Skip to main content

Home/ plenk2010/ Group items tagged MOOC

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Chris Jobling

Why MOOC Engagement is So Hard « Ponderances of Steve - 0 views

  •  
    Steve LeBlanc describes what i'ts like to be part of the PLENK2010 MOOC and suggests a method of engaging with it. Nicely summarizes the thoughts that are probably already forming in peoples' heads even if they haven't been able to formalize them so well.
Chris Jobling

Participating in a MOOC is like dining at a banquet | Sean's Emerging… - 0 views

  •  
    A wonderful analogy to the experience of being in a MOOC (or any other on-line community really). Sean might be missing out on some useful discussions if he's avoiding the Moodle forums. There's a lot going on there too.
Ian Woods

Why MOOC Engagement is So Hard « Ponderances of Steve - 0 views

  • Produce a field guide to the area and make it freely available to others
  • Your blog can serve as a public repository for notes to yourself. Those notes will document the insights and conclusions of all your travels through the field, and perhaps even your frustrations
  • Blog because you learn better with it. By reporting your struggles to learn the material, you learn better. By summarizing, reviewing and debating the ideas of the course, you learn better. By writing for an audience, you write better and thereby learn better. By making your journey open through the use of blogs and forum comments, you not only serve others, but you also do the extra work of sense making that leads to deeper integration of the materials.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • We teach best what we most need to learn. — Fritz Perls
  • So why is a MOOC so hard? Because it breaks all of our expectations about what is supposed to happen in a class. We are asked to transform from the passive role of student to the more active role of self-directed learner. Our new role makes us ever more responsible for our own learning, in a way that might just expose us and make us appear silly. That is a daunting undertaking, even for the most web-savvy students. The good news is that you can’t really fail, unless you apply the old rules to the new situation. Survive a MOOC and you’ll come out of it a better person. Thrive in it and you’ll come out a better leader.
  •  
    Steve LeBlanc on the importance of exposing ourselves and risking feeling silly
Chris Jobling

AUSpace: Managing and Learning in MOOCs (massive open online courses) - 0 views

  •  
    "George Siemens, with Athabasca's Technology Enhanced Knowledge Research Institute, is best known for his development of the pedagogical model of networked learning known as Connectivism. He and Steven Downes have pioneered the development of massive open courses, in which many hundreds of students study and learn in open and networked contexts." - It's all about MOOCs like PLENK2010
chris saeger

massive open online course presentation - 0 views

  •  
    presentation on MOOCs
Chris Jobling

A different view: PLENK 2010 MOOC Curation - 0 views

  •  
    "Dave [Cromier], I agree with you, and encourage us all to create, co-create, and curate! Physical curation, and digital curation are the keys to unlocking the assets of my PLN." or is it? - A different view from David Roberts.
  •  
    So is curation de-cluttering?
Vahid Masrour

Necesitamos The Daily en un MOOC Conectivista sobre PLE, PLENK2010? « Cruzand... - 0 views

  •  
    Iluminadora discusión sobre el rol de los curators en un curso. Gracias a Emapey!
Lindsay Jordan

YouTube - Massive Open Online Courses for Network Creation - 0 views

  •  
    Dave Cormier - MOOCs for network creation
Chris Jobling

PLENK10: Personal Learning Environments: Challenging the dominant design of educational... - 0 views

  •  
    A discussion forum instigated by Scott Wilson, co-author of one of the Week 1 readings, and arguably (so far as I can tell from what I've read in the context of the PLENK2010 MOOC) the inventor of the term PLE. A good place to go for extra background and other readings related to "Personal Learning Environments: Challenging the dominant design of educational systems" (Wlison, et al, 2007)
Chris Jobling

Search PLENK 2010 Feeds - 0 views

  •  
    A Google Custom Search Engine (CSE) for the Personal Environments, Networks and Knowledge (PLENK) 2010 Massively Open Online Course (MOOC). Created by @cpjobling from a dynamic OPML file provided by Stephen Downes, at the suggestion of @psychemedia by following the instructions provided by @cogdog.
Cris Crissman

Stories Synchronize Brains | Neuromarketing - 0 views

  •  
    Why MOOCs need real-time sessions . . . brain synching
Vahid Masrour

Teaching & Learning in Open Courses - 0 views

  •  
    George Siemens presents some findings about MOOCs
Chris Jobling

PLENK 2010: Just Like 'Watching Football' - 0 views

  •  
    Nice summary of the first week's readings and discussion by Stefanie Pike, Educational Technology and Change Journal.  "Both the discussion and readings helped me to refine my understanding of both concepts. To me, the term personal learning network refers to processes and structures within the personal learning environment. Another personal learning outcome is my new awareness of the importance of "curation" in online classes, an issue I have not yet thought about. A great deal of discussion time was dedicated to the problem of curation, that is, how to make the results of a forum or live discussion available without having to read through all comments. Dave Cormier and the participants vented different ideas and approaches - from structuring the process of curation in a wiki and using word clouds like Wordle and visualizations like concept maps to discourse analysis and approaches from computational linguistics. "Stephen Downes encouraged participants to be selective in their attention and activities within the class. "Think of it as football.  People do not stop watching football just because they cannot watch everything!" I wonder if Stephen was talking about american football or soccer? In soccer you just watch the player with the ball.
Chris Jobling

YouTube - Web 2.0 Expo NY: Clay Shirky (shirky.com) It's Not Information Overload. It's... - 0 views

  •  
    "It's Not Information Overload. It's Filter Failure." Clay Shirky speaking and Web2.0 Expo in 2008 between "Here comes everybody" and "Cognitive surplus". There was an interesting, somewhat negative, reaction from George Siemens when this video was mentioned in the Friday discussion ... Shared with PLENK2010 by Kimberly in the "Adventurous Learning" blog (http://learningpirate.blogspot.com)
  •  
    I think this video was selected by Kimberly because the title chimed with the problems of coping with the amount of information that is being generated by the PLENK2010 MOOC. But it contains other interesting messages as well. For example the issue of privacy in social networks and issues around group work in social networks and the problems that may have for educational institutions.
1 - 20 of 23 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page