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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Districts Put Open Educational Resources to Work - Education Week - 0 views

  • Bethel and Grandview both pursued open resources in large part because they were not satisfied that commercial curricula were closely aligned with the common core.
  • They called on their teachers, and other content experts, to help them find the open resources that hit the mark.
  • It's safe to assume many districts switching to open resources will have to devote large amounts of time and money to finding what they need and preparing teachers to use new materials, Mr. Bliss said. Yet that work brings rewards, he argued. In going through that process, teachers get "some of the best PD they've ever had."
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  • One of the largest open-resource undertakings is being led by the K-12 OER Collaborative, a coalition of 12 states and a group of nonprofits developing resources in English/language arts and math.
  • EngageNY, initially supported with federal Race to the Top funding, provides open, common-core-aligned English and math resources to K-12 audiences.
  • At the same time, more districts also may choose to rely on private vendors for "wraparound" services to support educators, while they turn to open sources for core academic content.
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    Education Week published online 6.10.15 on why districts put OERs to work in their schools. Commercial publishers fighting back saying that curriculum is more than content; C.P.s offer "wraparound support" for their resources to educators.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Reinventing Yourself After 60: Where Do Baby Boomers Go from Here? (Video) - 0 views

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    Margaret Manning interviews John Tarnoff, reinvention guy who writes for Huffington Post Reinvention each week. Our initial challenge is our mindset and finding out who we are now after 55 or 50 years of living. Then reframing who we are to avoid or discard stereotypes of old-aging ideas.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Reinventing the LMS Market - Again | 2015-09-28 | CLOmedia - 0 views

  • here has also been an explosion of written content, published in blogs and articles, all generally easy to find and curate with mobile tools, social media and various products that recommend content. This new digital world now offers a veritable ocean of free or nearly free content, often authored by experts, seasoned professionals, business leaders and well-known academics. It’s not a world most traditional learning management systems, or LMS, were designed to manage.
  • struggle to help employees find, manage and track all the new content on the Internet.
  • learning today is often learner-driven.
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  • new LMS might be a video learning portal to which anyone can add links, a content aggregation tool, new open learning platforms, or an IT-developed platform that takes existing IT tools and extends them into knowledge management.
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    Very interesting blog post by Josh Bersin on how LMS is figuring out how to organize content generated by employees from online and other sources for corporations/employers
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Four Directions - 0 views

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    Very nice skill compass for lifelong learning by Online Internet Institute 1. Collaboration/communication--using a variety of technology tools and techniques for organizing people into effective ad hoc teams 2. Exploration/evaluation--making sense of the Internet, by learning how to survey the field and assess what's available 3. Navigation/research--strategies for seeking and finding good data and 4. synthesis/presentation--taking what makes sense and using it to make meaning
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Accenture-2013-Skills-And-Employment-Trends-Survey-Perspectives-On-Training.pdf - 0 views

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    has interesting stats on training and finding skilled employees, up to 1/3 of employees are contingent workers, 2013
Lisa Levinson

Modern Parenthood | Pew Research Center - 0 views

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    "The way mothers and fathers spend their time has changed dramatically in the past half century. Dads are doing more housework and child care; moms more paid work outside the home. Neither has overtaken the other in their "traditional" realms, but their roles are converging, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of long-term data on time use. At the same time, roughly equal shares of working mothers and fathers report in a new Pew Research Center survey feeling stressed about juggling work and family life: 56% of working moms and 50% of working dads say they find it very or somewhat difficult to balance these responsibilities."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

