Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ Instructional & Media Services at Dickinson College
Ed Webb

Using VoiceThread to Give Students a Voice Outside the Classroom - ProfHacker - The Chr... - 1 views

Ed Webb

12 Reasons to Ditch the Pen - Why it's no longer mightiest against the sword by Lisa Ni... - 1 views

  •  
    Not there yet
Ed Webb

Eluminate user agreement - 1 views

  • Collaborate may use, disclose, distribute or copy the information and may use any ideas, concepts or know-how contained in the information for any purpose
  • The Sessions and the Services may be amended, revised, replaced or terminated, in whole or in part, by Collaborate, at its sole discretion, at any time and from time to time, without notice
  •  
    Blackborg has terrible agreement for users of Eluminate - are we surprised?
Ed Webb

Official Google Blog: Introducing Google Building Maker - 1 views

  •  
    Coolness.
Ed Webb

The Wired Campus - A Year Later, a Texas University Says Giving Students iPhones Is an ... - 1 views

  • Abilene Christian University says handing out iPhones to its entire first-year class in 2008 has improved interaction between students and faculty members.
  • Does positive feeling mean better teaching and learning? Mr. Schubert adds that it's too early to collect enough data to understand how giving out iPhones improves education. Student testimonials in the report, however, highlight easier access to professors. One savvy student says having an iPhone means he's less confused in class. "My professor will ask a question about something and I don't know what it is, but right here on my phone, with just one touch, I have Dictionary.com, I have a Wikipedia app—I can look it up," said Tyler Sutphen, a marketing major. "I know what they're talking about, because it's right there."
Ed Webb

Wikispaces - Create Your Free Higher Education Wiki - 1 views

  •  
    Now free for higher ed
Ed Webb

Mark Zuckerberg says the email's end is nigh. LOL | John Naughton | Comment is free | T... - 1 views

  • I can absolutely envision the rather hellish future, in which we use one of four organizations - Facebook, Apple, Amazon, or Google - for all of our media and communications needs, including talking, chatting, messaging, reading books, watching TV, listening to music, etc, etc.
Ed Webb

The End of Cyberspace: Google's cloudy Web clipboard - 1 views

  • shifts in metaphors matter
  • Today I noticed that Google Docs doesn't have a clipboard; instead, it has a "Web clipboard."
  • Notice that the Web clipboard isn't a conventional clipboard icon, but a clipboard with a cloud in front of it.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Google's icon designers are assuming that people are familiar enough with the cloud = Web equation to make its use uncontroversial. Another step away from cyberspace as place.
Ed Webb

Admission Officials' Tweets Fall on Deaf Ears - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher ... - 0 views

  • Evidence has shown that teenagers rely on college visits and Web sites to learn about colleges, rather than social-media outlets. When it comes to Twitter, students are barely on the site at all, let alone for college research purposes.
  • Rebecca Whitehead, assistant director of campus visits and engagements at Winthrop University, maintains the admissions office’s Twitter account, which currently has 373 followers. She says she uses it largely to connect with other higher-education professionals, to find out about upcoming events or research.
Ed Webb

High-Tech Cheating on Homework Abounds, and Professors Are Partly to Blame - Technology... - 0 views

  • "I call it 'technological detachment phenomenon,'" he told me recently. "As long as there's some technology between me and the action, then I'm not culpable for the action." By that logic, if someone else posted homework solutions online, what's wrong with downloading them?
  • "The feeling about homework is that it's really just busywork,"
  • professors didn't put much effort into teaching, so students don't put real effort into learning
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • "The current system places too great a burden on individual faculty who would, under the circumstances, appear to have perverse incentives: Pursuing these matters lowers course evaluations, takes their severely limited time away from research for promotion, and unfortunately personalizes the issue when it is not personal at all, but a violation against the university."
  • In the humanities, professors have found technological tools to check for blatant copying on essays, and have caught so many culprits that the practice of running papers through plagiarism-detection services has become routine at many colleges. But that software is not suited to science-class assignments.
  • a "studio" model of teaching
  • The parents paid tuition in cash
  • The idea that students should be working in a shell is so interesting. It never even occurred to me as a student that I shouldn't work with someone else on my homework. How else do you figure it out? I guess that is peer-to-peer teaching. Copying someone else's work and presenting it as your own is clearly wrong (and, as demonstrated above, doesn't do the student any good), but learning from the resources at hand ought to be encouraged. Afterall, struggling through homework problems in intro physics is how you learn in the first place.
Ed Webb

