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Bill Pelz

Creating Effective Responses to Student Discussion Postings - 2 views

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    An integral part of nearly all online classes is the threaded discussion-it is where students interact on a nearly daily basis, posting their thoughts and information on main discussion topics, your postings, and the postings of other students. While you have measured control over the content, length, and tone of student postings, you have full control over your own.
alexandra m. pickett

Two-year institutions help students achieve their dreams - Lumina Foundation: Helping P... - 0 views

  • other factors that magnify academic shortcomings and put students at risk of dropping out. They include:Being the first member of the family to attend college.Being the product of a K-12 system that failed to develop students’ potential.Holding down a job, in most cases full time.Being a parent, often a single parent.Being a part-time student and dropping out periodically due to the demands of time or lack of resources.
danfeinberg

Coursera - 0 views

shared by danfeinberg on 23 Apr 12 - No Cached
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    We are a social entrepeneurship company that partners with the top universities in the world to offer courses online for anyone to take, for free. We envision a future where the top universities are educating not only thousands of students, but millions. Our technology enables the best professors to teach tens or hundreds of thousands of students.
alexandra m. pickett

Five Things Your Lender Doesn't Want You To Know About Your Private Student Loan - Dist... - 0 views

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    " Five Things Your Lender Doesn't Want You To Know About Your Private Student Loan "
alexandra m. pickett

http://igitur-archive.library.uu.nl/ivlos/2006-1216-204736/pol - the affordance of anch... - 0 views

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    Anchored discussion is a form of collaborative literature processing. It "starts from the notion of collaborative discussion that is contextualized or anchored within a specific content" (van der Pol, Admiraal & Simons, 2006). In this course, the discussions we participate in are based on prompts that address ideas included in each of the required resources for each module. However, an anchored discussion is a discussion that is focused on one piece of literature. As students read and digest the material, discussions about the meaning of that material occur within a window where the material is present. It is like having an asynchronous chat window open next to a research article. (van der Pol et al., 2006) As I started learning about anchored discussions, I saw many connections to shared annotation such as what we use Diigo for. Van der Pol et al. (2006) state that "shared annotation might leave more room for individual processes, but is shown to have some limitations in supporting interactivity". Anchored discussions take shared annotation a step further in that it requires conversation (as opposed to individual notes) regarding a resource. The collaborative piece of anchored discussions really got my attention in that it provides greater opportunity for the development of teaching presence by both students and the instructor. The opportunity to facilitate a discussion within the context of a required reading is an exciting idea for me. The use of anchored discussion allows for all three facets of teaching presence: instructional design and organization, facilitating discourse, and direct instruction (Shea, Pickett, & Pelz, 2003). I am wondering if there is a way to use Diigo in creating anchored discussions.
alexandra m. pickett

'Miss, what's my password?' 14 Web 2.0 tools without student logins | Slome School - 2 views

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    RT @Larryferlazzo: RT @edublogs: 14 online tools you can use with students that don't require accounts - http://t.co/jdEv6qImIG
alexandra m. pickett

Practicing Learner-Centered Teaching: Pedagogical Design and Assessment of a Second Lif... - 0 views

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    "Weimer, M. (2002), Leamer-Centered Teaching: Five Key Changes to Practice, Jossey-Bass."
alexandra m. pickett

How Would Students Rethink Education? - 0 views

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    * Better cafeteria food with real ingredients * No school busses - nearly every child mentioned the bullying of bus rides as one of the reasons they hated school * More choice in their assignments or projects * Replace grades with feedback and portfolios (like we did in our class) * Staggered start and end times so that the school would "feel smaller" * More alternative sports in addition to the traditional ones * Off-campus community service once a week * Job-shadowing for one month of the year * A monthly educational field trip * iPads, netbooks or laptops in classes - they even brought up some interesting ways to raise money for these devices * More freedom in terms of leaving to use the restroom, eating a snack or getting a drink of water * More electives - while most of them agreed that we need math, they suggested that maybe they could choose pre-geometry or pre-algebra or in reading, they could have reading classes geared toward certain topics * A school garden
alexandra m. pickett

Sniffy the Virtual Rat - 0 views

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    Sniffy the Virtual Rat, is a fun, interactive software program that gives undergraduate students a virtual laboratory experience . . . without all the drawbacks of using a real laboratory rat. Using Sniffy, students can explore operant and classical by performing experiments that demonstrate most of the major conditioning phenomena discussed in textbooks on the psychology of learning.
alexandra m. pickett

Post Secondary Higher Education and Instruction Technology Solutions by PLATO Learning - 0 views

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    "PLATO Learning's post-secondary solutions meet the diverse demands college and adult students bring to their post-secondary learning experience with award-winning products that enhance the learning process and provide the quality, flexibility, interactivity, and online access that students expect. "
Rob Piorkowski

Seven Keys to Improving Teaching and Learning - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 0 views

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    "My first suggestion is to start where the bottlenecks in the discipline are," he said. "What topics in your course are harder for the students? Why is that? Are students lacking requisite prior knowledge? Do they need more practice of certain basic skills? Do they bring misconceptions to the table? If you don't know, collect some data. Once you get a handle on the reasons why, start bridging those gaps with appropriate interventions. Work incrementally. Get comfortable with a few changes in your teaching first, and then expand to others, until you reach a tipping point. …
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