ISTE | 6 project-management tips for PBL - 0 views

  • 1. Make a digital home for projects in a learning management system (LMS). This type of digital organizer is somewhat similar to the tools, such as Microsoft Sharepoint, that PMs use in the work world. For class projects, an LMS can act as a container and organizer that supports team communication and collaboration, the project calendar, assignments, polls, journals or blogs, grading, and other resources and materials. The New Tech Network of PBL-focused schools uses a proprietary LMS called Echo. Another PBL-focused platform to consider is Project Foundry. More general LMSs include Schoology, Edmodo and Google Classroom. Chalkup has a rubric builder built into it. Or, if a minimal project organizer will do, consider constructing a wiki. A simple wiki site such as Google Sites or Wikispaces might be all a class needs.
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    first tip is to find a digital home for projects in a LMS but it can be as simple as Google Sites or Wikispaces instead of Schoology or Edmodo or Google Classroom. 2. make sure everyone has anytime, anywhere access 3. set your support structures 4. turn the work over to the workers 5. track student progress and offer guidance when needed 6. learn from your mistakes
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why Some Freelancers Fail at Social Media in 4 Lessons - 0 views

  • Selling/finding new customers is a long process – that is no different in social media than anywhere else.
  • Social Media is about interaction and connecting. Not about sales pitches. Find your target audience and provide what they want first.
  • Everybody needs a message. What is the value you provide? What do you want to be known for? Why should people want to work with you?
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  • Being a freelancer is always harder.
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    great post by Susanna Gebauer on freelancers using social media, from September 18, 2014.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

16 Ways to Use Twitter to Improve Your Next Conference | face2face - 0 views

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    Jenn Deering Davis, 2012 Recommends: using an official conference hashtag 1. unique tag 2. communicate official tag 3. Track mention of the official and unofficial hashtags Surfacing interesting conference topics 4. Follow conversation as it unfolds 5. Pay attention to retweets 6. Use official handle to ask questions 7. Find problems quickly Sharing important conference content 8. Use official handle to post announcements and schedule changes 9. Distribute speaker slides 10. Answer attendee questions Tracking audience engagement 11. Measure total Twitter audience size 12. Determine popular speakers and presentations 13. Share metrics with sponsors Gathering feedback or your next conference 14. Tweet links to conference feedback survey 15. Compare this conference to other events 16. Analyze qualitative tweet content
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

BEtreat certificate program | Wenger-Trayner - 1 views

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    Look at how the social learning certificate portfolio requirements in the overview are presented with the certificate timeline. I find this clear and compelling . . . should we adapt for badges?
Lisa Levinson

Topic: New User - Invalid Key - The Solution · BuddyPress.org - 1 views

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    I think this addresses our registration problem, but will send to Kristen to find out.
anonymous

The Global Rise of Female Entrepreneurs - Jackie VanderBrug - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    "Women's entrepreneurship has hit a media tipping point. The question is: Is it just a passing media fad that will soon be a blip on the radar screen, or is it actually a real, fundamental economic force that's reshaping the world? I think it's safe to say that it's the latter. Women-owned entities in the formal sector represent approximately 37% of enterprises globally - a market worthy of attention by businesses and policy makers alike. While aggregated data is often challenging to find, the recent Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) found 126 million women starting or running businesses, and 98 million operating established (over three and a half years) businesses. That's 224 million women impacting the global economy - and this survey counts only 67 of the 188 countries recognized by the World Bank."
anonymous

61 Best Social Media Tools for Small Business - 2 views

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    "Small businesses are eager to find valuable tools that take a lot of the time and trouble out of social media marketing and that do so without costing an arm and a leg. I think we'd all want tools like that, right? Well, I went searching for just this kind of simple, easy, cost-effective tool, and I came up with 61 that made the cut. I tried out more than 100 in total, and I'm sure I missed a few along the way (please tell me in the comments or on Twitter which ones deserve a look)."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

It's not about adding technology to training, but about changing training | Learning in the Social Workplace - 0 views

