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Randolph Hollingsworth

SOPHIA - Free Social Teaching and Learning Network focused solely on education - 0 views

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    "social teaching" initiative with peer reviewers to identify the best teachers for any concept who then put their instruction for that concept online as "learning packets" for use by anyone free of charge - universities will be able to privatize parts of it to attach to student IDs and track progress for a fee - Capella Education has invested in this initiative also, http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/social-teaching-company-gets-buy-in-from-capella-education/29466?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Randolph Hollingsworth

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching - 0 views

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    Community of scholars offering access to their originally created learning materials, creating their own personal collection of materials from the database, serving as peer reviewers of submitted materials and working together to improve the culture of sharing good materials for learning and teaching.
Randolph Hollingsworth

MOOC Design Principles. A Pedagogical Approach from the Learner's Perspective | eLearni... - 0 views

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    "... massiveness and low teaching involvement during delivery stages is one the biggest challenges for MOOC design"
Randolph Hollingsworth

Siyavula | Technology-powered Learning - 0 views

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    South Africa - teaching portal, learning portal, community portal
Randolph Hollingsworth

The Rise of MOOCS - CAMPUS TECHNOLOGY August 2013 - 0 views

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    The MOOC Business Plan- With millions of students taking high-quality MOOCs for free, schools and course providers are searching for a viable business model. Editorial: MOOC Shake- MOOCs will change higher education radically, but not in the way we expect right now. Assessment Tools for MOOCs- As MOOCs are made available for credit, scalable assessment options are essential. Building a Sense of Community in MOOCs- Massive class sizes can breed feelings of isolation, but they also enable more student interaction. Blended MOOCs: The Best of Both Worlds?- Combining in-class instruction with high-quality MOOCs may resolve some of the hurdles facing xMOOCs, but questions about cost and the impact on faculty remain unanswered. Watch video: Catheryn Cheal, AVP and senior academic technology officer at San Jose State, discusses how the school adapted a course for use in a blended MOOC. The Rise of MOOCs… What does it mean for higher education? Watch video: Cathy Sandeen, VP of education attainment and innovation at ACE, talks about the potential of MOOCs to increase the number of Americans gaining a post-secondary degree. cMOOCs: Putting Collaboration First- Alternative MOOC models are fostering creativity and collaboration with peers. How to Convert a Class Into a MOOC- The sheer size and diversity of the student body in a MOOC require a new approach to teaching. C-Level- The role of MOOCs in learner-initiated learning. MOOC News & Analysis- Georgia Tech's MOOC Degree
Randolph Hollingsworth

Free Survey Tools for Teachers and Students - 0 views

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    Richard Byrne shares free resources and lesson plans for teaching with technology - this blog entry includes Yarp, vorbeo, Urtak, Buzz Dash, Obsurvey, Fluid Surveys, Stellar Survey, Polldaddy, and Poll Everywhere (text messaging)
Randolph Hollingsworth

Patell and Waterman's History of New York · Being a … course, companion, blog... - 0 views

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    An example of a faculty-centered open educational resource for the celebration of local cultures. "The Project on New York Writing seeks to generate significant new research and teaching about New York's relationship to American and global literatures and cultures.... The Project will offer students of New York literature and culture resources with which to interpret the palimpsest that is New York, to help them make sense of the myriad narratives that the city generates. One of the Project's chief aims is conservancy: we hope to preserve the history of New York writing for future generations. But another aim is the promotion of innovation: we hope to encourage all whom the Initiative serves to add to the living culture of city, reading and rewriting its narratives, enlarging the literary construct that is New York."
Randolph Hollingsworth

Study of Impact of Open Educational Resources - JISC funded - Brits - 0 views

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    This study will investigate the impact of Open Educational Resources (OER) use on teaching and learning. To achieve this, the project team will review current research in the area; survey, interview and run workshops with suitable participants to collect data; and will produce an accessible report on the study findings. The report will consider the use of OER from both an individual and institutional perspective looking at the benefits OER can offer each and identifying the pedagogic, attitudinal, logistical and strategic factors conducive to uptake and sustained use of OER, as well as the associated issues and challenges.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Forms of Assessment - 0 views

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    Great article (published online 2010) with easy access to various components of each method: description, indications when to use it, contra-indications, special precautions, notes
Randolph Hollingsworth

