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Learning With Technology Profile Tool - 0 views

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    This profile tool will help you to compare your current instructional practices with a set of indicators for engaged learning and high-performance technology. This is not intended to be a rating of your skill or ability as a teacher, but rather as a tool to help you think through the kinds of activities you use to help your students learn. Use the graph to help clarify your thinking about what types of activities you would like to use more frequently in your classroom. This activity frequently takes about 30 minutes to complete.
LRC MHC

Web 2.Xpo - 0 views

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    This blog is a companion piece to the Web 2.0 Expo run on May 14, 2007 at Wesleyan. At the expo we demonstrated various Web 2.0 technologies in action. As a resource for continued engagement, presenters in each of the areas created reference pages on this blog. The technologies covered include: Blogs, RSS feeds and readers, Wikis, Podcasting, Social bookmarking, Web-based Office Apps, Mash-ups, Content Management.
LRC MHC

Ed/ITLib Digital Library → Handwriting Technology and Future of Writing Instr... - 0 views

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    Itoh, R. (2006). Handwriting Technology and Future of Writing Instruction for Japanese Language. In T. Reeves & S. Yamashita (Eds.), Proceedings of World Conference on E-Learning in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, and Higher Education 2006 (pp. 609-612). Chesapeake, VA: AACE.
Daryl Beres

Vista Higher Learning Supersites Demos - 2 views

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    Vista Higher Learning Supersites seamlessly integrate text and technology by providing an array of online resources - activities, audio, video and resources - for each program. The integration of text and technology supports and enhances student learning every step of the way: section-by-section and lesson-by-lesson. Instructors will discover an array of online teaching resources, plus a gradebook for managing courses, viewing rosters, setting assignments, and posting announcements. Click on the cover image below to access the Supersite demo for that program.
Daryl Beres

Evalita2009 - Home Page - 0 views

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    Evaluation of NLP and Speech Tools for Italian Following the success of Evalita 2007, we are pleased to announce Evalita 2009, the second evaluation campaign of Natural Language Processing tools for Italian, supported by the NLP working group of AI*IA. The general objective of Evalita is to promote the development of language and speech technologies for the Italian language, providing a shared framework where different systems and approaches can be evaluated in a consistent manner. This year in conjunction with AISV (the Italian Association of Speech Science), Evalita will also hold the first speech input technology evaluation for Italian.
LRC MHC

http://bootcamp.pomona.edu/conference.html - 0 views

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    KEYNOTE SPEAKERS Friday, April 3: Barbara Sawhill (Oberlin College) Saturday, April 4: Gus Leonard (CSU Monterey Bay) In addition to the keynote speeches, the conference will consist of various workshops, joint presentations and panels centered around the use of technology and language learning. This collaborative conference, co-located with SWALLT, is designed for the expert and novice alike! April 3-5, 2009
LRC MHC

3 Ways Web-Based Computing Will Change Colleges - Chronicle.com - 0 views

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    In the next five years, Web-based computing will likely bring important changes in how students study, how scholars do research, and how college information-technology departments operate.
LRC MHC

HASTAC - 0 views

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    Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory
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Call for papers: IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies - 0 views

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    IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies special issue on Open Educational Resources, to be published in the Summer. Deadline for full papers is 1 March!
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Yale University Press Books Unbound - 0 views

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    Welcome to Yale Books Unbound 1 This project is part of the Institute for the Future of the Book's CommentPress experiment. 2 It's a way of sharing books and the ideas within them, as well as facilitating some of our works in progress. 3 Yale University Press is pleased to participate in this initiative since we see it as a very promising way of fulfilling our main objective of disseminating art and knowledge to the widest possible audience and facilitating on-going and all-important dialogues about ideas and issues that shape our world. 4 Up until now, very few book publishers have leveraged new technologies to add any additional value beyond basic Search functionality to their content. We agree with the Institute for the Future of the Book that a broad rethinking of books-and particularly scholarly monographs-needs to take place.
LRC MHC

Eder 669.73 Language Teaching and Technology - 0 views

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    Syllabus for LLT course from University of Calgary
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A social constructivist approach to the use of podcasts - 1 views

