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sherylteaches

How to Engage Students with Interactive Online Lectures | Faculty Focus - 3 views

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    One potential casualty when courses move online - or even when face-to-face courses incorporate web-based technologies - is collaboration. Many instructors fear they will lose opportunities to interact with their students - and that their students will lose the ability to interact with one another.
beelynn

5 Ways to Use Snapchat as A Teaching and Learning Tool in Higher Education - 2 views

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    I never thought Snapchat would work in a classroom setting. I think it's time for me to stop being too old school and meet my students in the middle and allow them to enjoy my messages in whatever reasonable way that is necessary.
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    This helps. It gives a good path to how to use this teaching and learning tool.
billreid1

Center for Continuing Studies - Innovative Leadership for Lifelong Learning - 1 views

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    The best way to determine how to offer your distance learning course is to consider these items: What do you want your students to know? How do you teach this on campus? How comfortable are you with technology-and do you want to learn? Remember: More technology does not make better teaching or learning.
sherylteaches

LearningTimes Green Room » Blog Archive » LTGR Ep. #30 - "Hearing Voices in Online Courses" - 0 views

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    Adding Audio to Your Online Course: Topic is revisited from more than 2 years ago. Dan and Susan look at how universal voice is when teaching online. Are people using voice and if so, how
Julie Fuller

How to Develop a Sense of Presence in Online and F2F Courses with Social Media - 1 views

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    Suggestions for how to use social media projects to increase instructor presence in an online course.
cassherm

ProProfs - Knowledge Management Software - 1 views

shared by cassherm on 25 Jul 10 - Cached
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    Great easy to use.
  • ...1 more comment...
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    I was amazed at how intuitive and easy this tool is to use to create quizzes. I had spent hours creating a PowerPoint quiz, and minutes to create the same quiz using this tool. Plus I had much more flexibility in kinds of questions I created--and I can gather feedback any time I want to. There is a free trial version of this tool, and then one must purchase the rights to use the tool. Try it!
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    You can develop your own questions, use their test bank, or import your existing quizzes. You can select the order of the questions, indicate scores for passing, will show you their score at the completion of the quiz and reveal the correct answer to the questions. Very easy to follow. Almost no learning curve. I would definitely use this in an online class to assess students understanding of concepts covered. I would offer it either as a review or as a quiz itself.
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    ProProfs - Knowledge Management Software for Quizzes, Tests, Training, Flashcards, Knowledge Base. Get started with our knowledge management softwares.
prabideau

untitled - 0 views

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    February 2009 | Volume 66 | Number 5 How Teachers Learn Pages 34-38 Learning with Blogs and Wikis Bill Ferriter Technology has made it easy for educators to embrace continual professional development. Few ideas about teachers' professional growth resonate with me more than those of Richard Elmore, professor of educational leadership at Harvard, who has gone as far as to argue that school structures make learning for adults unlikely at best and nothing short of impossible at worst. In a 2002 report for the Albert Shanker Institute, Elmore wrote, As expectations for increased student performance mount and the measurement and publication of evidence about performance becomes part of the public discourse about schools, there are few portals through which new knowledge about teaching and learning can enter schools; few structures or processes in which teachers and administrators can assimilate, adapt, and polish new ideas and practices; and few sources of assistance for those who are struggling to understand the connection between the academic performance of their students and the practices in which they engage. So the brutal irony of our present circumstance is that schools are hostile and inhospitable places for learning. They are hostile to the learning of adults and, because of this, they are necessarily hostile to the learning of students. (pp. 4-5)
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    Technology has made it easy for educators to embrace continual professional development. Few ideas about teachers' professional growth resonate with me more than those of Richard Elmore, professor of educational leadership at Harvard, who has gone as far as to argue that school structures make learning for adults unlikely at best and nothing short of impossible at worst.
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    Founded in 1943, ASCD (formerly the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development) is an educational leadership organization dedicated to advancing best practices and policies for the success of each learner. Our 175,000 members in 119 countries are professional educators from all levels and subject areas--superintendents, supervisors, principals, teachers, professors of education, and school board members.
dgronset

How-to Use Social Media Platforms to Create Meaningful Learning Assignments - 3 views

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    This post describes and provides examples of three social media platforms used as a pedagogical tool to create meaningful learning assignments in face-to-face and online courses. Social media platforms such as blogs, Wikis and Twitter hold great potential as vehicles for student learning.
anonymous

Twitter for Academia - 5 views

  • Through Twitter you can “track” a word. This will subscribe you to any post which contains said word. So, for example a student could be interested in how a particular word is used. They can track the word, and see the varied phrases in which people use it.
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    This blog entry provides us with very useful ideas of using Twitter in education.
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    I must admit that when I first heard about Twitter I thought it represented the apex of what concerns me about internet technology: solipsism and sound-bite communication. While I obviously spend a great deal of time online and thinking about the potential of these new networked digital communication structures, I also worry about the way that they too easily lead to increasingly short space and time for conversation, cutting off nuance and conversation, and what is often worse how these conversations often reduce to self-centered statements. When I first heard about Twitter I thought, this was the example par excellence of these fears, so for many months I did not investigate it at all.
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    This article describes ways to use twitter to enhance academic work. With twitter, the class goes on beyond the assigned class period because (i) the technology is appealing, (ii) students have much to say/ask, (iii) students can 'talk' without concern for "who's (physically) in class that might make fun of me", and (iv) students respond in their own time. Twitter has the dual benefits of quasi-synchronous and asynchronous communication.
Bradley Sward

