Skip to main content

Home/ WomensLearningStudio/ Group items tagged Siemens

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Pioneer of Ed-Tech Innovation Says He's Frustrated by Disruptors' Narrative - Wired Cam... - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting post by Jeffrey Young, August 6, 2015, on George Siemens' reactions to closed door gathering of educators at the White House. Siemens wrote his own blog post linked to in this post. In this post, Young reports that Siemens came away with strong feelings -- "stunned" "exceptionally irritated" and "disappointed" "about what he heard there".
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Siemens.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    This paper written by George Siemens in 2008 on Learning in Networks raises issues very similar to those we are raising in our discussion at CPSquare. This paper also has implications for how the Women's Learning Studio is launched into practice in its discussion of teacher as learning atelier, concierge, etc. Google Scholar, Scopus, and open access journals offer increased access to academic resources; an extension to more informal approaches such as regular internet search and Wikipedia. Social software (blogs, wikis, social bookmarking, instant messaging, Skype, Ning) provide opportunities for learners to create, dialogue about, and disseminate information. But what becomes of the teacher? How do the practices of the educator change in networked environments, where information is readily accessible? How do we design learning when learners may adopt multiple paths and approaches to content and curriculum? How can we achieve centralized learning aims in decentralized environments? This paper will explore the shifting role of educators in networked learning, with particular emphasis on curatorial, atelier, concierge, and networked roles of educators, in order to assist learners in forming diverse personal learning networks for deep understanding of complex fields.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

elearnspace › White House: Innovation in Higher Education - 0 views

  •  
    Siemens on higher education after being in WH group of educators recently. Interesting, strong reaction, well worth a read.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

elearnspace › What I've learned in my first week of a dual-layer MOOC (DALMOOC) - 0 views

  •  
    blog by George Siemens reflecting on his first week of a dual-layer MOOC, October 28, 2014. "I'm biased toward learners owning their own content and owning the spaces where they learn. My reason is simple: knowledge institutions mirror the architecture of knowledge in the era in which they exist. Today, knowledge is diverse, messy, partial, complex, and rapidly changing. What learners need today is not instructivism but rather a process of personal sensemaking and wayfinding where they learn to identify what is important, what matters, and what can be ignored. Most courses assume that the instructor and designer should sensemake for learners. The instructor chooses the important pieces, sets it in a structured path, and feeds content to learners. Essentially, in this model, we take away the sweet spot of learning. Making sense of topic areas through social and exploratory processes is the heart of learning needs in complex knowledge environments. " Though I am biased toward learner-in-control, I do recognize the value of formal instruction, particularly when the topic area is new to a learner. Even then, I would like to see rapid transitions from content provision to having learners create artifacts that reflect their understanding. These artifacts can be images, audio, video, simulations, blog posts, or any other resource that can be created and shared with other learners. Learning transparently is an act of teaching.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

the problem with EdX: a MOOC by any other name? | theory.cribchronicles.com - 1 views

  •  
    #change11, blog post by Bon Stewart, May 2, 2012 And here's the rub... "The original MOOCs - the connectivist MOOCs a la Siemens & Downes, and the work of David Wiley and Alec Couros and others - have been, for the most part, about harnessing the capacity of participatory media to connect people and ideas. They've been built around lateral, distributed structures, encouraging blog posts and extensive peer-to-peer discussion formats. Even in live sessions showcasing facilitator's expertise, these ur-MOOCs have tended towards lively backchannel chats, exploring participants' knowledge and experiences and ideas. They've been, in short, actively modelled on the Internet itself. They've been experiential and user-driven. Their openness hasn't stopped at registration capacity, but extended to curricular tangents and participatory contributions and above all, to connections: they've given learners not just access to information but to networks. They've been messy, sometimes, but they have definitely not been business as usual. The problem with EdX is that, scale and cost aside, it IS essentially a traditional learning model revamped for a new business era. It puts decision-making power, agency, and the right to determine what counts as knowledge pretty much straight back into the hands of gatekeeping institutions."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

elearnspace › Adios Ed Tech. Hola something else. - 0 views

  •  
    George Siemens does "quit Lit" to explain his move into something else that's not yet defined. Stephen Downes cites this blog post approvingly on Twitter.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

MIT Master's Program to Use MOOCs as 'Admissions Test' - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • MOOCs may soon become a prominent factor in admissions decisions at selective colleges
  • new twist on admissions will lead to a broader pool of applicants. "We will find people who never thought they would be able to apply," he said.
  • "What this system does," he said, "is it lets anyone prove their merit."
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • George Siemens,
  • applauded MIT’s admissions experiment. "We’re just starting to see the impact in education of the Internet on the legacy structure of higher education," he said. "This reflects an accessibility mind shift," he added.
  •  
    Very interesting experiment to allow six months of MOOC work to be used in admissions to MIT instead of transcripts of performance from schools that are unknown/untested. If MIT will allow MOOC accomplishment to satisfy entry-credentialing, what about employers?
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page