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David Amdur

Higher-ed LMS market penetration: Moodle vs. Blackboard+WebCT vs. Sakai | Zacker.org - 0 views

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    Moodle: 2,981 deployments / 54% market share Blackboard + WebCT: 2,500 deployments / 45% market share Sakai: 35 deployments / .63% market share
David Amdur

join.me - Free Screen Sharing - 0 views

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    Sharing your screen instantly with up to 250 computers. Collaborate, meet, train, demo or show-off. Free version: screen sharing, chat, file transfer, remote control with one user
Gina Dabrowski

Creative Commons - 0 views

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    Creative Commons is a nonprofit corporation dedicated to making it easier for people to share and build upon the work of others, consistent with the rules of copyright.\n\nThey provide free licenses and other legal tools to mark creative work with the freedom the creator wants it to carry, so others can share, remix, use commercially, or any combination thereof.\n\n\n
David Amdur

Twitter for Academia, academhack » Blog Archive - 0 views

  • students had the shared classroom experience when something came up outside of class that reminded them of material from class
  • Classroom Community: Once students started twittering I think they developed a sense of each other as people beyond the classroom space
  • you can “track” a word. This will subscribe you to any post which contains said word. So, for example a student could be interested in how a particular word is used. They can track the word, and see the varied phrases in which people use it. Or, you can track an event, a proper name (I track Derrida for example), a movie title, a store name see how many people a day tweet that they are at or on their way to a Starbucks. (To do this send the message “track Starbucks” to Twitter, rather than posting the update “track Starbucks” you will now receive all messages with the word “Starbucks.”)
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • nstant Feedback: Because Twitter is always on, and gets pushed to your cell phone if you set it up this way, it is a good way to get instant feedback. I was prepping for a lecture and wanted to know if students shared a particular movie reference, I asked via Twitter and got instant responses. Students can also use this when doing their classwork, trying to understand the material. Tweet: “I don’t understand what this reading has to do with New Media? any ideas?” Other students then respond. (This actually happened recently in a class of mine.)
  • Follow a Professional
  • sharing short inspirations, thoughts that just popped into your head. Not only are they recorded, because you can go back and look at them, but you can also get inspiration from others.
David Amdur

Social Collaboration Software | Atlassian - 0 views

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    One place online for teams to collaborate and capture knowledge - create, share, and discuss your files, ideas, minutes, specs, mockups, diagrams, and projects. A powerful rich editor, integration with Office and JIRA, and hundreds of add-ons help teams create intranets, technical documentation, and knowledge bases.
David Amdur

The Rapid eLearning Blog - 0 views

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    The Rapid E-Learning Blog shares practical tips and tricks to help you become a rapid elearning pro. It is hosted by Tom Kuhlmann who has over 15 years of hands-on experience in the training industry and currently runs the community at Articulate.
David Amdur

Nik's Learning Technology Blog - 0 views

  • Set up a backchannelOne of my favourite tools to use during presentations is Today’sMeet http://todaysmeet.com/ . It’s a great tool for setting up backchannels. A backchannel is basically what your students create when they talk among themselves or text each other during your lesson.The advantage of setting one of these up to allow your audience to do this is that you can capture and share what your audience is saying while they are listening to you and enable them to collaborate and share with each other what they know about the topic and links to any relevant resources.It can also help them to type in questions as they think of them rather than waiting for you to ask at the end, and for me it’s a great way to pass out URLs to interesting websites to give the audience some hands on participation during the presentation.It’s also a good way of getting the audience to brainstorm and do tasks together, just ask a few questions and get them to type in answers, and they’ll appear in the backchannel window for everyone to see.
David Amdur

Free Social Teaching and Learning Network focused solely on education - 0 views

shared by David Amdur on 31 Jan 11 - No Cached
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    Sophia is a content management platform that supports social teaching, has been piloted at college level: Some people describe Sophia as a mash up of Wikipedia, YouTube, and Facebook - focused solely on teaching and learning. It's where you can teach what you know and learn what you don't. Whether you're a high school student, college student, teacher, professor, tutor or parent, Sophia makes knowledge easier to share, easier to find, and easier to organize. And it's free.
David Amdur

Getting Started: St. Kates Instructional Media Group - 3 views

The St. Kates Instructional Media group was created to share information about digital tools, resources, or general tips that can enhance learning at St. Kates. This page provides directions for ge...

started by David Amdur on 19 Apr 11 no follow-up yet
David Amdur

sowebedu - home - 0 views

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    sowebedu is the short form of "Social Web in Education" and refers to the usage of Social Software and Web2.0 for teaching and learning. This wiki is created for the Share.TEC pilot Social Software and Web2.0 in Teacher Education and Teacher Training. It provides a platform for a community of practice for exploring and analysing the usage of Social Software and Web2.0 tools and services under real educational conditions
Siri Anderson

Minnesota's Immigrants | Browse Items - 0 views

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    It would be neat to have stories from St.Kate students shared here...
David Amdur

Knowledge building - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • Principles of Knowledge building Scardamalia (2002) identifies twelve principles of Knowledge building as follows:
  • Real ideas and authentic problems. In the classroom as a Knowledge building community, learners are concerned with understanding, based on their real problems in the real world. Improvable ideas. Students' ideas are regarded as improvable objects. Idea diversity. In the classroom, the diversity of ideas raised by students is necessary. Rise above. Through a sustained improvement of ideas and understanding, students create higher level concepts. Epistemic agency. Students themselves find their way in order to advance. Community knowledge, collective responsibility. Students' contribution to improving their collective knowledge in the classroom is the primary purpose of the Knowledge building classroom. Democratizing knowledge. All individuals are invited to contribute to the knowledge advancement in the classroom. Symmetric knowledge advancement. A goal for Knowledge building communities is to have individuals and organizations actively working to provide a reciprocal advance of their knowledge. Pervasive Knowledge building. Students contribute to collective Knowledge building. Constructive uses of authoritative sources. All members, including the teacher, sustain inquiry as a natural approach to support their understanding. Knowledge building discourse. Students are engaged in discourse to share with each other, and to improve the knowledge advancement in the classroom. Concurrent, embedded, and transformative assessment. Students take a global view of their understanding, then decide how to approach their assessments. They create and engage in assessments in a variety of ways.
David Amdur

Web 2.0 productivity tools - 0 views

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    Web 2.0 tools to increase productivity: Target audience: educators, students, nonprofits, social benefit organizations, NGOs.
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