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    Quote that Jane Hart found from Jane Bozarth, 12/6/14, rest of Jane Hart's post is just as interesting. well worth reading. "The thing that is going to change the game is - the learners …. They are changing the concept of training, and we are increasingly moving toward an age in which the adult worker will not sit still for training that just looks like more "school". They're becoming more sophisticated in their understanding of how learning looks and how it happens. We're going to have to figure out how to provide better performance support, in smaller bites, in places easy for them to access. And we'll need to offer time and space and support so they can create the user-generated help that others need. And if we don't? They won't wait for us. They'll find the means to do it anyway.""
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A Social Media Etiquette Guide You Might Find Useful : @ProBlogger - 0 views

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    interesting infographic on social media etiquette, numbers of participants, gender distribution, etc. for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google Plus, Instagram, Pinterest...
Lisa Levinson

The Emoji Have Won the Battle of Words - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Jessica Bennett of the NYTimes writes about how emoji are replacing words in emails. on twitter and other social media, even though it might be less time to type in the words. Although use is skyrocketing, communication by emoji is open to interpretation by the recipient. There are now sites, blogs, and a social network (Emoji.li) that uses only emoji for communication. A nonprofit devoted to emoji standardization across platforms (Unicode Consortium) has been formed. Examples: In their short life, emoji managed to find an exceptional cultural range: One Internet wit put out an emoji translation of Beyoncé's "Drunk in Love," and an emoji-only version of "Moby Dick," called "Emoji Dick," was recently accepted into the Library of Congress. Legal experts have even discussed whether an emoji death threat [gun and face] could be admissible in court. "I'm not sure you can really speak of it as a full-fledged language yet," said Ben Zimmer, a linguist, "but it does seem to have fascinating combinatorial possibilities. Any sort of symbolic system, when it's used for communication, is going to develop dialects."
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    I am certainly out of the loop on this one! A whole new language is developing - back to cave drawings but in a digital format?
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Finding Your Voice - A Social Media Crash Course « - 0 views

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    Very good post on Got Clicks? on social media--Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and HootSuite because it focuses first on why you want to use the tool. And then gets into nice explanation of how to use it. July 21, 2014
Lisa Levinson

The End of 'Genius' - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Opinion piece in the July 19th 2014 NYTimes by Joshua Wolf Shenk, the author of the forthcoming book: Powers of Two: Finding Essence of Innovation in Creative Pairs". He begins:"the lone genius is a myth that has outlived its usefulness. Fortunately, a more truthful model is emerging: the creative network, as with the crowd-sourced Wikipedia or the writer's room at "The Daily Show" or - the real heart of creativity - the intimate exchange of the creative pair, such as John Lennon and Paul McCartney and myriad other examples with which we've yet to fully reckon." and ends with: "This raises vital questions. What is the optimal balance between social immersion and creative solitude? Why does interpersonal conflict so often coincide with innovation? Looking at pairs allows us to grapple with these questions, which are as basic to the human experience as the push and pull of love itself. As a culture, we've long been preoccupied with romance. But we should also take seriously something just as important, but long overlooked - creative intimacy."
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    Although the author stresses pairs, the history of genius is really interesting - for example, before the 16th century, individuals were not geniuses, but having genius which was a value that emerged from within a person given to them at birth".
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

New Survey Highlights Challenges Facing Small Membership Associations: Associations Now - 0 views

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    AssociationsNow blog, July 30, 2014 "Toronto-based software company Wild Apricot, identified the same top three priorities reported in last year's survey: Small-membership organizations are most concerned about increasing membership, increasing member engagement, and demonstrating member value. Among the challenges that respondents said they face were attracting and engaging millennials and getting their boards and members to adopt new technologies. The survey gathered input from 487 organizations that represent fewer than 500 members and have operating budgets of less than $500,000. The findings provide a glimpse into the many facets of running a small-membership organization, including information about membership growth, recruitment and retention, membership models, and finances."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

In the Sharing Economy, Workers Find Both Freedom and Uncertainty - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    article by Natasha Singer on sharing economy and gig economy, reliance on technology such as Uber, Lyft, Sidecar for connecting strangers with drivers of their own cars, Task Rabbit for online chores. Check app. Accept. Job. Repeat.
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