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Candace Lavin

Adobe Education - Teach Digital Video - 0 views

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    This is a great service provided by Adobe, in connection with ISTE (Society for Technology in Education. The curriculum is project based
Sue Maberry

Curricular Uses of Visual Materials: A Research-Driven Process for Improving Institutio... - 0 views

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    "visual literacy" and understandings of visual culture essential outcomes of the contemporary liberal arts curriculum.
Sue Maberry

Can We Promote Experimentation and Innovation in Learning as well as Accountability? In... - 0 views

  • n contrast, the VALUE project responds to the need for multiple measures of multiple abilities and skills, many of which are not particularly well suited to snapshot standardized tests.
  • Drawing directly from curriculum-embedded and co-curricular work, e-portfolios can represent multiple learning styles, modes of accomplishment, and the quality of work achieved by students.
  • e believe that e-portfolios, potentially, can foster and provide evidence of high levels of student learning, across a vast range of experiences, and across programs and institution-wide outcomes.
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  • periodic reflections on learning by students are critical components of an education.
  • ntegrative Learning Metarubric
  • Creative Thinking Metarubric
  • Critical Thinking Metarubric
  • metarubrics
  • We hope that the VALUE project will be able to demonstrate several things:  that faculty across the country share fundamental expectations about student learning on all of the Essential Learning Outcomes deemed critical for student success in the 21st century; that rubrics can articulate these shared expectations; that the shared rubrics can be used and modified locally to reflect campus culture within this national conversation; and that the actual work of students should be the basis for assessing student learning and can more appropriately represent an institution’s learning results.
  • e have an environment in which we need to be able to encompass a wider variety of modes for students to demonstrate their learning processes and achievements. By definition this forces us to encompass audio and video, Web 2.0, hard copy and virtual learning.
  • that different knowledge sets and ways of knowing result in learning outcomes being demonstrated in different ways. But in the deconstruction of the demonstrated learning, we tend to find similarity in the core components or criteria of learning, e.g. for critical thinking.
  • student learning is something that the entire campus community is engaged with; each person on the campus participates in the learning, but no one is responsible for all of the learning.
  • rubrics and e-portfolios does not have to create more work--it requires working differently, shifting my time and focus a bit--but it is richer and more rewarding than what I used to struggle with in trying to communicate my expectations for learning and how students could more readily succeed in meeting those expectations. There is a transparency and communication ability that enriches the conversations both with students and with colleagues.
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    rubrics and e-portfolios does not have to create more work--it requires working differently, shifting my time and focus a bit good example rubrics for Integrative Learning, Critical Thinking, Creative Thinking
Gwynne Keathley

Liberal Education | Winter 2009 | Liberal Education & Effective Practice - 0 views

  • The most prominent attempt to introduce practical activity into liberal education is the civic engagement movement, through which students are encouraged to participate in off-campus community service, sometimes in connection with credit-bearing service-learning courses, sometimes outside the formal curriculum. Such programs aim to cultivate habits of “active citizenship” and build problem-solving skills in community settings.
  • Though important in its own right, the civic engagement movement is also a specific instance of the broader effort to link liberal education with action and practice.
  • The Carnegie Foundation has sponsored an effort to enrich the “thinking” orientation of liberal education with the “doing” emphasis of professional studies by incorporating practice-oriented pedagogies, such as simulations and case studies, in liberal arts courses. Many colleges offer interdisciplinary, problem-focused minors like urban studies or international relations through which students learn to think about complex, real-world problems. These programs often provide platforms for community-based research projects, internships and service opportunities, and Model UN–type simulations.
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    AACU example of a call to link liberal education with more practice-based learning.
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