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Danny Thorne

Instructors' Vantage Point: Teaching Online vs. Face-to-Face - Online Learning - The Ch... - 0 views

  • Online education promises the ability to bend space and time. Get your education anywhere! Take college courses in your pajamas! Become educated while drinking at a karaoke bar! But it can't deliver on such promises, because although it can bend space, online education cannot bend time.
  • The main thing that, in the end, had to go was interactivity, because it required both space and time.
Danny Thorne

Learning the Art of Virtual Instruction - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Edu... - 2 views

  • A 2007 survey of more than 10,000 faculty members at 69 public colleges and universities found that more than two-thirds of professors thought online learning was inferior or somewhat inferior to face-to-face instruction.
  • "We help them understand that it's a classroom, not a Web site."
  • Sloan study found that about 55 percent of probationary, tenure-track faculty members felt they were unlikely to receive adequate recognition for their online work at tenure and promotion time.
Danny Thorne

4 Myths About For-Profit Online Learning - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Ed... - 1 views

  • while for-profit institutions such as Capella and Kaplan Universities and the University of Phoenix educate hundreds of thousands of students online, their officials report that the average enrollment per course ranges from only nine to 18
  • at Phoenix, as reported for August of this year, 470,800 students were being served by over 33,000 faculty members, for a student-faculty ratio of just over 14 to 1
  • focus on what a student is expected to know
Nancy Lumpkin

Preparing the Academy of Today for the Learner of Tomorrow | EDUCAUSE - 1 views

  • Opportunities arise from students' familiarity with technology, multitasking style, optimism, team orientation, diversity, and acceptance of authority. Challenges, on the other hand, include the shallowness of their reading and TV viewing habits, a comparative lack of critical thinking skills, naïve views on intellectual property and the authenticity of information found on the Internet, as well as high expectations combined with low satisfaction levels.
  • Institutional leaders need to find ways to think about generations in designing campus and individual student initiatives, as well as to discern trends that will allow future-directed planning.
  • faculty development course designed to guide them in both technological and pedagogical approaches to Web instruction. Through a series of interactive sessions with instructional designers and Web faculty veterans, beginning faculty are encouraged to redesign their courses to focus on being student centered and interactive.
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  • The focus is on faculty facilitating instruction and students becoming active and interactive learners.22
  • Excellent TeachingFrom our exploration of generational issues, an important question evolved: Can students distinguish characterizations of excellent teachers independent of generation, learning style, course modality, and technological sophistication? Data collected at UCF, with more than half a million student responses, suggest an answer.23 We have identified six characteristics that students attribute to the best faculty—characteristics that are independent of age, gender, and academic achievement. Interestingly, these characteristics correspond to the seven principles of good practice in undergraduate education24 and to the national study of student engagement.25 Although students' behaviors, attitudes, and expectations are generally shaped by their generation, what constitutes good teaching appears to be universal across these generations. Students believe that excellent instructors: Facilitate student learning Communicate ideas and information effectively Demonstrate genuine interest in student learning Organize their courses effectively Show respect and concern for their students Assess student progress fairly and effectivelyThis seemingly paradoxical way in which students determine teaching excellence through the lens of their instructors clarifies how universities must accommodate students' needs, realizing that these needs are universal, yet greatly mediated by the Net Generation.
  • If today's students do not represent the constituency that our higher educational system is designed to teach as asserted by Prensky,28 how do we remedy that situation? Possibly, by studying how students interacted (politically, economically, culturally, socially, and technologically) with institutions' instructional climate in the past. By monitoring technology developments and their impact on the student population, we will be better able to anticipate the needs of the class of 2025. This approach will thrust institutions into a forward-thinking posture rather than a reactionary one in response to incoming student cohorts.
Nancy Lumpkin

