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Connected Learning: An Agenda for Research and Design | DML Hub - 2 views

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    Link to an eBook produced by the "connected learning" folk that aims to provide "An Agenda for Research and Design". Narrows the definition of networked learning to connected learning defined as "is realized when a young person is able to pursue a personal interest or passion with the support of friends and caring adults, and is in turn able to link this learning and interest to academic achievement, career success or civic engagement."
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MOOCs as Neocolonialism: Who Controls Knowledge? - WorldWise - Blogs - The Chronicle of... - 0 views

  • But I do believe it is important to point out that a powerful emerging educational movement strengthens the currently dominant academic culture, perhaps making it more difficult for alternative voices to be heard.
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    One of the critiques of MOOCs that perhaps can be applied to broader ideas of NGL - or at least need to be considered. In particular this links to the under-developed aspect of NGL in this course - global learning.
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Social Sciences | Free Full-Text | On the Design of Social Media for Learning - 3 views

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    Another article from Dron and Anderson extending some of the earlier work. Abstract follows. Is explicitly intended to help "design learning activities that make most effective use of the technologies" This paper presents two conceptual models that we have developed for understanding ways that social media can support learning. One model relates to the "social" aspect of social media, describing the different ways that people can learn with and from each other, in one or more of three social forms: groups, networks and sets. The other model relates to the 'media' side of social media, describing how technologies are constructed and the roles that people play in creating and enacting them, treating them in terms of softness and hardness. The two models are complementary: neither provides a complete picture but, in combination, they help to explain how and why different uses of social media may succeed or fail and, as importantly, are intended to help us design learning activities that make most effective use of the technologies. We offer some suggestions as to how media used to support different social forms can be softened and hardened for different kinds of learning applications.
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    This paper presents two conceptual models that we have developed for understanding ways that social media can support learning. One model relates to the "social" aspect of social media, describing the different ways that people can learn with and from each other, in one or more of three social forms: groups, networks and sets. The other model relates to the 'media' side of social media, describing how technologies are constructed and the roles that people play in creating and enacting them, treating them in terms of softness and hardness. The two models are complementary: neither provides a complete picture but, in combination, they help to explain how and why different uses of social media may succeed or fail and, as importantly, are intended to help us design learning activities that make most effective use of the technologies. We offer some suggestions as to how media used to support different social forms can be softened and hardened for different kinds of learning applications.
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Blogging as a Tool for Reflection and Learning - 1 views

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    Associate Professor Jill Walker Rettberg talks about why blogging is useful for learning.
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Webpage of Jill Walker Rettberg - 1 views

shared by anonymous on 12 Sep 14 - Cached
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    Jill Walker Rettberg is a professor of digital culture at the University of Bergen and posts regular articles on online learning.
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A New Architecture for Learning (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE.edu - 0 views

  • lty, and students.
  • Most of the technologies and applications shown in Figure 1 are on campuses already. The problem is that they are not easily and
  • seamlessly integrated
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  • e expected to be
  • The following are several specific examples of what the open standards and services must enable to make this new architecture for learning a reality: Digital content and applications must be easily, quickly (ideally, within a few minutes versus months), and seamlessly integrated into any platform that supports a set of vendor-neutral open standards and, importantly, are not trapped inside a single platform. User, course, and context information must be synchronized among selected applications so that neither the manual transfer of information nor multiple logins to different applications are required—thus making set-up and use of new software much easier for all concerned. Data that describes usage, activities, and outcomes must flow from learning content apps to the enterprise system of record, learning platforms, and analytics platforms. Systems, services, and tools must be virtualized and must increasingly move toward the elastic computing model that enables sharing scenarios across systems or other federations of users.Imagine what would happen if CIOs could safely add services and applications in a matter of days instead of months, if instructors could seamlessly combine these tools into their courses with one click, and if analytics data would begin to flow immediately thereafter. This new IT architecture would revolutionize the support for academic technology in the same way that the app movement has revolutionized what is available on mobile devices. A key difference with the new IT architecture, however, is that these educational apps are built using standards adopted and managed by the educational community and would be connected into the educational enterprise IT infrastructure.
  • The rise of the MOOC illustrates how important innovations often happen outside of established channels: by faculty who, interested in innovation, put together their own technology solutions outside their college or university. This should be a wake-up call for the higher education community to do better. Enterprise IT organizations need to enable such innovation, not stand in its way.
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    If we are to support students and faculty as connected learners and instructors, we must rethink our approach to academic technology architecture. At the foundation and core of that architecture is information technology, in its role as the strategic enabler of connected learning.
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Deutsche Post DHL | Partnership Teach For All - 0 views

