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Peter DiFalco

Getting Started with Interactive Tools in Bb Learn 9.1 Service Pack 8 - 2 views

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    PDF that compares Wikis, Blogs, Journals and Discussions and gives a few tips for getting started with them.
Ann Steckel

Getting Started - diigo help - 0 views

  • Step 3:   Access Teacher Console
  • our personalized Teacher Console, located at http://www.diigo.com/teacher_entry/console,  is where you create and manage student accounts and class groups.
  • Fill out the application, and submit.  Please share as much info as possible to facilitate the approval process.   Note: We only accept school email to verify educator identity.
Ann Steckel

A great How-to Tutorial on Creating Student Portfolios on iPad Using Google Drive App ~... - 0 views

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    Watching the video tutorial you will get to learn how students can easily create a complete portfolio using Google Drive app for iPad. You will also learn how to create and collaborate in real time on a document or spreadsheet and everything in between from editing to sharing finished work.
Jim Aird

Could Many Universities Follow Borders Bookstores Into Oblivion? - Wired Campus - The C... - 1 views

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    I just love getting glimpses of the future through the eyes of people with real vision.
Jim Aird

Digital Literacy: Why adaptability is key - Chimera EDUCATION - 0 views

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    "Give students a chunk of time without instruction to explore a new tech program before using it. Encourage students to use online resources to figure the program out. Create a backchannel discussion or an online forum where students can post links to helpful resources or ask questions.  Encourage your tech savvy students who get it faster than the others to monitor the boards and answer questions electronically.  Using an electronic forum with delayed responses instead of face-to-face assistance will encourage adaptability and eliminate the possibility that a tech-light student will sit back and let the tech-savvy student fix the problem or do the work. To avoid frustration, stop after 15 minutes and distribute a self-assessment rubric on adaptability (see my example below).  Debrief with students about their experiences.  For those who fall in the flexible and adaptable category, what strategies did they use to navigate through unfamiliar interfaces?  For those who didn't, how can they improve their experience for the next time?"
Ann Steckel

Integrating Digital Audio Composition into Humanities Courses - ProfHacker - The Chroni... - 0 views

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    "May 25, 2010, 02:00 PM ET Integrating Digital Audio Composition into Humanities Courses By Prof. Hacker Edison Phonograph[This guest post is by Jentery Sayers, who is a PhD candidate in English at the University of Washington, Seattle. In 2010-2011, he will be teaching media and communication studies courses in Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington, Bothell. He is also actively involved with HASTAC. You can follow Jentery on Twitter: @jenterysayers.] Back in October 2009, Billie Hara published a wonderfully detailed ProfHacker post titled, "Responding to Student Writing (audio style)". There, she provides a few reasons why instructors might compose digital audio in response to student writing. For instance, students are often keen on audio feedback, which seems more personal than handwritten notes or typed text. As an instructor of English and media studies, I have reached similar conclusions. Broadening the sensory modalities and types of media involved in feedback not only diversifies how learning happens; it also requires all participants to develop some basic-and handy-technical competencies (e.g., recording, storing, and accessing MP3s) all too rare in the humanities. In this post, I want to continue ProfHacker's inquiry into audio by unpacking two questions: How might students-and not just instructors-compose digital audio in their humanities courses? And what might they learn in so doing? Designing Courses with Audio Composition in Mind One of the easiest ways to integrate digital audio composition into a humanities course is to identify the kinds of compositions that might be possible and then find some examples. Below, I consider five kinds of digital audio compositions: * recorded talks * audio essays * playlists * mashups * interviews Each entails its own learning outcomes, technologies, and technical competencies. The recorded talk consists of students reading their own academic essays a
Ann Steckel

Second Life Fashion: Dressing Professionally for Not Too Many Lindens - 0 views

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    When I rezzed in Second Life, the first thing I wanted to do was shop. But like many newbies, I had no idea where to buy clothes, had pretty low standards for outfits and no lindens, so I haunted freebie warehouses and collected everything I could get my virtual hands on. I've finally deleted most newb finds, but my quest for free or inexpensive, yet stylish, fashion remains. Among the many fashion choices in SL, like many librarians, I like classic, professional looking styles that I would feel comfortable wearing anywhere - Second Life or real life.
Jim Aird

Helping Learners Get The Most Out Of Online Discussions - eLearning Industry - 0 views

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    Taking discussions to the next level.
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