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Claude Almansi

What We're All About | Peer to Peer University (P2PU - 0 views

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    "Peer 2 Peer University (we mostly just say P2PU) is a grassroots open education project that organizes learning outside of institutional walls and gives learners recognition for their achievements. P2PU creates a model for lifelong learning alongside traditional formal higher education. Leveraging the internet and educational materials openly available online, P2PU enables high-quality low-cost education opportunities. Learning for the people, by the people. About almost anything. Our values Three things guide everything we do: openness, community and peer learning. P2PU is open Being open enables more people to participate and innovate, and makes us accountable. Our community is open so that everyone can participate. Our content is open so that everyone can use it. Our model & technology are open so others can experiment with it and we can all improve it together. Our processes are open so that we remain accountable to our purpose and community. P2PU is a community P2PU is community-centered and our governance model reflects that. P2PU is built driven by volunteers, who are involved in all aspects of the project. As members of this community, we speak and act with civility. We show tolerance and respect for other opinions, people, and perspectives. We strive for quality as a process - driven by community-review, feedback and revision. P2PU is peer learning P2PU is teaching and learning by peers for peers. Everyone has something to contribute and everyone has something to learn. We are all teachers & learners. We take responsibility for our own and each others' learning. "
Claude Almansi

Coursera Apologizes for Translation Quality Tweet - 0 views

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    "By Carl Straumsheim March 6, 2015 1 Comment Massive open online course provider Coursera this week drew the ire of some translators on Twitter after claiming "that the quality of the Coursera's Global Volunteer Translator Community... is better than a professional translator." The roughly 5,600 volunteer members of the community help translate lecture video subtitles. After a number of critical tweets, including from Coursera critic Paul-Olivier Dehaye, the MOOC provider deleted the tweet. Coursera later apologized in its Global Translator Community newsletter. Dehaye chronicled the exchanged on Storify."
fabrizio bartoli

edWeb: A professional online community for educators - 0 views

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    Connect with Colleagues in Education, Create Professional Learning Communities, Collaborate on Goals and Initiatives, Support for New Teachers, Practice 21st Century Skills
Claude Almansi

A statement on online course content and accessibility | Berkeley News (UC Berkeley, Se... - 0 views

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    " We look forward to continued dialog with the Department of Justice regarding the requirements of the ADA and options for compliance. Yet we do so with the realization that, due to our current financial constraints, we might not be able to continue to provide free public content under the conditions laid out by the Department of Justice to the extent we have in the past. In many cases the requirements proposed by the department would require the university to implement extremely expensive measures to continue to make these resources available to the public for free. We believe that in a time of substantial budget deficits and shrinking state financial support, our first obligation is to use our limited resources to support our enrolled students. Therefore, we must strongly consider the unenviable option of whether to remove content from public access. Please know that we fully intend to exhaust every available option to retain or restore free public availability of online content. It is our hope that we will find an appropriate resolution with the Department of Justice that allows us to serve the extended seeing- and hearing-impaired community and continue to provide free online content."
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    Risposta di Berkeley alla lettera del Dipartimento di Giustizia US sulla non conformità dei materiali di corso con i requisiti della legge.
Claude Almansi

digi.metsch @ Digitales Lehren und Prüfen - Medien und Bildung - 0 views

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    "...Ries arbeitet gerade vor allem an der Übersetzung von Online-Kursen. Dabei sei es wichtig, dass die Übersetzung nicht nur rein sprachlich stattfindet, sondern auch Beispiele auf die jeweilige Nation angepasst werden müssen. Für Coursera arbeiten derzeit viele freiwillige Übersetzer aus den verschiedensten Ländern, die als Global Translator Community bezeichnet wird. Die Übersetzungsqualität der Community war, entgegen den Erwartungen, erstaunlich hoch. Die Übersetzer hatten die zu übersetzenden Kurse bereits absolviert und verfügten demnach über einen besseren fachlichen Wortschatz, als professionelle Übersetzer. TRAMOOC arbeitet gerade an einem Generator, der für einen speziellen Fachbereich Inhalte übersetzt."
Claude Almansi

Half an Hour: International Perspective: The MOOC and Campus-Based Learning - 0 views

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    "Summary of a presentation by Phillip D. Long, University of Queensland We want to see the learning design patterns change, we want to see phy6sical participation in the profession, that is, engagement with the content and the practice, in the rich spaces that we have, and let the content engagement, which can be well-designed online, be the place where content is delivered. (Eg. Pictures of classes, eg., composed of 'terraces'). Recently, we tried bringing people together en masse. We took a large space that is a sports facility and turned it into a learning environment, tables of nine, an instructor and two TAs, and engagement simply in terms of 'showing up' is stunning, 85-90 per cent attendance. Our engagement with MOOCs, and we've just started to partner with EdX, is because we are learning how to refactor how learning on campus takes place, to put the effort into learning design into the online context, moving away from these little boxes, and looking at the campus as a series of practice spaces. (SD- Stephen Downes: This is a good model - but one wonders why it would be reserved for tuition-paying students - why not move it out into the community as a whole - you'd get *much* better 'tables of nine')"
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    SD = Stephen Downes
Claude Almansi

