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Janos Haits

Knowledge Graphs for Open Science - Ontotext - 1 views

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    "The Open Science (or Open Scholarship) movement has been gaining momentum, especially since the European Commission has committed itself to ensuring open access to all funded research in April 2016. Expensive paywalls used by publishers, restrictive usage policies by scientific literature sources, a lack of consistency in the formatting and data locked away by proprietary software have all had detrimental effects on the dissemination of scientific knowledge."
Janos Haits

working - The Knowledge Web - 0 views

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    'Welcome, this is a prototype test version of James Burke's Knowledge Web (video overview). It includes only the very basic functions. The fully developed version will have three tools (input and display) that all work together: 1) a web view (see above) to see the relationships, 2) a timeline to know when you are (e.g., Chronozoom), and 3) a map to know where you are (also tours of historical sites). This user int
21 articles

21 Articles | Adobe Photoshop Tutorials - a brief dialogue - 21 Articles - 0 views

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    A individual who wants to establish a home business can consider stock of the skills and knowledge he or she already has and then take inspiration from existing resources.
Janos Haits

Wikidata:Main Page - Wikidata - 0 views

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    Wikidata - the free knowledge base that anyone can edit
Giorgio Bertini

Science as an open enterprise « Learning Sciences of Change - 2 views

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    Open inquiry is at the heart of the scientific enterprise. Publication of scientific theories - and of the experimental and observational data on which they are based - permits others to identify errors, to support, reject or refine theories and to reuse data for further understanding and knowledge. Science's powerful capacity for self-correction comes from this openness to scrutiny and challenge.
Giorgio Bertini

Open science « Learning Sciences of Change - 1 views

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    Open science is the umbrella term of the movement to make scientific research, data and dissemination accessible to all levels of an inquiring society, amateur or professional. It encompasses practices such as publishing open research, campaigning for open access, encouraging scientists to practice open notebook science, and generally making it easier to publish and communicate scientific knowledge.
Roland Gesthuizen

What Are 21st-Century Skills? - 7 views

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    "What Are 21st-Century Skills? Learning to collaborate with others and connect through technology are essential skills in a knowledge-based economy."
Sean Nash

Aligning Philosophy and Practice - nashworld - 0 views

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    One of my foundational rules of classroom engagement is simply this: never be the first one to open your mouth and start talking about any topic. Twenty years in the classroom taught me that one. Never assume. Never take prior knowledge for granted. Listen first, then act. Never presume to know what the students in front of you are capable of. They'll show you if you are bold enough to listen.
Michael Sturgeon

ATLAS 3D Kit - Murobo - 0 views

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    This is a scanner kit you can print and build yourself. The kit contains everything required to assemble the scanner except for the enclosure. No soldering or electrical knowledge is required to build the ATLAS 3D kit. All of the components simply screw together.
nimblechappstech

PHP vs. WordPress: Which One is Better - 0 views

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    PHP user needs to have a knowledge of WordPress but WordPress user does not need to learn PHP in order to use or manage a WordPress website. To know the difference between them read this article.
Roland Gesthuizen

Ban social media as a distraction? No, it boosts productivity | TechRepublic - 3 views

  • That core presence enables workers to complete collective tasks more effectively by giving them a greater freedom over when and where they do their jobs
  • research suggests that knowledge workers who manage their presence successfully and control their responses are better at organising workflow
  • social media is not an entertainment medium with side-benefits for business. “It’s not a by-product. It’s the main thing
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  • warned against organisations treating social media and easy access to it via mobile devices as a distraction for employees. “They said that about email. They said that about the telephone. Businesses should change - social media is a fact of life,”
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    "Far from diverting employees from their jobs, social media and smartphones actually make staff more productive - and employers should learn to deal with that new reality. Access to social networks via mobile devices gives staff a "virtual co-presence" with direct benefits for the business in which they work, according to a new study."
Sean Nash

An Evidence-Based Approach To Science Education (Or: Dr. Hattie, And How I Learned To S... - 2 views

  • The best results from computer-based learning are seen with Computer-Cooperative Pair Learning (0.96), where two students will work together to complete a computer-based learning task.
    • Sean Nash
       
