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M Bresler

Getting Started With Online Faculty Development - 0 views

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    This article provides inspiration for both the project in general, and for publishing the results. I think this could be approached for scholarships in a number of ways.
M Bresler

Barriers and solutions to online learning in medical education - an integrative review ... - 0 views

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    Even though this is focused on eLearning for students, I suspect some overlap with modules for faculty. Provides some "things to avoid".
M Bresler

Online faculty development: What works? - 0 views

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    For higher ed (not Med ed) but still relevant, and current. Why make the same mistakes others have made?
M Bresler

Online learning for faculty development: A review of the literature: Medical Teacher: V... - 0 views

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    Nice to find a lit review on this topic. Good ideas for research & scholarship, as well as sources of inspiration.
k_best

Importance of Student Engagement Initiatives to Ensure Academic Success | Unifyed - 0 views

  • When a student is encouraged to participate in group learning, they are more likely to develop an interest in the subject.
  • Student engagement also builds better relationships with other students, staff, and faculty
    • k_best
       
      We are always looking to get students to just KNOW who we are and getting them engaged, and that first steps leads to getting students who want to become a bigger part of our community later (student leaders, facilitators, etc.)
k_best

Four Activities to Increase Student Engagement in Higher Education - 1 views

  • You can source and share relevant content directly with learners through social media.
    • k_best
       
      On our instagram page, we try to use polls, upcoming events, and interactive posts to get students to engage with us and to know what's going on.
  • The more involved an instructor becomes in the online activities of students, the more these students will feel validated for the learning they are demonstrating.
    • k_best
       
      Maybe if we were to showcase what students were sending us (photos of events, ideas they had for our community, etc.) they would be more inclined to get involved and share with us and each other.
k_best

Critical and Alternative Perspectives on Student Engagement | Student Affairs and Techn... - 0 views

  • tudent eng
  • ement is everything.
    • k_best
       
      We need students to not only be engaged with their classes (which is important), but with their learning communities as well. They are supposed to be learning where they are living, so how can we get them engaged in what we are trying to introduce into the community?
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  • Student engagement is generally accepted as being connected to academic success, retention, learning, and the student experience.
  • a performative mode of practice that not only links to students’ changing role and position as regulators of HE
    • k_best
       
      Students are often changing and wanting/needing different things at different times. If we are to create things centered around them, we also have to be willing to change our roles and plans to work in conjuncture with theirs.
jenmitchellvt

Digital Citizenship: What It Means, How to Teach It, and the Resources You Need - 0 views

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    This is a blog post on the American College of Education website. It goes over the basics of digital citizenship (the who, what, where, etc.) and also shares some resources of teaching it.
jenmitchellvt

9 resources for teaching digital citizenship | ISTE - 0 views

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    A list of resources from ISTE that was published at the beginning of February. I am particularly interested in digging deeper into the "6 tips and 1 Activity" article and "A New Twist on Cyberbullying."
jenmitchellvt

Edutopia - 0 views

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    This link has a bunch of articles that all fall under the umbrella of digital citizenship. I want to be able to go back and look through some of the more closely as I work on my change project.
hannahluce95

Interactive Math for the Google Classroom - The Tech Edvocate - 1 views

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    The benefits of using Google Classroom in Mathematics. This article identifies the points of integration between Khan academy and Math Games with Google Classroom.
hannahluce95

5 Math Technology Tools to Engage Students - Global Learning - Education Week - 0 views

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    Technology in the Math Classroom - this blog post outlines 5 tech tools that can be used to engage students and promote deep learning in the classroom. After reading the article, I am going to sign up for Google Classroom and explore the tool as a way to provide students increased access to videos of math concept videos that we are learning.
hannahluce95

Edutopia - 1 views

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    This article from EduTopia provides a review of the TPACK framework and shifting concerns with technology in schools. Educators used to be concerned most with access, but now we should be shifting thinking towards empowerment and excellent teaching supported by technology.
Lucie deLaBruere

Women In Technology Stats: What's About To Change? [2020] - 0 views

  • In 2017, just 26% of professional computing jobs were held by women.
    • Lucie deLaBruere
       
      Wonder how this has changed in 3 years.
  • 85% of Facebook’s global tech-related jobs are occupied by men.
  • ore promising for women, as you’ll see: 29% of all Apple leaders were women.
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  • companies with male leadership earned $58.2 billion in investments.
  • Admiral Grace Murray Hopper was one of the first programmers in history
  • In 1985, 37% of all US bachelors in Computer Sciences were women.
  • In 2018, 20% of all jobs in technology were held by women.
  • one out of three employees in Apple, Facebook, and Google was female.
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    contains current stats on women in tech.
jessvanorman