Seven years after Nature, pilot study compares Wikipedia favorably to other encyclopedi... - 2 views

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    "Posted by Dario Taraborelli on August 2, 2012 Improving the quality of articles has long been one of the primary aims of contributors to Wikipedia, and is one of the Wikimedia movement's 2010-15 strategic priorities, but measuring it objectively has remained a challenge. In 2005, Nature famously reported that Wikipedia articles on scientific topics contained just four errors per article on average, compared to three errors per article in the online edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica. Britannica objected to the report, but Nature stood by it, and the report remains widely cited today. Since that time, however, there have been relatively few independent analyses of Wikipedia article quality, despite the enormous growth of the project. Wikipedia today counts more than 23 million articles across languages (more than 4 million articles in the English Wikipedia alone) compared to 3.7 million total articles in 2005; today it ranks 6th by overall traffic according to Alexa, while it ranked 37th in 2005. (...) The Wikimedia Foundation is announcing the release of a pilot study conducted by Epic, an e-learning consultancy, in partnership with Oxford University - "Assessing the Accuracy and Quality of Wikipedia Entries Compared to Popular Online Alternative Encyclopaedias: A Preliminary Comparative Study Across Disciplines in English, Spanish and Arabic." The study compared a sample of English Wikipedia articles to equivalent articles in Encyclopaedia Britannica, Spanish Wikipedia to Enciclonet, and Arabic Wikipedia to Mawsoah and Arab Encyclopaedia. 22 articles in the sample were blind-assessed by 2 to 3 native speaking academic experts each, both quantitatively and qualitatively. The small size of the sample does not allow us to generalize the results to Wikipedia as a whole. However, as a pilot primarily focused on methodology, the study offers new insights into the design of a protocol for expert assessment of encyclopedic contents. For our editor community a
fabrizio bartoli

Coding With Scratch | Summer with Pursuitery - 2 views

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    "What is Coding with Scratch? Coding with Scratch is a free, online class that will teach you how to program using Scratch, a graphical programming language and online community where you can create your own interactive stories, games, and animations - and share your creations with others around the world."
Claude Almansi

IntroOpenEd 2007: an experience on Open Education by a virtual community of teachers | ... - 0 views

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    "Antonio Fini, Andreas Formiconi, Alessandro Giorni, Nuccia Silvana Pirruccello, Elisa Spadavecchia, Emanuela Zibordi Abstract In Fall 2007 David Wiley, professor at Utah State University held a course about Open Education. That time, however, Dr Wiley's course was followed by a rather unusual group of students. The Fall 2007 edition, in fact, was available to anybody, free of charge, all over the world. The only requisite required was the possession of a blog for the completion of the weekly assignments. The present paper, whose authors attended the course completing it successfully, is an account of the experience they had. It can be considered an innovating experience from many different viewpoints and can be regarded as an example of how the world of the formal education can meet the demands of the informal one, in the broader landscape of professional training and lifelong learning. Keywords OER; Open Education; online community; informal learning Full Text: PDF This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License."
fabrizio bartoli

Scratch - For Educators - 3 views

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    Crea storie, giochi e animazioni Condividili con tutti, For Educators Scratch is designed with learning and education in mind. A wide variety of educators have been supporting Scratch creators since 2007, in both formal and informal learning environments - K-12 classroom teachers, educational and computer science researchers, librarians, museum educators, and parents. Cos'è ScratchEd? Partito nel Luglio 2009, ScratchEd è una comunità online dove coloro che insegnano Scratch possono condividere storie, scambiare risorse, fare domande e trovare altre persone con i loro stessi interessi. Dalla data di lancio, più di 7500 educatori provenienti da tutto il mondo si sono uniti alla comunità, condividendo centinaia di risorse e dando inizio a migliaia di discussioni. Unisciti gratuitamente alla comunità di ScratchEd sul sito scratch-ed.org. Come posso imparare di più sui modi in cui gli educatori usano Scratch - e come posso usarlo? Non sei sicuro di cosa è possibile fare con Scratch? Leggi una storia su come gli educatori hanno inserito attività basate su Scratch in moltissimi ambienti diversi. O esplora le risorse suddivise per età, discipline e ambienti. Guarda webinars e rivedi documenti come la guida al curriculum Scratch. Oltre ad esplorare la comunità online di ScratchEd e le sue risorse, puoi discutere con il Team di ScratchEd e con gli altri educatori di Scratch anche grazie a Twitter, Facebook, Edmodo, a incontri settimanali e alla nostra newsletter trimestrale.
Claude Almansi

