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Thomas Galvez

Becoming Screen Literate - 0 views

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    Very important article from the NY Times about the need for visual literacy.
Thomas Galvez

Podcast trumps lecture in one college study - 0 views

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    Students who listened to a lecture via iTunes U outperformed those who attended in person -- pause button a factor
Thomas Galvez

AASA hears what's about to disrupt schools - 0 views

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    Online instruction, says best-selling education author, will change schooling as we know it--if we're lucky
Thomas Galvez

Measuring 21st-century skills - New resource helps teach 21st-century skills - 0 views

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    Free online guide maps digital-age skills to social studies projects and tasks
Thomas Galvez

DIGITAL YOUTH White Paper - 0 views

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    Living and Learning with New Media: Summary of Findings from the Digital Youth Project
Jeffrey Plaman

educational-origami » Bloom's Digital Taxonomy - 0 views

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    This is a great site that introduces the revised Blooms in the context of ICT integration.
Thomas Galvez

New Reading, New Writing - 0 views

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    Will Richardson Blog post, focusing on Diigo and its impact on critical thinking.
Thomas Galvez

Opening Up Education--The Remix | Academic Commons - 0 views

  • that a key tenet of open education is that education can be improved by making educational assets visible and accessible and by harnessing the collective wisdom of a community of practice and reflection
  • the unrelenting velocity of change means that many of our skills have a shorter shelf life, suggesting that much of our learning will need to take place outside of traditional school and university environments.
  • Nor is it likely that current methods of teaching and learning will suffice to prepare students for the lives they will lead in the twenty-first century.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • In response, we need to find a way to reconceptualize many twentieth-century education models, and at the same time reinforce learning outside of formal schooling. There may be powerful ways to blur the distinction between formal learning and informal where both turn on the social life of learning.
  • So to me, that’s why I find this so exciting, is that in a curious way the explosion of digital technology still increasing this exponential path is driving change, change, change ever faster, which is creating a tremendous problem for the old ways of learning and teaching. But the same thing that’s driving this challenge we have is also providing us the tools and mechanisms to attack this problem in fundamentally new ways.
  • How might the slow-to-change culture of education adapt elements inherent in a fast-paced technological world? When is it most appropriate to do so?
  • As a result, individual educators spend heroic amounts of time on planning and preparation, but with enormous duplication of effort and no economies of scale. Apart from the lack of efficiency in preparation, educational quality also suffers: While some educators regularly create outstanding learning experiences for their students, some do not. How could the best teaching processes be shared among the widest number of educators
  • In these projects, the power of the Internet is used to overcome barriers to access by serving as a medium for freely distributing content. Making existing content available in this way is based on the revolutionary idea that education and discovery are best advanced when knowledge is shared openly.
  • Because teaching and learning are so hard to see and know, they are even harder to systematically analyze and improve. One reason why policymakers have turned their attention to the clamor and cry for assessment and accountability is higher education’s “black box” of classroom excellence and student success. If the so-called “best practices” of teaching and learning could be identified and articulated beyond local environs, shared in a transparent and transferable mode with an assurance of accomplishment at the end of the day, then educators the world over might be convinced to embrace change.
  • The failure is harder to put into words. It could be described as our lack of progress on sharing “pedagogical know-how” among educators
  • but we have not captured the teaching processes that expert educators use to bring learning alive in their e-learning courses
  • We think of this genre as embracing the ideals of scholarship and the practices of our contemporary, digital-participatory culture.
  • Our knowledge and understanding of “technology-enhanced learning” will accelerate faster in a teaching community that acts like a learning system--one that makes knowledge of what it takes to learn explicit, adapts it, tests it, refines practice, reflects, rearticulates, and shares that new knowledge
Thomas Galvez

Flexr Flexbook - 0 views

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    Create a textbook with customized content.
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