infed.org | Peter Senge and the learning organization - 0 views

  • The basic rationale for such organizations is that in situations of rapid change only those that are flexible, adaptive and productive will excel. For this to happen, it is argued, organizations need to ‘discover how to tap people’s commitment and capacity to learn at all levels’ (ibid.: 4).While all people have the capacity to learn, the structures in which they have to function are often not conducive to reflection and engagement. Furthermore, people may lack the tools and guiding ideas to make sense of the situations they face. Organizations that are continually expanding their capacity to create their future require a fundamental shift of mind among their members.
  • Personal mastery. ‘Organizations learn only through individuals who learn. Individual learning does not guarantee organizational learning. But without it no organizational learning occurs’ (Senge 1990: 139). Personal mastery is the discipline of continually clarifying and deepening our personal vision, of focusing our energies, of developing patience, and of seeing reality objectively’ (ibid.: 7). It goes beyond competence and skills, although it involves them. It goes beyond spiritual opening, although it involves spiritual growth (ibid.: 141). Mastery is seen as a special kind of proficiency. It is not about dominance, but rather about calling. Vision is vocation rather than simply just a good idea.
  • But personal mastery is not something you possess. It is a process. It is a lifelong discipline. People with a high level of personal mastery are acutely aware of their ignorance, their incompetence, their growth areas. And they are deeply self-confident. Paradoxical? Only for those who do not see the ‘journey is the reward’. (Senge 1990: 142)
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  • If organizations are to develop a capacity to work with mental models then it will be necessary for people to learn new skills and develop new orientations, and for their to be institutional changes that foster such change. ‘Entrenched mental models… thwart changes that could come from systems thinking’ (ibid.: 203). Moving the organization in the right direction entails working to transcend the sorts of internal politics and game playing that dominate traditional organizations. In other words it means fostering openness (Senge 1990: 273-286). It also involves seeking to distribute business responsibly far more widely while retaining coordination and control. Learning organizations are localized organizations (ibid.: 287-301).
  • it’s the capacity to hold a share picture of the future we seek to create’ (1990: 9). Such a vision has the power to be uplifting – and to encourage experimentation and innovation. Crucially, it is argued, it can also foster a sense of the long-term, something that is fundamental to the ‘fifth discipline’.
  • When there is a genuine vision (as opposed to the all-to-familiar ‘vision statement’), people excel and learn, not because they are told to, but because they want to. But many leaders have personal visions that never get translated into shared visions that galvanize an organization… What has been lacking is a discipline for translating vision into shared vision – not a ‘cookbook’ but a set of principles and guiding practices. The practice of shared vision involves the skills of unearthing shared ‘pictures of the future’ that foster genuine commitment and enrolment rather than compliance. In mastering this discipline, leaders learn the counter-productiveness of trying to dictate a vision, no matter how heartfelt. (Senge 1990: 9)
  • People need to be able to act together. When teams learn together, Peter Senge suggests, not only can there be good results for the organization, members will grow more rapidly than could have occurred otherwise.
  • In a learning organization, leaders are designers, stewards and teachers. They are responsible for building organizations were people continually expand their capabilities to understand complexity, clarify vision, and improve shared mental models – that is they are responsible for learning…. Learning organizations will remain a ‘good idea’… until people take a stand for building such organizations. Taking this stand is the first leadership act, the start of inspiring (literally ‘to breathe life into’) the vision of the learning organization. (Senge 1990: 340)
  • In essence, ‘the leaders’ task is designing the learning processes whereby people throughout the organization can deal productively with the critical issues they face, and develop their mastery in the learning disciplines’ (ibid.: 345).
  • One of the important things to grasp here is that stewardship involves a commitment to, and responsibility for the vision, but it does not mean that the leader owns it. It is not their possession. Leaders are stewards of the vision, their task is to manage it for the benefit of others (hence the subtitle of Block’s book – ‘Choosing service over self-interest’). Leaders learn to see their vision as part of something larger. Purpose stories evolve as they are being told, ‘in fact, they are as a result of being told’ (Senge 1990: 351). Leaders have to learn to listen to other people’s vision and to change their own where necessary. Telling the story in this way allows others to be involved and to help develop a vision that is both individual and shared.
  • By attending to purpose, leaders can cultivate an understanding of what the organization (and its members) are seeking to become. One of the issues here is that leaders often have strengths in one or two of the areas but are unable, for example, to develop systemic understanding. A key to success is being able to conceptualize insights so that they become public knowledge, ‘open to challenge and further improvement’ (ibid.: 356).
  • It is about fostering learning, for everyone. Such leaders help people throughout the organization develop systemic understandings. Accepting this responsibility is the antidote to one of the most common downfalls of otherwise gifted teachers – losing their commitment to the truth. (Senge 1990: 356)
jessvanorman

Creating a professional growth culture: 3 lessons from school districts - 2 views

  • Lesson 1: Incentives help overcome inertia
  • Lesson 2: Time is a precious resource
  • Lesson 3: Community makes a movement
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  • “Adoption needs to happen teacher by teacher, grade by grade.”
  • By helping educators develop the skills and confidence to grow professionally, school districts are investing in their students and building cultures that embrace technology. “It doesn’t matter how many devices you have,” Mac says. “If you don’t know how to integrate technology with teaching, it becomes just another add on.”
pjspurlock

Digital citizenship is more than staying safe online, says ISTE's chief executive - 0 views

  • Practicing responsible “digital citizenship” requires students, educators and administrators to do more than simply avoid confrontations online, but to be proactive in improving their online communities, the CEO of the International Society for Technology in Education said at a conference Monday.
    • pjspurlock
       
      Great article on #digcit
  • Practicing responsible “digital citizenship” requires students, educators and administrators to do more than simply avoid confrontations online, but to be proactive in improving their online communities, the CEO of the International Society for Technology in Education said at a conference Monday.
pjspurlock

Projects | Stanford History Education Group - 0 views

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    Good resources for those of us looking into #digcit curriculum
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