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bkozlek

Live@Edu grows, evolves into Office 365 for Education, leapfrogs Google Apps for Educat... - 3 views

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    office 365 seems to be a new offering that bundles licenses for the desktop version of office along with the cloud-based versions. The author of the zdnet article seems to feel that bundling the desktop versions is a big plus, but I don't really see it. I think one of the pluses of google docs is that it is much more simple and easier to use than ms word. 
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    I agree on some levels. It seems it would be important to have the desktop version over the short term until a new group of students show up with no recollection of desktop services. I think we are living in a bit of space between with this issue. With that said I am dismayed to think we are planning for only that space. There are so many issues surrounding the future here.
bkozlek

Google Apps Marketplace Gets An Education Category - 0 views

  • Aimed for Google’s 10 million Google Apps for Education users, the category offers over 20 applications from 19 vendors including specialized apps for schools and universities such as social learning game Grockit, grading software LearnBoost, math teaching tool DreamBox, design apps Aviary and more.
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    disaggregation of education software services built on a common platform
Cole Camplese

Apple's iPad Officially Passes the Higher Education Test [Exclusive] | Fast Company - 2 views

  • After extensive student interviews throughout the Fall 2010 semester, "The bottom line feeling was that the Amazon Kindle DX was not adequate for use in a higher education curricular setting," Chief Technology Officer Martin Ringle tells Fast Company. "The bottom line for the iPad was exactly the opposite."
  • The silver-medal feature, with only a few strikes against its score, was the highlighting and annotation of text.
  • With the exception of scanned PDF files, the students found "highlighting was easier on th
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  • Apple’s new favorite child is not without its flaws. The virtual keyboard is a pain for composing anything beyond short notes. The nonexistent file system makes finding important documents difficult and sharing across applications nearly impossible. Finally, managing a large number of readings in PDF format becomes a major time-suck. Syncing PDFs via iTunes was found to be "needlessly complicated," emailing marked-up versions back to oneself was "prohibitively time-consuming," and even the cloud-based storage, Dropbox, "failed to work seamlessly with PDF reading/annotating applications."
  • Perhaps the most impactful discovery was that none of the iPad's strengths are unique to Apple. According to the report, “the new wave of Android-based tablets seems likely to provide an appealing alternative that will result in the coexistence of at least two competing tablet operating systems.”
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    Annotation is a huge need with these devices, at least how they seem be typically used (as eBook readers). I use Papers to annotate and sync PDF's with my laptop, and the Diigo bookmarklet to annotate web pages, both of which work very well for me. When it comes to iPads, I'd like to see more discussion extending beyond eBook functionality though. This article is obviously comparing the iPad to the Kindle, and only briefly mentioned "more exciting possibilities". But it seems silly to say "iPad officially passes the higher education test" by just talking about documents and annotation.
Cole Camplese

News: Disruption, Delivery and Degrees - Inside Higher Ed - 4 views

  • Though those circumstances have "rendered higher education impossible to disrupt in the past," the situation is changing, the authors write. Policy makers are demanding that they enroll and successfully educate many more students at a time when their "economic model is already broken" -- with public pressure mounting against increasing tuitions and their ability to use "government dollars, ... endowments and gifts ... to paper over cost increases" waning, Horn said.
  • The key question the authors pose is whether traditional institutions can adapt themselves enough to fill this role or "whether community colleges, for-profit universities and other entrant organizations aggressively using online learning will do it instead -- and ultimately grow to replace many of today's traditional institutions."
  • Changing will not be easy for, say, Harvard and the University of Texas; just ask General Motors and America's steel companies, the authors suggest. Altering an institution's educational model (by delivering courses only online, for instance) does not in and of itself transform an institution unless new business models are embraced, too, that allow for lower prices and the shedding of research and other functions that aren't central to teaching and learning.
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  • Public universities will find it difficult to change, so state systems are more likely to take steps like Indiana's has in turning to Western Governors University to fill the online learning gap in its offerings, the authors write. And if private nonprofit institutions "are able to navigate this disruptive transition," they say, "they will have to do so by creating autonomous business units."
  • It continues: "Both the not-for-profit and for-profit incumbents have been successful so far at warding off policies that seek to regulate quality.... [T]he goal of policy should be to unleash innovation by setting the conditions for good actors that improve access, quality, and value -- be they for-profit, nonprofit, or public -- to succeed. And if those institutions deliver, the landscape will shift over time, as it has in every other highly regulated market that was disrupted."
Cole Camplese

(Neatness has no place in education.) | The Fish Wrapper - 0 views

  • Yesterday, I attended a 90 minute presentation by one of the most well-known CMS vendors.
  • teaching, learning, knowing, and thinking. Once you have begun to grapple with these messy and essential questions, sitting through presentations aimed at describing content delivery and administrative efficiences sucks a little more of your soul out of your being.
  • Ultimately, then, our conversations about technologies must grapple with our larger community’s values — and what code we think enacts these values.
Cole Camplese

