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Danny Thorne

Auburn University -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • Students have used geospatial technologies to map more than 12,000 infrastructure elements along miles of Alabama’s Gulf Coast, enabling emergency responders to find critical utility points to restore services in the wake of natural disasters.
Danny Thorne

Innovation - 0 views

  • The Curriculum Innovation and Technology Group (CITG) is a curriculum-based technology consulting organization that provides thought leadership and support services to the Babson College academic programs and Babson College faculty.  The group's primary focuses include: Researching and developing best practices and innovative uses of technology in education Empowering faculty to use technology and appropriate pedagogies in their course and content development Collaborating with program administrators and faculty to innovate the curriculum through technology integration Contributing to Babson brand-building by positioning the College as a leader in curriculum innovation and technology
Danny Thorne

Duke University -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • SimSoap, a Twitter soap opera tied to a cardiac care simulation, is a project of Innovative Nursing Education Technologies (iNET), a federally funded collaborative effort among the nursing programs at Duke, Western Carolina University, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte to integrate technology into nursing education. The goal of SimSoap is to create teaching materials that are fun and immersive for nursing students. “Our hope is to model the use of Twitter and spark the curiosity of nurse educators,” says Mary Barzee, iNET’s program coordinator.
Danny Thorne

Stephen J. Laster (Harvard Business School) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  • He was responsible for Babson’s adoption of blended learning and led the effort to increase working professional MBA enrollments by 500% through the creation of a state-of-the-art, blended, MBA program.
Danny Thorne

Hotseat at Purdue University - 1 views

  • Hotseat, a social networking-powered mobile Web application, creates a collaborative classroom, allowing students to provide near real-time feedback during class and enabling professors to adjust the course content and improve the learning experience. Students can post messages to Hotseat using their Facebook or Twitter accounts, sending text messages, or logging in to the Hotseat Web site.
Danny Thorne

5 Higher Ed Tech Trends To Watch in 2010 -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • Gregory Phelan
  • Phelan pointed to the colleges that are "handing out" tablet PCs to all freshmen as the frontrunners in the race to equip students with all of the information they need to succeed in school. Whether other universities follow that lead remains to be seen. "I'd really like to see more schools making that move," said Phelan, "and even further integrate technology into the college classroom."
  • One of the coolest uses of technology that Hutchins has seen lately can be found in Rutgers University's English department, which is equipped with an entire wall of touch-enabled whiteboards. Using precision positioning technology, the wall-mounted boards allow for unprecedented participation and collaboration among students.
Danny Thorne

Wartburg College - Waverly, Iowa, USA - 2 views

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    Educational technology department Education technology newsletter Manhattan Virtual Classroom LMS
Danny Thorne

Goshen College, Goshen, Indiana. U.S.A. - 1 views

shared by Danny Thorne on 02 Sep 10 - Cached
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    student blogs school wallpaper recently transitioned from Blackboard to Moodle mac minis running Windows 7 students get $25 printing credit per semester at least 6GB network storage per student 1,000 Mb iLight2 fiber optic connection host midwest "Moodle Moot" online game developed by student
Nancy Lumpkin

The Open, Social, Participatory Future of Online Learning - Wired Campus - The Chronicl... - 0 views

  • Most faculty teach the way they were taught, but most weren't taught with technology. To learn how to do so requires time, incentives and support to go back to being a student of one's craft (teaching), preferably in an environment one will be asked to teach in.
  • Also, the joint Educause and Gates Foundation "Next Generation Learning Challenges" identifies "Learning Analytics" as one of four key challenges will receive funding consideration:http://www.nextgenlearning.com/the-challenges/learning-analyticsHere at UMBC, we've been pursuing academic analytics by looking at how strong and weak students using the LMS. We've been very much influenced by the fine work being done at Purdue University, the University of Georgia, and others.
Danny Thorne

Bill Gates Predicts Technology Will Make 'Place-Based' Colleges Less Important in 5 Yea... - 0 views

  • On one end will be (and maybe already are) the super-rich who can afford to send their offspring to pricey colleges and universities with a golden future virtually assured even if they're borderline morons. On the other extreme, just above the exploited immigrant classes, will be the products of online schools destined for permanent underclass status.
  • Well designed online courses do not simply push out information to self-motivated learners. Well designed courses include collaboration, formative & summative assessment, and absolutely require faculty participation. To suggest you could pull that off for $2000 for a four year degree is amusing.
  • Real teaching is done in small groups, or 1:1 like Oxford. The rest is compromise with resources.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • I have great faith in online education when it's well designed and well executed. Any class with design and instruction that can be sold for a price that would fit into a $2000 per year curriculum will not qualify on either count.
  • place-based activiy in that college thing will be five times less important than it is today
Nancy Lumpkin

EBSCOhost: The Net Generation in the Classroom - 1 views

  • The article focuses on the use of modern technology to teach new generation of college students. According to Richard T. Sweency, university librarian at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, today's college students, sometimes called the Net Generation or the Millennials, will soon alter the way professors teach, the way classrooms are constructed, and the way colleges deliver degrees. Born between roughly 1980 and 1994, the Millennials have already been pegged and defined by academics, trend spotters, and futurists: They are smart but impatient. They expect results immediately.
Nancy Lumpkin

Educating the Net Generation | EDUCAUSE - 1 views

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    2005...too old? Explores many of the same things we are in this group.
Nancy Lumpkin

Previous ITW Projects - 1 views

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    Since 1999, Sewanee has had the Instructional Technology Workshop and this page shows the types of projects between faculty and ITS.
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