Why Some Elite Colleges Give Away Courses Online - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

  • is there evidence of their learning effectiveness? A. That's part of what makes the OLI [Open Learning Initiative, based at Carnegie Mellon University] so unique, is that built into the environment itself, that accomplishes the teaching, is the mechanism for assessment. ... They have given a control group and a variable group the same final, and found that the students using OLI aren't hurt in the slightest by not having had the same level of in-person instruction—that the system did just as well, if not better, at teaching them this material. ... Beyond those two studies, there really hasn't been a systematic appraisal of learning outcomes based on openly available material writ large. No one disputes that these open-courseware initiatives have done much good. But it's impossible, with the currently available data, to determine how much good.
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    Article by Marc Parry on Unlocking the Gates (Princeton University Press), a new book by Taylor Walsh, is a research analyst with Ithaka S+R, the research division of the nonprofit Ithaka consulting group, which supported the project together with the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
Randolph Hollingsworth

4LTR Press | Student-Tested, Faculty Approved - 0 views

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    4 Steps that Chris Rice also uses in his EADs at UK: Meet (are we listening? reach out to students to understand their learning preferences and motivations for taking a course) Show (did we do it? develop learning solutions based on today's students and validate through interative process to ensure ideal product mix) Test (do you like it? gain faculty approval to finalize the product and content mix specific to each discipline) Work (are you in? publish the student-tested, faculty-approved teaching and learning solution) Rest (are you kidding? our research never ends, continual feedback from students ensures that we keep up with their changing needs)
Randolph Hollingsworth

JOLT - Journal of Online Learning and Teaching - 0 views

shared by Randolph Hollingsworth on 17 Feb 13 - Cached
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    Published by MERLOT, CSU Chancellor's Office
Randolph Hollingsworth

A Lesson in Academic Integrity | simulation re copyright ethics and plagiarism - 0 views

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    dealing with morals of plagiarism - could be revised to serve more issues especially stronger regarding various aspects of Creative Commons licenses
Randolph Hollingsworth

Free Technology for Teachers: Free 33 Page Guide - Google for Teachers - 0 views

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    Goggle does more than offer search tools, maps, online docs or spreadsheets for collaborative writing and figuring - it can also offer online quizzes, map placemarking, embedding books in your blog, and more!
Christopher Rice

Should Class Blogs Be Private or Public? | HASTAC - 1 views

  • (2)  Intellectual property.  In the documentary I mention above and in just about all of the other work in my class, we discuss IP issues--and then claim fair use for the materials we borrow from within the class.  We talk about Creative Commons and other forms of share-alike licensing.   But then we often disregard those rules in the creation of the class student-produced materials.  By that I mean, there are images and audio that are attributed, of course, to those who created them but nonetheless used in the production intended for our class and for pedagogical purposes only that would require fees and legal agreements were they distributed beyond the walled off class project.   We are at such a strange moment in the history of intellectual property, with everything changing and no one quite knowing what they want or why since the business model of so much online property remains in flux.  I want my students to understand the IP issues--but I don't want their intellect and imagination fettered by it.  
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    Interesting look at using private class blogging as a means for learning about IP and copyright.
Randolph Hollingsworth

CAST: Center for Applied Special Technology - 0 views

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    Universal design principles are critical to raising standards in faculty-designed learning experiences. When/how do we get awareness and then exploring best types of faculty (and grad students) development learning experiences?
Randolph Hollingsworth

FERPA and Social Media | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  • FERPA was never intended to place students into the box of a physical or online classroom to prevent them from learning from the public.
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    Great approach to helping instructors understand some basic issues of student privacy and the role of social media. This kind of argument might encourage people to assign the use of (and contribution to) open educational resources. "FERPA was never intended to place students into the box of a physical or online classroom to prevent them from learning from the public."
Christopher Rice

photo friday - conversation | D'Arcy Norman dot net - 0 views

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    Great picture of David Wiley & Stephen Downes at their summit at Open Education 2009. Includes link to the .mp3's on Stephen's blog. Nice illustration of how two people can be committed to roughly the same goal, but come at it from very oppositional positions.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Cyberlaw Clinic | Berkman Center - 0 views

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    Harvard Law School students provide "pro-bono legal services to appropriate individuals, small start-ups, non-profit groups and government entities regarding cutting-edge issues of the Internet, new technology and intellectual property."
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