Learning Creative Learning (MIT Media Lab Open Course) - 0 views

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    " Sign-up is now closed. But don't worry, we'll definitely be back! Follow us at @medialabcourse for updates. Free & Online! You've been dying to take the MIT Media Lab course on creative learning, but you're not in Cambridge? Despair no more. We invite you to join the course right here, on the interwebs. It's free of charge and we hope you'll like it. A Big Experiment This is a big experiment. Things will break. We don't have all the answers. Sometimes we plan to rely on you to make it work. But we'll try our very darndest to make sure you have a good time, and get something out of it. Weekly Lessons Make new friends, and start learning from weekly live videos, readings, discussions, and project-based activities. Open for signup now, course starts February 11th. Questions? Drop us a note in our Google+ community or send us an email at medialabcourse@p2pu.org. All materials licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license."
fabrizio bartoli

Teach the Web - 0 views

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    Teach the Web: a Mozilla Open Online Collaboration for Webmaker mentors May 2 - June 30 Learn how to teach digital literacies, master webmaking tools, develop your own educational resources, and take what you learned back to your communities and classrooms.
Claude Almansi

DDN Articles - What's RSS and Why Should I Care About It? [copia Internet Archive del 8... - 0 views

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    "Author: Andy Carvin , EDC Center for Media & Community | December 7th, 2004 You may have noticed recently that lots of websites now contain little graphical buttons with the word XML on them. For example: XML button When you click on the button, all you see is a bunch of jumbled text and computer code. What's this all about? It's an RSS feed, and they're changing the way people access the Internet. RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is a technical format that allows online publishers to share and distribute their content to other websites or individual Internet users. It's commonly used for distributing headlines on news websites. Bloggers use it to distribute summaries of their blog entries as well. RSS is written in the Internet coding language known as XML, which is why you see RSS buttons labeled that way. If a website publishes an RSS page, commonly known as an RSS "feed," this feed will contain summaries of all the recent articles posted on that site. For example, Yahoo News publishes news related to world headlines, national news, sports, etc. These you can all read by going to the Yahoo website. But they also publish RSS feeds for each of these subjects. Each RSS feed contains a summary of the most recent news stories posted. Similarly, the Digital Divide Network publishes RSS feeds for our news headlines, events listings and other content on our website. I even have my own RSS feed for articles that I publish on my personal blog, Andy Carvin's Waste of Bandwidth. But why do RSS feeds look like a jumbled mess when I click on them with most Web browsers? It's because RSS feeds are meant to be read by machines rather than people. Software and websites can understand the data contained in RSS feeds and make it available to people on personalized websites, through software known as news aggregators, even through email. So when you aggregate RSS feeds, you're having a computer collect content from many different websites and organize them in a convenient pla
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    Linkato in http://iamarf.org/2013/04/20/racconti-ltis13/ , commento 42. RSS come empowerment.
fabrizio bartoli

Learning Labs - Guest - Webinars - 0 views

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    "eTwinning Webinars are a new opportunity foreTwinners to become involved in Continuing Professional Development online. The webinars will combine live communication sessions with some offline activities in the Learning Lab. They will last for 5 days. Some are open to all teachers while some are restricted to registered eTwinners. All you need to participate in a webinar is a computer, a headset and maybe a microphone, although you can easily particpate without one."
Claude Almansi

Coursera Announces Details for Selling Certificates and Verifying Identities - Wired Ca... - 0 views

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    January 9, 2013 by Jeffrey R. Young "...Setting the Price The company also revealed more details about how it would award certificates and how much it would charge for them. Students who want a verified certificate will have to decide early in the course and pay upfront. Paying that fee will put students on what the company is calling the "Signature Track." The company and colleges are still struggling to decide what to charge for the certificates, though in its latest announcement Coursera said the price would run $30 to $100. "It's a huge decision: You're essentially setting a market," said Daphne Koller, a co-founder of Coursera, in an interview this week with The Chronicle. "No one has ever priced this before." Officials also stressed that they would offer financial aid to students who demonstrated that they could not afford the fees but could benefit from the verified certificates. Ms. Koller said Coursera would continue to offer free unofficial certificates to students who passed some of its courses. So why would someone pay for the verified certificates? Peter Lange, provost at Duke University, which plans to offer one of the courses in the new pilot, said each free certificate would have a clear disclaimer on it: "It says something to the effect of, We cannot vouch that the person who got this document took the course or did the work." The new Signature Track could mean serious revenue for Coursera, and for the 33 partner colleges that will get a cut of it. Exactly how the colleges will divide that revenue is still being worked out, it seems. Mr. Lange said the question was on the agenda at the next monthly meeting of Duke's Advisory Committee on Online Education." So, when Coursera staff offered free Statements of Accomplishment as "Recognition" to the volunteers of the Global Translator community, they did so in full awareness of their lack of value and of the mentioned disclaimer
Claude Almansi

