Connectivism in Practice - How to Organize a MOOC | Peeragogy.org - 0 views
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Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are online learning events that can take place synchronously and asynchronously for months. Participants assemble to hear, see, and participate in backchannel communication during live lectures. They read the same texts at the same time, according to a calendar. Learning takes place through self-organized networks of participants, and is almost completely decentralized: individuals and groups create blogs or wikis around their own interpretations of the texts and lectures, and comment on each other's work; each individual and group publicises their RSS feed, which are automatically aggregated by a special (freely available) tool, gRSShopper. Every day, an email goes out to all participants, aggregating activity streams from all the blogs and wikis that engage that week's material. MOOCs are a practical application of a learning theory known as "connectivism" that situates learning in the networks of connections made between individuals and between texts.
Dashboard | Twijector - 0 views
Why Use a backchannel - YouTube - 0 views
There's a #Hashtag for That! & Mean Tweeting! | The Daring Librarian - 0 views
Why Tweet at Conferences | Doug Woods - 0 views
20 useful ways to use TodaysMeet in schools | Ditch That Textbook - 0 views
Co-meeting -Text Based Realtime Group Discussion- - YouTube - 0 views
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co-meeting is a text-based group discussion tool. This live-typing chat tool lets you have a conversation that can also deliver the "atmosphere" which was impossible to share with your participants using traditional chat tools, and also lets you take meeting minutes during a discussion by using the document editor with the real-time concurrent editing ability. Because everything is done through texting, you can have discussions without constraint by time and location and make innovative changes in your meeting style for your teams that suffer from wasteful conferences.
Google Moderator- helps u to find the best input form an audience of any siz - 0 views
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What does Google Moderator do? Google Moderator allows you to create a series about anything that you are interested in discussing and open it up for people to submit questions, ideas, or suggestions. These are called submissions. Anyone can come to the site and submit a question, idea, or vote, and anyone can vote. Google Moderator shows you a question in the box with the blue background. This is called the Featured Question. A topic is a way to break up your series into smaller, more manageable topics of discussion. You can have one topic, or multiple topics. For example, if you create a series of 'Book clubs' for your organization, topics could be 'Fiction,' 'Non-fiction,' or 'Auto-biographies.'
The Archivist #ict4champions graphs - 0 views
Twitterfall- realtime twitter feeds - 0 views
#ict4champions - Wiffiti screen - 0 views
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