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Michael Walker

Curatr at the NHM: Learning Locker - 0 views

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    Learning Locker
Brendan Murphy

Easy ways to protect your online privacy and educate others | The Webmaker Blog - 0 views

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    Mozilla webmaker privacy. How to secure your firefox browser. Why it's important
Brendan Murphy

Our privacy matters! | Youth, Identity and Online Sociability - 0 views

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    documentary on privacy as well as other rsources
Brendan Murphy

Content Strategy In The Age Of Semantic Search - Presentation Software that Inspires | ... - 0 views

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    What companies do to get a better idea ofwhat their consumers are thinking.
Michael Walker

MOOCs as Neocolonialism: Who Controls Knowledge? - WorldWise - Blogs - The Chronicle of... - 0 views

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    This argues that MOOC content is mostly western in origin, and doesn't take into account other cultures or pedagogies.
anonymous

The Privilege of "Digital Literacy" - 2 views

  • “I’m wondering if the new digital divide…is not about access but about people who have the time, energy, and skills to develop new media literacy and those who don’t.”
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    "the real divide in the future will not be between those who have access to the Internet and those that don't. Instead it will be those who know how to use that access well compared to those that don't. "
Rhonda Jessen

How to Teach Your Students to Think Before They Post | Common Sense Media - 0 views

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    Post from Common Sense Media about California's "Eraser Bill" with tools to teach K-12 students to think before they post
Cameron Mount

Why Do Teachers Quit? - 0 views

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    This is interesting, and I wonder how edtech affects the teacher turnover rate,
Michael Walker

MOOCs: Too Much Hype, or Not Enough? | Innovation Insights | Wired.com - 0 views

  • The next generation MOOC (I’ll go ahead and coin ngMOOC now — you’re welcome) will have to employ more of a feedback loop to the student. Understanding the issues with social learning at scale, most progressive MOOC providers are finding ways to utilize graduate students, or simply more advanced students, like Seniors, who have already taken a course, to help push conversation and assessment. By seeding courses with large clusters of “more knowledgeable others” (as Vygotsky would call them), providers theorize they can get at the kind of learning communities desired to make a MOOC work at scale. So, essentially the next generation of MOOC combines the worlds of the xMOOC and the cMOOC, by using computers to do as much simulated instruction and assessment as possible, while making up for communication and community flaws through social construction. Wait, maybe the next generation MOOC should be an “xcMOOC” — you’re welcome again.
  • For instance, as I’ve noted before, a number of schools are working to crack the $10,000 Baccalaureate degree. To do so, it is likely that these schools and programs will need to employ the MOOC concept (whether their solutions need to include “massive” courses is yet to be determined). That means using reusable, self-paced, socially networked courses to free up typical administrative or teaching overhead. That means using more machine learning for grading, adaptivity, and personalization.
  • Are MOOCs over-hyped and dying? I don’t think so.
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  • We don’t need a new letter in front of a MOOC. Maybe we just need a new name for a MOOC. You know, something like: eCourse. Because at the end of the day, these massive courses may just be another way that any student can learn at any time.
Rhonda Jessen

Mrs. Yollis' Classroom Blog: Educational Tweeting! - 0 views

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    Great post from Linda Yollis about how to use Twitter in the classrooom to share learning. Great examples, primary grades
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