Subtitles and Captions for Every Video on the Web - 1st post of the Amara blog, April 1... - 2 views

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    "Here's the problem: web video is beginning to rival television, but there isn't a good open resource for subtitling. Here's our mission: we're trying to make captioning, subtitling, and translating video publicly accessible in a way that's free and open, just like the Web. Our approach: Make a simple and ubiquitous way to request, create, and translate subtitles for any video Work with others to define open protocols so that whenever subtitles for a video exist, any website or video player will be able to retrieve them Create a community space for people who subtitle video, to encourage contributions and facilitate collaboration" Posted April 13, 2010 by amarasubs.
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    Se avessi lasciato l'intitolato basato sul tag "title", questo segnalibro sarebbe intitolato: "Subtitles and Captions for Every Video on the Web | Amara - Buy captions, video translations, transcriptions, and crowd subtitling". - con la parte prima del | il titolo del primo post del 13 aprile 2010 del blog di Amara (allora Universal Subtitles": "Sottotitoli tradotti e per sordi per ogni video online" - e con la seconda parte dopo l'|, che dà il titolo attuale del blogo, cioè "Amara - Compra sottotitoli, traduzioni di video, trascrizioni e sottotitolazione di massa" Quite a change...
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    I am currently investigating file formats for long-term preservation. Obviously they must be free of proprietary ownership and publicly accessible and avoid vendor-locking - even if the vendor is a non-profit organization. What I wonder: which conditions must a video file format fulfill to permit captioning / subtitling? Are there public and open standards of formats for captioning / subtitling? Where do I find them? Can they be enriched with metadata about the author of the subtitles?
fabrizio bartoli

K-8 Intro to Computer Science | Code.org - 2 views

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    "K-8 Intro to Computer Science is a free course that aims to demystify computer science and show K-8 students that it's fun, collaborative, and creative. The course is designed to motivate students and educators to continue learning computer science to improve real world relationships, connections, and life. Educators will foster an environment of communal learning that emphasizes risk-taking. This course will teach students about computer science, computational thinking, and programming. It will also teach that success does not come on the first try, just like the world's most difficult problems aren't solved on the first try. Challenge is good when it is supported by plans and tools that lead to success. This course will help students persevere in solving problems."
fabrizio bartoli

Free Professional Development Webinars for Educators from edWeb.net - 1 views

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    EdWeb Webinars calendario
Claude Almansi

"risk-free, no obligation Signature Track trial" site:coursera.org - Google Search - 4 views

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    Tentativo di vedere quali dei corsi Coursera che offrono soltanto la certificazione "Signature Track" a pagamento sono e non sono disponibili per la traduzione nella Global Translator Community di Coursera 14 signature-track-only couses not on GTC: - New World, New Map: GPS for Today's Music Industry https://www.coursera.org/course/gpsmusic . West Virginia University - Re-Enchanting the City - Designing the Human Habitat https://www.coursera.org/course/city . UNSW Australia - Pre-Calculus https://www.coursera.org/course/precalculus . University of California, Irvine - The American South: Its Stories, Music, and Art https://www.coursera.org/course/south . The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Foundations of Virtual Instruction https://www.coursera.org/course/virtualinstruction . University of California, Irvine - Forensic Accounting and Fraud Examination https://www.coursera.org/course/forensicaccounting . West Virginia University and Association of Certified Fraud Examiners - What's Your Big Idea? https://www.coursera.org/course/bigidea . The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - The Magna Carta and its Legacy https://www.coursera.org/course/magnacarta . University of London - Introduction to Environmental Law and Policy https://w
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    8 signature-track-only courses on GTC: - The Art of Teaching History https://www.coursera.org/course/teachinghist . Rice University - What a Plant Knows (and other things you didn't know about plants) https://www.coursera.org/course/plantknows . - The Fall and Rise of Jerusalem https://www.coursera.org/course/jerusalem . Tel Aviv University - The Power of Macroeconomics: Economic Principles in the Real World https://www.coursera.org/course/ucimacroeconomics . University of California, Irvine - Learning How to Learn: Powerful mental tools to help you master tough subjects https://www.coursera.org/course/learning . University of California, San Diego - Learning to Teach Online https://www.coursera.org/course/ltto . UNSW Australia (The University of New South Wales) - Developing Innovative Ideas for New Companies: The First Step in Entrepreneurship https://www.coursera.org/course/innovativeideas . University of Maryland, College Park - The Emergence of the Modern Middle East | Coursera https://www.coursera.org/course/modernmiddleeast . Tel Aviv University
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