5 Games That Teach You How to Code - 1 views

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    human Resource Machine isn't listed but it's a great logic game!
Jacqui D

Diigo Sticky Notes - 0 views

shared by Jacqui D on 19 Jul 11 - Cached
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    Here is a "how to" video for creating sticky notes using Diigo.
prabideau

Ten Steps to Using Twitter in the College Classroom | Jason A. Llorenz - 2 views

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    Posted: Like all college and university faculty, August means finalizing fall syllabi and lesson plans, and pre-reading articles for fall courses. For many professors, this process includes thinking (or rethinking) on how to leverage social media to engage students in the semester's learning.
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    Having experimented with social media for learning -- especially Twitter -- across my courses, I am convinced that social media offers powerful opportunities to connect with students, by providing new ways for them to own the learning....
qt_gray

How I Use Twitter In My Classroom - Edudemic - 2 views

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    My students hate writing, especially in math. To create a happy medium I decided to integrate the use of micro-blogging into my classroom to motivate my students to begin to at least use mathematical language in class.
Denise Caparula

Alice Out Of Context: Respond - 2 views

  • Okay, why didn't you just say that?
    • Denise Caparula
       
      How true - how hard is it to say "I'm not sure - I'll get back to you?" This happens a lot at work when appointments are sent out for meetings. People don't accept, don't decline, don't comment, so you have no idea who is going to be at the meeting. Courtesy, people!
  • If I don't have time to respond with two sentences, what am I doing checking email?
    • Denise Caparula
       
      Terrific argument - if you don't have time for quick responses, you should be spending your time doing something else. Don't check your email with no intention of returning any communication. That's worthless.
  • Just respond.
    • Denise Caparula
       
      Amen!
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    Great article about responding to email in a timely manner, even when you don't have any answers for the sender or are incredibly busy. Enjoy!
dgronset

How to Make Bad Discussion Questions Better for an Online Course: Case Study Using an edX MOOC - 2 views

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    I'm enrolled as a student in the MOOC Saving Schools Mini-Course 1: History and Politics of U.S. Education on the edX platform and share in this post discussion questions used for assignment purposes from the course to illustrate what NOT to do when it comes to writing discussion questions.
Junoo Tuladhar

How to use twitter in the classroom - 0 views

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    This link highlights how twitter can be used in the various fields.
baldwincccprof

Accountants On Social Media: See How These Accountants Are Killing It! - 2 views

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    This is an interesting article and shows how social media is being used in the accounting profession. It's hard to believe the past of that profession used to be tons of green ledger paper and physical filing cabinets.
acctg_rocks

7 Ways Teachers Use Social Media in the Classroom - 2 views

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    Millennials live and breathe on social media, so teachers are learning how to incorporate the medium into the classroom successfully. In doing so, teachers not only encourage students to engage actively in the material, but they also provide online communities for students that might not exist for them in real life.
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    Suggestions include: having students use Twitter, Facebook and Flickr to share work, using hashtags to live tweet, requiring students to blog, using LinkedIn to reach out to experts, using Google Hangouts for virtual office hours, post assignments and messages in Edmondo, conducting class in Second Life.
SC Ngan

Key elements of building online community: Comparing faculty and student perceptions - 0 views

shared by SC Ngan on 08 Mar 14 - Cached
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    Vesely, P., Bloom, L., & Sherlock, J. (2007). Key elements of building online community: Comparing faculty and student perceptions. MERLOT Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, 3(3), 234-246. Vesely, Bloom, and Sherlock (2007) document that essential to the learning process is the student/student and student/teacher interaction, and building this community of learners is more challenging in online. Students in blended courses felt interaction may be better than in traditional courses. Students who feel silenced in onsite class discussions are more apt to contribute online. Seeking help can be a determining factor in successful learning. In the online communities, help is available virtually around the clock from the instructors and fellow classmates. Furthermore, through their experiences in the blended course, students would better understand the significance of managing their time, cultivating their study environment, regulating their effort, seeking appropriate support, and learning from classmates. In my experience, students reported that their online interaction with classmates had greatly assisted in their comprehension of course materials. Central to how they felt about blended learning was the quality and quantity of student and faculty interaction. In blended courses, students are often required to engage actively by reading and responding to discussion forum postings that become a permanent record of their participation and learning, rather than passively attending classes. Perceptions of interaction from faculty are also positive for blended courses. Faculty renovate their teaching methods by placing onsite lectures online and adding supplementary activities to aid student learning. Blended teaching and learning transforms education from "a command and control structure to a connect and collaborate environment" (Moskal, Dziuban, Upchurch, Hartman, & Truman, 2006) which is more student-centered than faculty-controlled. For faculty, the quality
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