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Ben Wyatt

Podcasting - Pedagogy - 1 views

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    The article intends to simplify the different aspects of podcasting. The article covers types of podcasts; the pedagogical benefits of podcasting; the connection between theory and podcasting; answers to questions, queries, and apprehensions. Before trying out a new tool, it is important to understand why we do things the way we do. A crucial part of using any tool or technology is to understand, test, and determine the pedagogical appropriateness of it for specific context. Through the article, the author has tried to suggest some of the uses of podcasting along with the pedagogical appropriateness in different scenarios. At the end, the author has tried to (through pictorial representation) describe the podcasting community and the tasks performed by the community members. Also, through a pictorial representation, the author has provided a gist of the podcasting creation process as a producer and as a consumer.
Lorie Shuck

Vodcasting: Education Of The Future - 0 views

  • But vodcasting makes it a lot easier to keep up. The video is posted online, where kids can access it outside of school. That way they can better utilize their time with the teacher.
  • Essentially, vodcasting has flip-flopped the traditional way of learning. Classroom instruction is done at home, and homework is done in class.
  • "There's a lot of research that shows that kids learn better that way because of their ability to pause, rewind, listen to things again," Newitt said.
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    "You probably remember going to school with the teacher at the front of the room and the students sitting quietly in neat rows. But education has changed; now students work in groups and participate actively in class. Even homework is different. Vodcasting is changing the role of the teacher in the classroom. "
Lorie Shuck

How Technology Wires the Learning Brain | MindShift - 0 views

  • The technology train has left. You have to deal with it, understand it, and get some perspective
  • “The brain is complex,” he said. “The answers are not straightforward.”
  • “Google is making us smart,” he said. “Searching online is brain exercise.”
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    "How Technology Wires the Learning Brain February 23, 2011 | 9:45 AM | By Tina Barseghian FILED UNDER: Learning Methods, Research, Neuroscience, text, video games * 9 Comments * * Share447 * Email Post * Link to this post Getty Kids between the ages of 8 and 18 spend 11.5 hours a day using technology - whether that's computers, television, mobile phones, or video games - and usually more than one at a time. That's a big chunk of their 15 or 16 waking hours. But does that spell doom for the next generation? Not necessarily, according to Dr. Gary Small, a neuroscientist and professor at UCLA, who spoke at the Learning & the Brain Conference last week."
Lorie Shuck

Mind Over Mass Media - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "NEW forms of media have always caused moral panics: the printing press, newspapers, paperbacks and television were all once denounced as threats to their consumers' brainpower and moral fiber. So too with electronic technologies. PowerPoint, we're told, is reducing discourse to bullet points. Search engines lower our intelligence, encouraging us to skim on the surface of knowledge rather than dive to its depths. Twitter is shrinking our attention spans. But such panics often fail basic reality checks. When comic books were accused of turning juveniles into delinquents in the 1950s, crime was falling to record lows, just as the denunciations of video games in the 1990s coincided with the great American crime decline. The decades of television, transistor radios and rock videos were also decades in which I.Q. scores rose continuously."
Lorie Shuck

Flash Launches on Android--Now Things Get Interesting - PCWorld Business Center - 0 views

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    Adobe launched Flash Player for Android 10.1 today--the latest move in the Chess match between Adobe and Apple over the future of interactive mobile ads and video content. Now, the world can begin to experience firsthand whether Flash delivers as expected on smartphones, or if Steve Jobs made the right move in turning his back on the platform.
Lorie Shuck

The Structure of Collaborative Tagging Systems - 0 views

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    Collaborative tagging describes the process by which many users add metadata in the form of keywords to shared content. Recently, collaborative tagging has grown in popularity on the web, on sites that allow users to tag bookmarks, photographs and other content. In this paper we analyze the structure of collaborative tagging systems as well as their dynamical aspects. Specifically, we discovered regularities in user activity, tag frequencies, kinds of tags used, bursts of popularity in bookmarking and a remarkable stability in the relative proportions of tags within a given url. We also present a dynamical model of collaborative tagging that predicts these stable patterns and relates them to imitation and shared knowledge.
Lorie Shuck

Why Magic Bullets Don't Work - 0 views

  • They begin by establishing the relevance of the material for students through explicit connections with their goals or interests.
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    Change Magazine - March/April 2010 "We always tell our students that there are no shortcuts, that important ideas are nuanced, and that recognizing subtle distinctions is an essential critical-thinking skill. Mastery of a discipline, we know, requires careful study and necessarily slow, evolutionary changes in perspective. Then we look around for the latest promising trend in teaching and jump in with both feet, expecting it to transform our students, our courses, and our outcomes. Alternatively, we sniff disdainfully at the current educational fad and proudly stand by the instructional traditions of our disciplines or institutions, secure in our knowledge that the "tried and true" has a wisdom of its own."
Lorie Shuck

Swift Kick Central: Valedictorian Speaks Out Against Schooling in Graduation Speech - 4 views

  • I am now enlightened
    • Lorie Shuck
       
      by whose standard?
    • Lorie Shuck
       
      Interesting viewpoint of one successful high school graduate.
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    "Last month, Erica Goldson graduated as valedictorian of Coxsackie-Athens High School. Instead of using her graduation speech to celebrate the triumph of her victory, the school, and the teachers that made it happen, she channeled her inner Ivan Illich and de-constructed the logic of a valedictorian and the whole educational system."
Lorie Shuck

