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alexandra m. pickett

Calling for Success: Online Retention Rates Get Boost From Personal Outreach | Educatio... - 0 views

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    RT @TEBuckTMG: Online retention rates boosted by personal outreach: http://t.co/1A73diKM via @MandyZatynski
Helen Lane

Faculty Usage of Library Tools in a Learning Management System - 0 views

  • In order to better understand faculty attitudes and practices regarding usage of library-specific tools and roles in a university learning management system, log data for a period of three semesters was analyzed. Academic departments with highest rates of usage were identified, and faculty users and non-users within those departments were surveyed regarding their perceptions of and experience with the library tools. Librarians who use the tools were also surveyed to compare their perceptions of faculty tool and role use. While faculty survey respondents showed high levels of positive perceptions of librarians, they also exhibited low awareness of the library tools and little understanding of their use. Recommendations for encouraging wider adoption and effective usage are discussed.
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    In order to better understand faculty attitudes and practices regarding usage of library-specific tools and roles in a university learning management system, log data for a period of three semesters was analyzed. Academic departments with highest rates of usage were identified, and faculty users and non-users within those departments were surveyed regarding their perceptions of and experience with the library tools. Librarians who use the tools were also surveyed to compare their perceptions of faculty tool and role use. While faculty survey respondents showed high levels of positive perceptions of librarians, they also exhibited low awareness of the library tools and little understanding of their use. Recommendations for encouraging wider adoption and effective usage are discussed.
alexandra m. pickett

A radical idea to transform what kids learn in school - The Answer Sheet - The Washingt... - 0 views

  • How many? The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says, “Employment of mathematicians is expected to increase by 16 percent from 2010 to 2020…. There will be competition for jobs because of the small number of openings in this occupation.”
  • 1) Humankind’s hope for the future lies, as it always has, in the richness of human variability. We differ in experience, situation, aspirations, attitudes, abilities, interests, motivations, emotions, life chances, prospects, potential, and luck. To survive and prosper, these differences need to be exploited to the maximum. The core curriculum minimizes them. (2) Knowledge is exploding at an ever-accelerating rate. Whole new fields of study unimagined even a few years ago are emerging. The explosion isn’t just going to continue, it’s going to accelerate. Thinking we know enough to lock ANY curriculum in place — much less one that’s more than a hundred years old — is either naïve or malicious. (3) The future is unknowable. Period. Even if it were possible to standardize and program kids, we don’t know — NOBODY knows — what they’ll need to know next week, much less for the rest of their lives. They may need technical skills no one now has, or the ability to survive on edible weeds and a quart of water a day. Neither the Common Core nor the tests that manufacturers are able to write can take adequate account of an unknown future.
Rob Piorkowski

How to Create Evidence of Student Learning - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 1 views

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    ...First-week final exam - One of the more controversial methods of measuring student learning is to have students take the final exam during the first week in class, but don't grade them on it. At the end of the semester give them that same exam again and compare the results. While letting students see their final exam makes some faculty nervous, Nilson says most students won't remember any of the questions, and if they do what's the harm? It will simply help them focus in on what you feel is important for them to know.
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    Before ... and after learning ...
danfeinberg

MyEDU: Professor ratings, average GPA, class schedule & degree tools | MyEdu - 0 views

shared by danfeinberg on 15 Apr 11 - Cached
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    Maybe this is useful tool for some of our students?
alexandra m. pickett

New study suggests that faculty development has a demonstrable impact on student learning - 2 views

  • “Independent ratings of students’ learning outcomes demonstrate that when faculty learn and apply better ways of addressing desirable student learning outcomes, they translate their learning into course materials and assignments that actually do positively influence students’ learning,” the book says. “That result, in the end, constitutes a successful case, and that kind of design produces long-range outcomes.”
alexandra m. pickett

[PDF] The Impact of Findability on Student Motivation, Self-Efficacy, and Perceptions o... - 0 views

  • Students reported lower levels of self-efficacy and motivation after interacting with courses rated low in findability. Additionally, a negative, linear relationship was found between findability and both self-efficacy and motivation.
  • Findability
  • negative, linear relationship was found between findability and both self-efficacy and motivation
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • linking findability to student achievement
  • linking findability to student achievement of learning outcomes
  • impact on student perceptions of course quality and experience
  • inking findability to student achievement of learning outcomes
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