This would be a great project base for students. They take photos, upload them and then record a voice description. Has connect to Facebook option also.
Managing resources is one of the most important skills for students (people!) to master. I started blogging in 2000 and have spent a significant amount of time trying to devise an information management system that I can use to make sense of a topic or discipline. I've attached an image below that highlights the process and tools that I use.
This system has a few weaknesses
1. It fails to account for trend development and dissipation
2. Too many aspects of my sensemaking system are manua
Information is not something that has value in itself. We use it to do something
What tools do you use?
Eric von Stackelberg
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I have moved to fewer tools with the intention of increasing the depth of data held in those tools while reducing duplication.
learning as a two-step process: First there’s the transfer of information (from a source of knowledge, like an instructor, to the student), then there’s the assimilation of that information by the student
students need to have their first exposure to the course material happen some other way—like reading their textbook
in all fields, there’s still the challenge of motivating students to actually do the pre-class readings
short, online reading quizzes consisting of open-ended questions that are due several hours before class starts to do the job. Most of the quiz questions are meant to help students focus on and make some sense of key concepts
Students submit answers to these questions online before class, and I grade their quizzes on effort.
pre-class reading quizzes allow me to practice what is often called “just-in-time teaching.”
pre-class reading quiz questions as a clicker question during class,
how do I implement these quizzes?
local course management system, but I found the system to cumbersome
I find it much easier to post course documents to a WordPress blog, and I like that it makes my course more open to those not enrolled in it.
I create a Facebook fan page for each of my courses
that pulls in the course blog content via RSS
So I now post my pre-class reading quizzes on my course blogs, tagged with a “PCRQ” for easy locating
default comments feature on WordPress to have students reply to them. This meant that students could read each other’s answers, which, for these questions, only enhanced the learning experience
So I looked around for a way to have students comment on posts semi-privately—where I could see their comments but they couldn’t see each other’s comments. I found a WordPress plug-in called, appropriately, Semi-Private Comments! (Plug-ins—yet another reason I prefer WordPress to a course management system.)
he main limitation is that it doesn’t help me grade those quizzes