It's just not working out the way we thought it would « Lisa's (Online) Teach... - 0 views

  • Gradually, closed spaces (Facebook, Ning, even Google if you understand what they’re up to) have become the norm, as have monetized sites. The spaces that were free are no longer free, although many of us freely contributed our own work to these sites, providing the basis of their popularity in the first place. Crowdsourcing, celebrated in story and song, has become the exploitation of the work of others in order to make money or provide cheap customer service. The use of personal information for marketing purposes is widespread, and creative people are leaving the platforms that brought everyone into the agora in the first place. Scholars at first enthusiastic about the future now see it as a lonely place. And I see conversations where people who care deeply about the web, education for the 21st century, and learning theories are beginning to back away from proselytizing about academic openness.
  • it’s about users becoming the products in the marketplace and the amusements in the panopticon
  • Where before it might have made sense to say we should make sure everyone is web literate, now such literacy extends beyond critical thinking about websites into a deeper understanding of what the using the web means for individual privacy and independence. This time, the enemies of openness and freedom won’t need to argue their philosophical reasons – they’ll argue that they’re protecting people. And the trouble is, they may be right.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • We need to be the antidote for blind adoption
Ed Webb

Ian Bogost - Beyond Blogs - 0 views

  • I wish these were the sorts of questions so-called digital humanists considered, rather than figuring out how to pay homage to the latest received web app or to build new tools to do the same old work. But as I recently argued, a real digital humanism isn't one that's digital, but one that's concerned with the present and the future. A part of that concern involves considering the way we want to interact with one another and the world as scholars, and to intervene in that process by making it happen. Such a question is far more interesting and productive than debating the relative merits of blogs or online journals, acts that amount to celebrations of how little has really changed.
  • Perhaps a blog isn't a great tool for (philosophical; videogame) discussion or even for knowledge retention, etc... but a whole *blogosphere*...? If individuals (and individual memory in particular) are included within the scope of "the blogosphere" then surely someone remembers the "important" posts, like you seemed to be asking for...?
Ed Webb

The Ed Techie: Montaigne, the Godfather of blogging - 0 views

  • "Montaigne was living his skepticism, daring to show how a writer evolves, changes his mind, learns new things, shifts perspectives, grows older—and that this, far from being something that needs to be hidden behind a veneer of unchanging authority, can become a virtue, a new way of looking at the pretensions of authorship and text and truth. Montaigne, for good measure, also peppered his essays with myriads of what bloggers would call external links"
  • Honesty
  • Openness
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Relaxed style
  • element of the personal
  • Reflective and questioning
  • Playfulness
Ed Webb

Study Finds No Link Between Social-Networking Sites and Academic Performance - Wired Ca... - 0 views

  • no connection between time spent on social-networking sites and academic performance
  • The trouble with social media is it stunts the development of social skills. Now we learn that time spent on social media does not damage GPA, which implies it's benign. What a tragedy. And precisely the mistaken impression that social development stunting craves.
  • The study in question focused only on first-year students, and traditional ones at that. (A read through of the study revealed the sample included mostly 18- and 19-year-olds and a few (3%) 20-29-year-olds).
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Such a broad generalization based on one narrowly defined study, along with the suggestion that college students should be unconcerned about how much time they spend on SNS, is, at best, naive and, at worst, irresponsible.
  • Will there soon be a study determining that partying had no effect on grades, despite "how often students used them or how many they used"?
Pat Pehlman

Moodle 2.3 Gets New Course Interface, Improved File Management -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • Moodle's developers have formally released version 2.3
  • major enhancements to the course interface and file management.
  • major new features" in nine different areas: file usability, repository, course pages, assignments, books, quizzes, SCORM, workshops, and update notifications
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • interfaces with a variety of services, including Google Docs, Dropbox,
  • A new grading method called "marking guide," which allows instructors to enter comments on each criterion;
  • Drag and drop of files onto course pages to add them as resources;
Ed Webb

Official Google Blog: Finding more high-quality sites in search - 0 views

    • Ed Webb
       
      I kinda love Google
Ed Webb

tweetbook.in - 2 views

shared by Ed Webb on 07 May 12 - Cached
‹ Previous 21 - 40 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page