world can take pictures from near space," Mr. Upton said. "You give people access to this tool and they do great things."
Laura Johnson

How In-Person Meetups Are Fixing The Problem With MOOCs - Edudemic - 1 views

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    @Komal and Steve - article about MOOC meet ups 
Chris Dede

Interest in Online Courses Could Be Peaking - US News and World Report - 2 views

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    The issue
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    HGSET561
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    This is a really interesting article, and coupled with the edX / Anant Agarwal article below from Douglas, I think it brings up additional questions. Even with all the features that Anant says will be added to edX, I feel like they are all just part of the "convenience" factor and in many cases (like grading, discussion forum), more convenience for the teaching staff than the students. It is convenient for the students to do online labwork instead of going to a physical lab, for example. So I wonder if that type of convenience is enough to convince more students to sign up to MOOCs, or if they have to fundamentally change to add more types of value?
Daniel Melia

Institute of Play - 0 views

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    Follow up to that last post. Here's the Institute of Play website.
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!
Jason Hammon

Texas schools begin tracking students with computer chips in ID Cards - 0 views

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    Texas schools are using technology to enable their attendance tracking. Like always, parents are fired up about it.
Angela Nelson

Future Affective Technology for Autism and Emotion - 1 views

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    In follow-up to previously posted video, this full article details MIT's Media Lab research on monitoring electrodermal activity (EDA), a measure of sympathetic arousal, and on advancing autism communication through 4 active research areas.
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    This article further details the research behind the video I previously posted relating to emerging technology related to autism emotion and communication.
Hannah Lesk

White Paper on Moving Learning Games Forward from MIT's Education Arcade - 1 views

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    Following up on yesterday's section discussion on connections and barriers between educational game development and "mainstream" gaming, here is an interesting white paper released by MIT's Education Arcade last year that explores obstacles and opportunities in great depth.
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?
Bharat Battu

What Would You Pay for a Great Educational App? | MindShift - 1 views

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    full disclosure: classmate Alex Schoenfeld first shared this with the us in the TIE facebook group :). But it brings an interesting trend in the adoption and pricing of mobile apps: Article outlining what lots of us know when it comes to moblie apps and pricing - free, $1, and $2 are the price-points that sell, and allow us to try out an app with minimal regret. But with the rise of more and more high-quailty, high-profile, and high-budget educatioanl apps, will the pricing structure change? Will parents and educators be willing to spend the prices of traditional computer software ($50 or more?) for really great mobile apps? The article brings up an interesting model that seems to already be coming to life looking at how apps are being sold and updated lately: "Donahoo and Russell propose there's a better way: subscriptions and content expansion packs.  Launchpad Toys follows the latter tact. The initial price the Toontastic app for $3 (though it's currently free). Users can use that fully functioning app, or choose to add additional characters and themes with $.99 expansion packs. This way, they contend, costs are controlled; it's cheap for parents and children to evaluate an app, and the model encourages regular updates."
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