21 Things That Will Be Obsolete by 2020 | MindShift - 1 views

  • we don’t need kids to ‘go to school’ more; we need them to ‘learn’ more
  • In ten years, the teacher who hasn’t yet figured out how to use tech to personalize learning will be the teacher out of a job
  • This is actually one that could occur over the next five years. Education Schools have to realize that if they are to remain relevant, they are going to have to demand that 21st century tech integration be modeled by the very professors who are supposed to be preparing our teachers.
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    "Inspired by Sandy Speicher's vision of the designed school day of the future, reader Shelly Blake-Plock shared his own predictions of that ideal day. How close are we to this? The post was written in December 2009, and Blake-Plock says he's seeing some of these already beginning to come to fruition."
Lorie Shuck

Education: Learning styles debunked - 0 views

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    "ScienceDaily (Dec. 17, 2009) - Are you a verbal learner or a visual learner? Chances are, you've pegged yourself or your children as either one or the other and rely on study techniques that suit your individual learning needs. And you're not alone -- for more than 30 years, the notion that teaching methods should match a student's particular learning style has exerted a powerful influence on education. The long-standing popularity of the learning styles movement has in turn created a thriving commercial market amongst researchers, educators, and the general public."
Lorie Shuck

Encyclopedia of Educational Technology - 0 views

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    The Encyclopedia of Educational Technology (EET) is a collection of short multimedia articles on a variety of topics related to the fields of instructional design and education and training. The primary audiences for the EET are students and novice to intermediate practitioners in these fields, who need a brief overview as a starting point to further research on specific topics. Authors are graduate students, professors, and others who contribute voluntarily. Articles are short and use multimedia to enrich learning rather than merely decorate the pages.
Lorie Shuck

Is Technology Making Your Students Stupid? - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Educa... - 0 views

  • It indicates that, even if you think that allowing students to look at other information relevant to what they're being taught might enhance their learning, it actually appears to have the opposite effect.
    • Lorie Shuck
       
      Or maybe it indicates that the instructor lectured primarily on what would be on the test. What is the ultimate end result for the students? Can students comprehend concepts better by looking at relevant websites? Is learning material for a test the sole indicator of whether a student understands the concepts... and can that be a true predictor of future success in the chosen field?
Sarah Lang

Information on the New DMCA Exemptions - 0 views

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    First in series of articles about the changes to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. "The exemption on the cracking of [Content Scrambling Systems] now extends to all college and university instructors, as well as students in film and media studies courses, and the permitted "educational uses" now include critical commentary and documentary production, as well as the exceptionally broad category of "non-commercial videos."
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    More information about the DVDs "Letting Us Rip: Our New Right to Fair Use of DVDs" http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Letting-Us-Rip-Our-New-Right/25797/
Lorie Shuck

Disrupting Ourselves: The Problem of Learning in Higher Education (EDUCAUSE Review) | E... - 0 views

  • they almost always point enthusiastically to the co-curricular experiences in which they invested their time and energy.
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    "A growing appreciation for the porous boundaries between the classroom and life experience, along with the power of social learning, authentic audiences, and integrative contexts, has created not only promising changes in learning but also disruptive moments in teaching. "
Lorie Shuck

Best Practices in Online Teaching - 0 views

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    "Summary: This course provides practical strategies and pedagogical advice for instructors teaching in an online environment. The course includes advice about: preparing to teach in an online environment, managing the teaching of a course, and addressing larger issues surrounding online teaching (e.g. workload, intellectual property, etc.) The course includes interviews from a number of teachers who have taught in an online environment. This course is based on a training session offered to faculty who teach at The World Campus at Penn State University."
Lorie Shuck

Wylio.com - free pictures - 1 views

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    "Wylio automatically sizes the image, hosts the image, and builds the photo credit into the code."
Lorie Shuck

Responding to Student Writing (audio style) - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Educ... - 2 views

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    Responding to student writing in an effective and timely manner is important to student success. And we want students to succeed, to be good writers. However, students don't often expect to receive detailed and intricate feedback on their work; they expect to see the dreaded "red pen" marks. They assume that we don't really read their writing, that we give each page a cursory glance, and that we are only looking for spelling and grammatical errors. This implies-and the students believe-that "writing" is only "writing correctly." But writing is much more than that, and as professionals we understand this. We know that revision has a key role in the process of writing, but good revision requires good feedback.
Ben Wyatt

News Details :: Top 12 Ways to Bring the Real World into Your Classroom - 0 views

shared by Ben Wyatt on 21 Sep 09 - Cached
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    article on how to bring the real world into the classroom, great ways to connect the outside world to what is being taught in class
Lorie Shuck

Mass Video Courses May Free Up Professors for Personalized Teaching - Technology - The ... - 0 views

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    "New York University plans to join the growing movement to publish academic material online as free, open courseware. But in addition to giving away content-something other colleges have done-NYU plans a more ambitious experiment. The university wants to explore ways to reprogram the roles of professors in large undergraduate classes, using technology to free them up for more personal instruction."
Lorie Shuck

More Professors Could Share Lectures Online. But Should They? - Technology - The Chroni... - 1 views

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    College 2.0: More Professors Could Share Lectures Online. But Should They? There are good reasons to press the 'record' button, but uploading to the Internet might desecrate the classroom
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