Open Educational Resources (OER) - Faculty Center - 2 views

  • While I was already familiar with a number of OER websites, I was surprised to learn of a few that were new to me. I have shared the complete list below.
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    A very good introductory review of OER initiatives by Carol McQuiggan at PSU Harrisburg.
Chris Millet

News: Online Courseware's Existential Moment - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  • In the Internet age, walls are everywhere falling in academe. Online education, all but cleansed of its original stigma, has become commonplace. This is especially true among big public universities, which have clamored to capitalize on new markets by enrolling far-flung students. The University of Massachusetts and Penn State University rake in tens of millions of dollars each year from their online programs.
  • there is no way to tell how much actual learning these expensive projects are creating. “If you take away OCW completely,” said Ira Fuchs, former vice president at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, of MIT’s celebrated OpenCourseWare project, “I’m not sure that higher education would be noticeably different.”
  • Though often designed primarily for external audiences, these projects have also made an impact closer to home, aiding efforts to improve alumni relations, recruit prospective students, and provide a welcome study aid (and a kind of enhanced course catalog) for the university’s enrolled student population.
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  • With so much open content being created and shared through a variety of outlets, this is a very exciting time for online learning. But one of the challenges raised by this growing corpus of available lecture materials is that of demonstrating the value or impact of each new offering. In this next phase of development, the open courseware community — whose ranks are growing nearly every day — may have to grapple with difficult questions like: Do we really need yet another recording of Economics 101? And if so, how do we distinguish our version from all the others?
Cole Camplese

News: The Invisible Computer Lab - Inside Higher Ed - 5 views

  • Only 10 percent of colleges have begun phasing out their physical computer labs, even though the vast majority of students now own laptops, according to the Campus Computing Project. A full two-thirds of respondents to last fall’s survey said they had decided not to phase out their labs. Yet all of the technologists contacted by Inside Higher Ed agreed that virtual computing labs are bound to emerge to supplement physical computer labs across higher education, and some even suggested that the rooms where students currently tap away on campus-owned computers will eventually yield to the virtual kind.
  • Well before the term entered the popular lexicon via a recent Microsoft advertising campaign, “the cloud” was transforming how college students interact with their coursework.
    • Cole Camplese
       
      I never thought of the power behind MS' "the cloud" advertising campaign ... even my own 9 year old now says that ... and we aren't Windows users.  I wonder if that commercial is enough to tip the scale on a student's understanding of cloud services.  Interesting.
  • In a virtual computing lab, students log in via a secured website and choose from a library of “images” — virtual desktops outfitted with different versions of various programs. The selected image then appears as a window on the student’s own computer desktop, at which point students can open a program and begin working. They can save or print their work just as though the program were running on their own hard drives.
    • Cole Camplese
       
      We will be releasing our own virtual lab infrastructure later this semester.  CLC is making that happen now.
    • Chris Millet
       
      I know IST has been doing it for several years. They had a lot of technical problems, which I hope they have (and we can) overcome. It did give students access to a lot of high end software that they couldn't have otherwise. I'll be curious to see how CLC's solution affects lab usage patterns.
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    Not sure how interesting this is other than example of approaches to computer lap alternatives
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    I assume we would need a laptop or a netbook program at PSU to make this really work, but as you all know, I a big fan of the idea of phasing out physical computer labs.
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    I'm not sure we would need a laptop program. Our own survey numbers point to close to 100% ownership by students as it is. In the short term, remote application services would not be able to replace the labs. We would use this service at first for very specialized software that a relatively few use. The number of students using our labs is staggering ... I now have numbers broken down by College and the students in the Liberal Arts are the largest population. Something we should look more closely at.
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    I'd love to see those numbers, and to start putting some meaning behind them. What are the patterns of usage in different disciplines/colleges? I think some of it comes down to software needs, but also instructional styles, how technology is utilized in a discipline, college culture, and how affordances of labs match up with those things. I'm not sure the answer is so much reducing computer lab seats as much as understanding what people are doing and building spaces with that knowledge.
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    If the CLA is the biggest user of the labs and much of what students are doing is printing, it would make sense for us to initiate a move toward paperless teaching and learning. If we are able to use the iPads for faculty after the pilot in ENGL, then perhaps we can fold that into a larger initiative.
bkozlek

No More Digital Facelifts: Thinking the Unthinkable About Open Educational Experiences - 1 views

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    Gardner Campbell's Presentation at open ed 2009 where he further expounds on his notion of Personal Cyberinfrastructure
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