Education and the social Web: Connective learning and the commercial imperative - 0 views
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I argue that commercial social networks are much less about circulating knowledge than they are about connecting users (“eyeballs”) with advertisers
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not the autonomous individual learner, but collective corporate interests that occupy the centre of these network
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business model restricts their information design in ways that detract from learner control and educational use
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In recent years, new sociallyoriented Web technologies have been portrayed as placing the learner at the centre of networks of knowledge and expertise, potentially leading to new forms of learning and education. In this paper, I argue that commercial social networks are much less about circulating knowledge than they are about connecting users ("eyeballs") with advertisers; it is not the autonomous individual learner, but collective corporate interests that occupy the centre of these networks. Looking first at Facebook, Twitter, Digg and similar services, I argue their business model restricts their information design in ways that detract from learner control and educational use. I also argue more generally that the predominant "culture" and corresponding types of content on services like those provided Google similarly privileges advertising interests at the expense of users. Just as commercialism has rendered television beyond the reach of education, commercial pressures threaten to seriously limit the potential of the social Web for education and learning.
All too much | The Economist - 0 views
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QUANTIFYING the amount of information that exists in the world is hard. What is clear is that there is an awful lot of it, and it is growing at a terrific rate (a compound annual 60%) that is speeding up all the time.
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data from sensors, computers, research labs, cameras, phones and the like surpassed the capacity of storage technologies in 2007. Experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Europe’s particle-physics laboratory near Geneva, generate 40 terabytes every second—orders of magnitude more than can be stored or analysed.
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scientists collect what they can and let the rest dissipate into the ether.
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Reflections on the Knowledge Society » Gravity rules the MOOC LAK11 - 0 views
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Discussions spread in ever-which way. Participants migrate between discussions and platforms (or shall we say “bounce”?).
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‘open space’ conference
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A MOOC follows the same principles but is entirely virtual.
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Half an Hour: What Connectivism Is - 0 views
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in connectivism, there is no real concept of transferring knowledge, making knowledge, or building knowledge.
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a pedagogy that (a) seeks to describe 'successful' networks (as identified by their properties, which I have characterized as diversity, autonomy, openness, and connectivity) and (b) seeks to describe the practices that lead to such networks,
What is the unique idea in Connectivism? « Connectivism - 0 views
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what is the unique idea in connectivism?
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a new idea is often an old idea in today’s context.
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what is the new idea in constructivism? That people construct their own knowledge? Or the social, situated nature of learning? Or that knowledge is not something that exists outside of a knower? (i.e. there is no “there” out there)
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10 Websites For Free Audio Books - 0 views
Technology Tidbits: Thoughts of a Cyber Hero: Top 10 Sites for Creating Digital Comics - 2 views
Students, Ownership, & Creativity: 35 Resources | Teacher Reboot Camp - 2 views
MOOC newbie Voice - Week 2 Big Data… must be important… it's big! » Dave's Ed... - 0 views
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we are increasingly at the mercy of the data that is out there
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Week 1 skimming
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The Telegraph article on the 10 ways data is changing how we live
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Learning with 'e's: Physiology of a PLE - 0 views
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functionality of PLEs - the physiology if you will - what is it that learners need from their PLEs?
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the three main functionalities
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functionality is exclusive to the personal web tools (PWTs)
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Reflections on Open Courses: Curation, Ombuds, and Concierges | Learning and Knowledge ... - 0 views
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Part of the focus in LAK11 is to explore how we can better use data to make sense of complex topics such as:
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How students interact
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patterns of activity
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Teaching & Technology - 0 views
Free email newsletter service | TinyLetter - 0 views
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Write an email newsletter. Start your own newsletter instantly with TinyLetter. Then tell people to subscribe to it. Then write whatever you want, whenever you want, and we'll send it to them. Also, it's free.
Resources | Teaching With and About Technology - NYTimes.com - 2 views
#PLENK2010 PLEs and learner autonomy « Jenny Connected - 0 views
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PLE is a counter concept arising from discontent with centralised course management.
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they have always been around, it’s just that the wide range of open source tools available at the moment, means that learners now have greater opportunity to learn independently and autonomously than ever before.
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Sebastian was concerned that we focus only on the personal learner model for adults – which he suggested was one where adults are self-functioning, self-co-ordinating, self-controlling (self monitoring), self-developing and self-projecting.
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Created by Russell Stannard for Teacher Training videos.com - 0 views
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TimeToast is a way to create historical timelines. Could be used for project- or content-based learning, or for personal autobiographies. Also has several good content examples, such as Moon Landings, The Great Gatsby, and Western Civilization. You place points on the timeline and then add text and pictures to go along with the dates.
PLN Competencies « Ponderances of Steve - 2 views
News: Harnessing Social Media - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views
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There was always more potentially relevant information out in the world than people could ever hope to know. But Twitter, Facebook, social bookmarking sites, and countless other content streams and conversation threads — constantly available in the era of wireless networks and mobile computing — have thrust many in academe into an endless, unwinnable race to keep up.
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At a session on Friday here at the Sloan Consortium International Conference on Online Learning, called “Managing the Flow of Information,” a roomful of higher ed technologists commiserated about the information assault and discussed how to figure out what information to ignore without abnegating their obligation to stay current.
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While some instructors might take the sight of students typing on keyboards and smartphones as a sign of chronic inattention, the authors of this study take it as the opposite.
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