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    "As part of our commitment, we provide support to the worldwide Teach For All parent organization as well as to seven national organizations in Germany, India, Argentina, Peru, Chile, Spain and the Philippines. " As part of our commitment, we provide support to the worldwide Teach For All parent organization as well as to seven national organizations in Germany, India, Argentina, Peru, Chile, Spain and the Philippines.
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9/15-9/28 Unit 1: Why We Need a Why | Connected Courses - 1 views

  • the “whats” to be learned
  • We usually start by addressing the “What” question first
  • If we have time, we address the “How” question by considering how we can best teach the material
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  • we rush into the semester, rarely asking, “Why?”
  • Starting with “Why” changes everything.
  • As Neil Postman has noted, you can try to engineer the learning of what-bits (The End of Higher Education, Postman), but “to become a different person because of something you have learned — to appropriate an insight, a concept, a vision, so that your world is altered — is a different matter. For that to happen, you need a reason.”
  • So what is the real “why” of your course? Why should students take it? How will they be changed by it? What is your discipline’s real “why”? Why does it matter that students take __________ courses or become _________ists? How can digital and networked technologies effectively support the real why of your course?
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    Intro page to week one of Connected Courses. The connection here to what we're doing in NGL is the text from Mike Wesch - "Why we need a why" It connects with course design - not a big leap from there to what you're doing "as teacher" in NGL - and talks about the importance of why
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What We Miss by Comparing MOOCs to Traditional Classrooms | DMLcentral - 1 views

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    An article that looks at MOOC's as an extension to the traditional library rather than the classroom.
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Half an Hour: Connectivism and the Primal Scream - 2 views

  • Indeed, so long as you think of knowledge and learning as something to be acquired and measured and tested - instead of practiced and lived and experienced - you will be dissatisfied with connectivist learning. And - for that matter - there's probably a limit to how far you can advance in traditional education as well, because (to my experience) everybody who achieves a high degree of expertise in a field has advanced well beyond the idea that it's just information and skills and things to learn. Kind of like Dreyfus and Dreyfus said.
    • ggdines
       
      Perhaps EDU8117 is attempting both - "something to be acquired and measured and tested" and "practiced, lived and experienced". That might be where my discomfort lies and perhaps also what Keith Brennan is articulating in his article.
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    A response to Keith Brennans article 
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Reducing the digital literacy divide through disruptive innovation | Simon McIntyre - A... - 0 views

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    This article suggests that educators in HE can generate systemic change by engaging in open and informal professional development outside and beyond their own institutions. An interesting read for anyone in a support role in Higher Education.
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Untitled - 2 views

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    I found this blog, its not really about NGL but I guess a warning to us all :) and I found it a really interesting read
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Beyond the LMS - 0 views

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    Notes and slides from a presentation entitled "Beyond the LMS" may have some interesting perspectives for those thinking about the need for "walled gardens" in high school (and elsewhere). There's a response to this that I'll share next. Audrey Watters - the author of this presentation - provides an interesting and through provoking perspective on all things educational technology. A useful alternative to some of the more common, but less critical perspectives.
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A hard drive of ones own « Lisa's (Online) Teaching & History Blog - 0 views

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    A response to the "Beyond the LMS" post from someone who's more of a practitioner and has had experience of both open and walled gardens
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Padagogy Wheel; SAMR Model; using iPads in L&T - 1 views

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    Padagogy Wheel is about transformation and integration Learning design; graduate attributes; capabilities and motivation Site links to article 'Integrate iPads into Bloom's Digital Taxonomy';
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Welcome to the School of YouTube: #LaughLearnGive - YouTube - 1 views

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    A bit of a laugh on the school of YouTube
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http://www.csus.edu/indiv/s/stonerm/blogging_to_learn.pdf - 3 views

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    There is no doubt that pedagogical practices are being swamped with new technology options. While accessibility to these new technologies and cautious uptake may be slowing integration into teaching strategies, educators in the current market would be wise to consider the following question before embracing the options presented to them: How will this new technology enhance learning in my context?
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The Pomodoro Technique® - Time Management Skills From MindTools.com - 1 views

    • ozangel4
       
      A very interesting technique picked up in my MOOC -Learning how to learn. Hopefully it may help us to learn and to understand as we teach our participants
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