      This seems to be intuitively logical to me at this point. This results is likely not based on many meta-analyses. I'll have to look these up.
  • First, students are engaged through activation of a schema. Basically, setting the stage for learning something new by invoking things they already know.  Second, students do an experiment where they are allowed to “mess around” with a concrete phenomenon.  Third, an extensive class or tutorial discussion or activity takes place where students attempt to make sense of what they’ve seen.  This is the most critical stage, and must include scaffolding, guided questioning, modeling, shaping, concept mapping and so on.  Finally, having developed a set of principles or a theory, students are made to apply the theory to a novel problem or situation.  Some have formalized this learning cycle into four stages and an acronym: Activation (A; the set up), Concrete (C; the experiment), Invent (I; the discussion etc.), and Apply (A; the application to a novel problem); ACIA.
    • Sean Nash
       
      Ah, yes.... learning cycles. This sounds much like the 5E approach to me.
  • direct instruction method (lecturing to small classes) gets a bum wrap that it doesn’t deserve.  It works very well provided instructors are versed in the proper use of questioning, scaffolding (building a mental framework to accompany the knowledge), and modeling (showing students good example of what they want and expect).
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  • Second, PBL may be all the rage, but it’s a double-edged sword.  It works very well when worked, partially worked, and “to-complete” problems are used, and when schema are activated prior to commencement, but barely works at all when these things are not done.  PBL tutors require a greater degree of training than is currently the case if this method is going to be used effectively.
  • Third, don’t ignore the importance of giving students the chance mess around with concrete examples, particularly at the early stages.
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    He lost me on the first paragraph with the stereotyping of university professors. The last 7 years have shown a major shift in accountabillity at the post-secondary level. Univiersities, colleges and for-profit education institutions must now show a return on investment for students like never before. Part of this is due to financial aid availability dependent on institutional graduation and post-graduation employment rates. Don't start an article dissing those who teach those who will serve in the elementary and high school classes.
seoservicesguru1

Seo Services Guru - Want to be on Page 1 of Google? Here at - 1 views

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    Experienced SEO Specialist having vast knowledge on SEO, Social media, PPC, Content Marketing, Affiliate marketing and Social Media Marketing, PBN - Private Blog Networks, Web Development
mj-freeway

Cannabis Compliance Software - 1 views

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    Be more intelligent than you've ever been before with in-depth knowledge about your operation - and the market at large - like you've never had before.
Sean Nash

AI, Robotics, and the Future of Jobs | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life P... - 3 views

  • “Unlike previous disruptions such as when farming machinery displaced farm workers but created factory jobs making the machines, robotics and AI are different. Due to their versatility and growing capabilities, not just a few economic sectors will be affected, but whole swaths will be. This is already being seen now in areas from robocalls to lights-out manufacturing. Economic efficiency will be the driver. The social consequence is that good-paying jobs will be increasingly scarce."
  • For those who expect AI and robotics to significantly displace human employment, these displacements seem certain to lead to an increase in income inequality, a continued hollowing out of the middle class, and even riots, social unrest, and/or the creation of a permanent, unemployable “underclass”.
  • truck driver is the number-one occupation for men in the U.S.
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  • “Just today, the guy who drives the service car I take to go to the airport [said that he] does this job because his last blue-collar job disappeared from automation. Driverless cars displace him. Where does he go? What does he do for society? The gaps between the haves and have-nots will grow larger. I’m reminded of the line from Henry Ford, who understood he does no good to his business if his own people can’t afford to buy the car.”
  • A consistent theme among both groups is that our existing social institutions—especially the educational system—are not up to the challenge of preparing workers for the technology- and robotics-centric nature of employment in the future.
  • “The jobs that the robots will leave for humans will be those that require thought and knowledge. In other words, only the best-educated humans will compete with machines. And education systems in the U.S. and much of the rest of the world are still sitting students in rows and columns, teaching them to keep quiet and memorize what is told to them, preparing them for life in a 20th century factory.”
  • Autodidacts will do well, as they always have done, but the broad masses of people are being prepared for the wrong economy.”
  • “Robots that collaborate with humans over the cloud will be in full realization by 2025. Robots will assist humans in tasks thus allowing humans to use their intelligence in new ways, freeing us up from menial tasks.”
  • “Many things need to be done to care for, teach, feed, and heal others that are difficult to monetize. If technologies replace people in some jobs and roles, what kinds of social support or safety nets will make it possible for them to contribute to the common good through other means? Think outside the job.”
  • And we can already see some hints of reaction to this trend in the current economy: entrepreneurially-minded unemployed and underemployed people are taking advantages of sites like Etsy and TaskRabbit to market quintessentially human skills. And in response, there is increasing demand for ‘artisanal’ or ‘hand-crafted’ products that were made by a human.
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