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Assess Your Curriculum and Courses Using Harden's Taxonomy of Curriculum Inte... - 0 views

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    A Solution Approach: Harden's Taxonomy of Curriculum Integration Building upon various earlier works on curriculum integration with more specific focus on school education, in 2000, Harden [4] proposed a taxonomy of curriculum integration wrt medical education. In my view, it is good model that can be used by all programs of higher education.  Harden has structured this taxonomy as an eleven stage ladder given below:
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2011 OLF - July 21 & 22 - 0 views

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    inexpensive tools that you can use to create audio and video for your eLearning. Attend this Online Forum to examine the tools and techniques that will help you use media in your eLearning
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8 Unique Online Presentation Tools for Students| The Committed Sardine - 1 views

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    Nice introduction to various free tools for presentations. Many of which are iPad friendly and/or collaborative.
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eFront: e-Learning Glossaries - 0 views

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    It is important that e-Learning professionals, researchers, experts, and learners have a common basis in order to communicate effectively. In other words, they need to "speak the same language".  Therefore, I have created the following list of e-learning glossaries.
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Grading 2.0: Evaluation in the Digital Age | HASTAC - 0 views

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    How do we better align grading and assessment techniques so that they are more in line with how students learn today?
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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.”)
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  • 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.
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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.
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Learning Groups: Larry K. Michaelsen - 0 views

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    Several articles on Learning Groups
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Training Games - 0 views

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    more than 200 ready-to-use training games and activities. Most of them were published in the Thiagi GameLetter.
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Academic Earth - 0 views

shared by David Amdur on 30 Oct 10 - Cached
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    Thousands of video lectures from the world's top scholars.
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Alice.org - 0 views

shared by David Amdur on 30 Oct 10 - Cached
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    teaching tool for introductory computer programing. It uses 3D graphics and a drag-and-drop interface to facilitate a more engaging, less frustrating first programming experience.
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Harvesting Gradebook « Center for Teaching, Learning, & Technology - 0 views

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    portfolios for learning and their relationship to institutionally supported learning tools and course designs.
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GPC Center for Teaching and Learning - Online Resources - 0 views

  • collection of Online Resources by Subject Area
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    Here is a collection of Online Resources by Subject Area: English History Sign Language ESL Biology Chemistry Accounting Psychology German Spanish French Business Nursing/Dental Hygiene Humanities Economics Physics/Astronomy Business Law General Resources Computers and Technology Mathematics
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For Exposure, Universities Put Courses on the Web - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • OpenCourseWare Consortium, a worldwide organization of about 250 academic institutions around the world, adds that universities get “global engagement” from posting courses online.
  • here are also “recognition for individual faculty members who may be well known within their disciplines but not outside them,
  • M.I.T.’
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  • Harvard, Yale, Stanford and the University of Michigan all now offer substantial portions of their courses online.
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interactive bag-of-tricks - 0 views

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    Brief survey of interactive ed & communication tools
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RSS readers/aggregators - 0 views

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    RSS readers/aggregators are available (free or paid) as well as client-based software (freeware and commercial)
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Emotiv EPOC-control video game activity through brainwaves - 0 views

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    EPOC headset, by Emotiv, allows users to directly control video game activity through their brainwaves. It uses a set of sensors that monitor the human brain to directly interface with most wireless-enabled PC's, as well as video game consoles. This means the actions of your virtual character in a video game can be directly controlled through your mind.
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Experience Desire2Learn Learning Suite 9.0 - 0 views

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    Instructional Design Wizard walks users through creation of pedagogically-sound courses containing a variety of learning experiences focused on appropriate learning levels. \nThrough an intuitive and accessible drag-and-drop interface, Course Builder organizes and manages the development of a course, its lessons, and its materials, building on the course blueprint provided by the Instructional Design Wizard. Its integration with Learning Environment tools allows a seamless experience for creating items and associating them with one another from one interface, providing a consolidated view of the course
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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.
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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.
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