Technology and Learning Expectations of the Net Generation | EDUCAUSE - 2 views

shared by Nancy Lumpkin on 28 Oct 10 - Cached
  • Higher education often talks about the Net Generation's expectations for the use of technology in their learning environments. However, few efforts have been made to directly engage students in a dialogue about how they would like to see faculty and their institutions use technology to help students learn more effectively. Through a series of interviews, polls, focus groups, and casual conversations with other students, I gained a general understanding of the Net Generation's views on technology and learning.1
  • How will institutions define and develop technology-enabled learning when students view technology as encompassing a wide range of mobile options beyond the traditional classroom? Do student expectations regarding technology and customization constitute a barrier to effective teaching and learning with technology? What does it mean when students consider an institution's "advanced technology" as "so yesterday?"
  • The options were: 100 percent lecturing 75 percent lecturing and 25 percent interactive 50 percent lecturing and 50 percent interactive 100 percent interactive
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  • "To me, my success in the classroom depends on the teacher. If the teacher is prepared and knowledgeable about their particular field, I know I can expect to learn from their knowledge as well as know what is expected of me."
  • Thus, student views regarding faculty use of PowerPoint help illustrate the Net Generation's desire for the use of technology to support learning, as long as faculty members have the technological—and pedagogical—knowledge and skill necessary to use it appropriately.
Danny Thorne

Views: Our Obligation to Adapt - Inside Higher Ed - 2 views

  •  
    I especially like some of the comments after this article.
Danny Thorne

2010 Campus Computing Survey | The Campus Computing Project - 1 views

  • (70.3 percent) of the survey participants agree/strongly agree that “mobile [LMS] apps are an important part of our campus plan to enhance instructional resources and campus services.”
  • (60.5 percent) of the survey participants agree/strongly agree that “lecture capture is an important part of our campus plan for developing and delivering instructional content.”
  • (86.5 percent) agree or strongly agree that “eBook content will be an important source for instructional resources in five years,”
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  • (78.6 percent, up from 66.0 percent in2009) agree/strongly agree that “eBook readers (hardware) will be important platforms for instructional content in five years.”
  • CC2010-Executive Summary.pdf309.26 KB Green-CampusComputing10-slides.pdf1.97 MB
Danny Thorne

iKnow + FHU - 0 views

Grover Hibberd

The Media Scholarship Project: Strategic Thinking about Media and Multimodal Assignment... - 1 views

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    This article provides insight into the importance of support and collaboration in the use of media in liberal arts instruction.
Danny Thorne

Presenting with Twitter and other backchannels - 0 views

  • Presenting with Twitter can be challenging. Just about every week a new story of a speaker getting roasted on Twitter makes waves in the blogosphere. I’ve written a free eBook “How to present with Twitter (and other backchannels)” to help you avoid that fate.
Danny Thorne

Innovators Awards 2010 Penn State University -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • open source application that allows students to submit assignments for studio-based art instruction in a fully online course.
Danny Thorne

EDTECH: Focus On Higher Education - One Great Opportunity - 0 views

  • to every student who enrolls at the private liberal arts college: a personal Hewlett-Packard notebook computer, compliments of Bethel’s one-to-one notebook program.
Danny Thorne

Darton College -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • the system puts 360-degree viewing controls in the hands of instructors and their students, who can review the recording of a dancer from many different angles as they critique interpretation as well as technique. They can study the anatomy of the dancer in three-dimensional space and analyze every movement more fully than would be possible even with a live dancer in a traditional studio with mirrored walls. “Dance is the type of thing that’s normally done only ‘in the moment,’” says Ostrander, “but we are able to freeze the dancer’s recorded motions and play them forward or backward, more slowly or faster, [and from various angles], to view all the intricacies of the dance.”
Danny Thorne

South Orange County Community College District -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • Providing an experience much like shopping online, the SIS automates the process of guiding students through course selection based on their academic goals. A student can create customized lists of courses he is interested in; view a profile of an instructor; find a course location on a campus map; and review the details of the course offering. He can add courses to his personal shopping cart and view them in relation to other classes in a day/time grid. In addition, he can sign up for daily e-mails that list the classes in his shopping cart, their current status, and how many seats are still available. This information is also available in a personalized RSS feed that is updated every half hour.
Danny Thorne

University of Idaho -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • The system they developed in house has allowed UI’s small group of technicians to receive up-to-the-minute status reports on all classroom projectors and audio/video equipment at a glance. Its monitoring capabilities enable them to respond more quickly to user requests as well as develop preventive maintenance plans to cut down on hardware failures.
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