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Jim Aird

Why a leading professor of new media just banned technology use in class - The Washingt... - 0 views

  • Multi-taskers often think they are like gym rats, bulking up their ability to juggle tasks, when in fact they are like alcoholics, degrading their abilities through over-consumption.
  • I’ve stopped thinking of students as people who simply make choices about whether to pay attention, and started thinking of them as people trying to pay attention but having to compete with various influences, the largest of which is their own propensity towards involuntary and emotional reaction.
  • Professors are at least as bad at estimating how interesting we are as the students are at estimating their ability to focus.
Marjorie Shepard

Could We Be Doing Better with Our Assignments? | Faculty Focus - 1 views

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    An open exchange of ideas among faculty of creative approaches for assessing learning other than traditional research paper.
Marjorie Shepard

The Teacher's Guide To Twitter | Edudemic - 0 views

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    "100 Ways To Use Twitter Twitter is too big to ignore. Right now, there are still many (MANY) in education not using Twitter. They may think it's tough to start using, difficult to monitor, and even a waste of time. But what if they had a categorized list of the top tips to help you use Twitter? From how to follow people to asking for help to the best tools to use, it's all here. I hope you find this list as useful as I have and spread the word (likely via Twitter!)."
Marjorie Shepard

10 Recommendations for Improving Group Work | Faculty Focus - 0 views

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    "efore the groups are formed and the task is set out, teachers should make clear why this particular assignment is being done in groups. Students are still regularly reporting in survey data that teachers use groups so they don't have to teach or have as much work to grade. Most of us are using groups because employers in many fields want employees who can work with others they don't know, may not like, who hold different views, and possess different skills and capabilities."
Marjorie Shepard

Introduction to Key Concepts in Five Minutes or Less: The 'Did You Know?' Microlecture ... - 0 views

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    "Microlectures (snippets) are simple multimedia presentations that are 90 seconds to five minutes long. They focus on a specific concept or skill associated with the course's learning objectives. Microlectures allow students to access instruction on a specific concept or skill they need to practice."
Jim Aird

MOOC U: The Revolution Isn't Over - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • College leaders should focus on using MOOCs to complement and enhance their continuing-­education programs, as the number of options students have for education in small bites and on their own schedule continues to grow.
Laura Sederberg

Why Flunking Exams Is Actually a Good Thing - 1 views

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    Imagine that on Day 1 of a difficult course, before you studied a single thing, you got hold of the final exam. The motherlode itself, full text, right there in your email inbox - attached mistakenly by the teacher, perhaps, or poached by a campus hacker. No answer key, no notes or guidelines.
Marjorie Shepard

Education 3.0 - Around The Globe « WCET Frontiers - 0 views

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    Loved this quote, "...A GREAT lecture can be amazing and I try in my keynotes to deliver a great lecture. But in my classes it's a different story! I rarely lecture at all anymore. I have those students for 45 hours a term - I don't need to cram anything into an hour. And I know that nobody can create 45 amazing lectures per term. In fact, after polling about 20,000 teachers and professors, the average number of great lecturers on campus seems to be 3 and the total number of great lectures any one person delivers seems to be 3."
Laura Sederberg

Three Domains of Learning - Cognitive, Affective, Psychomotor - The Second Principle - 0 views

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    What are the differences between the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor taxonomies? There are three main domains of learning and all teachers should know about them and use them to construct lessons. These domains are cognitive (thinking), affective (emotion/feeling), and psychomotor (physical/kinesthetic). Each domain on this page has a taxonomy associated with it.
Laura Sederberg

Enhance Students Productivity with These Web Tools ~ Educational Technology and Mobile ... - 2 views

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    August 26, 2014 There is a growing number of tools for students offering benefits from organizing assignments to creating study groups to taking notes. Here are some notable options for your students to consider. ClassOwl was founded by a group of Stanford sophomores wanting to improve the hectic academic experience.
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