  • The general premise that listening is often more engaging than the written word and that diction, intonation and inflection add meaning might be acceptable at face value, but as Hargis and Wilson (2005: 6) point out, ‘there are currently no examples which clearly indicate proven foundational pedagogical uses and outcomes for podcasts.’.
  • Though the technology is quite recent, it may tend to lead teachers towards outmoded, didactic approaches to delivery rather than the constructivist, collaborative activities recommended by more recent learning theorists.
  • learner is the passive recipient of the content
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • supplementary resources that would prompt them to undertake some cognitive activity whilst listening to the podcasted material
  • opportunities for listeners to converse about and record their reflections on what they have heard so that the flow of information does not become one way
  • Podcasts were only part of a set of broader learning activities, designed following Laurillard’s recommendations for conversational framework (2002).
  • The aim of the research design was not to establish causations, rather to understand the students’ responses to the podcast medium and its potential as a tool to support learning at a distance.
  • Whilst there were some neutral and negative responses to podcasting, there was a significant tendency towards positive perceptions
  • effect of delivery style on perceptions of listeners
  • Students involved in this study tended to be negative about the use of gapped handouts to supplement the podcast
  • significantly more omissions of important information occurring in students’ responses to text-based material than in their responses to the podcast.
  • Since a similar amount of time had elapsed in each instance the conclusion is that, in this case, students retained more detail from listening to the podcasts than from reading material. 
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    "Does listening to something, perhaps once, perhaps more than once, perhaps over and over again, mean that it is learned in a way that is useful to the student and that they can retrieve and re-use in an appropriate context at a later date? It is a proposition that seems to conflict with the situated learning theories of researchers like Brown, Collins and Duguid (1989), which assert that learning always lies in the interactions between people rather than in the content itself or in the minds of the individual learners. The general premise that listening is often more engaging than the written word and that diction, intonation and inflection add meaning might be acceptable at face value, but as Hargis and Wilson (2005: 6) point out, 'there are currently no examples which clearly indicate proven foundational pedagogical uses and outcomes for podcasts.'. Though the technology is quite recent, it may tend to lead teachers towards outmoded, didactic approaches to delivery rather than the constructivist, collaborative activities recommended by more recent learning theorists."
LRC MHC

Top 100 Tools for Learning 2009 - 1 views

shared by LRC MHC on 21 Nov 09 - Cached
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    Top 100 technology tools for learning, 2009.
LRC MHC

Electric Paris Exhibit - 0 views

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    The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, MA is showing how the "City of Lights" is portrayed through transitions from gas lamps to electric lighting--and how Parisianskept up, just as modern in technology as in society.
LRC MHC

AAEEBL - 2012 Annual ePortfolio Conference - 1 views

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    "For the third year, AAEEBL members and eportfolio practitioners from around the world will gather at the Seaport World Trade Center on stunning Boston Harbor for the AAEEBL Annual Conference. Once again, AAEEBL is co-locating with Campus Technology, and attendees will be welcome to attend either AAEEBL or CT sessions."
LRC MHC

Georgia Tech Wipes Class Wikis From Web - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    "The Georgia Institute of Technology has stripped, at least for now, more than 10 years of class work from its collaborative-learning Web sites, known as Swikis. Following a student's complaint to the university that his name was listed on the Web site of a public course, Georgia Tech officials decided on Monday to remove all Swikis other than ones from the current semester, said Mark Guzdial, a professor in the School of Interactive Computing, who is a co-creator of the Swikis."
LRC MHC

Ipadio… Cell Phones, Phlogs, Speech To Text, Geotagging - 0 views

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    "Ipadio technology links up the telephone networks with the internet, enabling the live broadcast of audio directly to the internet… all from a standard phone. There's never been an easier way to record oral assessments, create revision podcasts, or even collect homework. The process involves a simple registration of your phone and the selection of a password. You are then given a toll free number to call, enter the password, and start recording. Your recording is instantly available as a phlog (phone blog) on your own channel at Ipadio. Don't have the cell phone you registered with Ipadio. There is an easy solution, just use any phone and complete the additional step of entering your registered phone number. After the recording you can visit your own channel and listen to the phlog, email it, embed it in a web page, or even download it as an mp3 to be used in your own multimedia application. You even have the opportunity to edit your phlog and make it public. Ipadio even converts the spoken words to text! Imagine the educational uses of that features. There is even an iPhone and Android app."
LRC MHC

Soundbooth - 0 views

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    What does it do? Develops the four skills of language learning Can be used with any language Utilises existing resources; audio, text books, worksheets and graphics Enables live monitoring of an individual student or a group of students Provides private communication between the teacher and student or a group of students Motivates learners of every ability using familiar technology Easy Assessment - All student work is saved as mp3 files or web pages The addition of a headset with a microphone turns any pc network into a language lab How does it do it? Using two small software programmes, a student module and a teacher module, that will run on virtually any pc and network. Items containing text, graphics and audio recordings are viewed by students who can record themselves and can also enter text or make selections. The teacher can communicate to students individually, or by group, and can monitor progress live.
LRC MHC

Academic Earth - Video lectures from the world's top scholars - 0 views

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    Academic Earth is an organization founded with the goal of giving everyone on earth access to a world-class education. As more and more high quality educational content becomes available online for free, we ask ourselves, what are the real barriers to achieving a world class education? At Academic Earth, we are working to identify these barriers and find innovative ways to use technology to increase the ease of learning. We are building a user-friendly educational ecosystem that will give internet users around the world the ability to easily find, interact with, and learn from full video courses and lectures from the world's leading scholars. Our goal is to bring the best content together in one place and create an environment that in which that content is remarkably easy to use and in which user contributions make existing content increasingly valuable.
LRC MHC

The CITE - 0 views

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    Welcome to the CITE -- a blog on Course materials, Innovation, and Technology in Education. CITE is a pun with multiple meanings - referring to cite as in citation, something people reference; site as in location, website, or place people go to; and sight as in foresight or looking ahead to what is coming. Comments, discussion, feedback and ideas are welcome.
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