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wlampner

Mobile Learning and the Edited Course | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  • The lack of screen real estate will push us to think about what is really important in our classes.
  • result in cleaner, sparer, and more elegant learning experience
  • What we don't do very well is take things away.
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  • activity for reflection.
  • simultaneously richer and less legible
  • raded density for flexibility
  • back to fundamentals,
  • what do we really want our students to learn
  • hance to take all that we have learned about online and blended teaching and re-imagine how we can make more than incremental improvements
wlampner

The Making of a Teaching Evangelist - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views

  • Mr. Mazur realized what he had really been teaching them: to memorize formulas.
  • Joy is not a word that often describes the lecture.
  • One humanities professor wrote last year that lectures work because they demand that students pay close attention, connect ideas, and understand how to build an argument.
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  • Mr. Mazur wondered whether lecturing was an ethical teaching choice.
  • a lecture is only as passive as the listener
  • Students learn when they think about what they’re hearing and organize it into salient points. "This places the responsibility for learning on the student,
  • modern zeitgeist places the responsibility on the instructor.
  • Lecturing, he says, serves another important purpose. It reaffirms the importance of expertise and allows students to see how an expert role-models the process of working through a problem.
  • Learning is not a spectator sport,"
  • Lectures are inexpensive for institutions, allowing hundreds of students to be assigned to one faculty member.
  • Mr. Mazur often likes to cite education research suggesting that students overestimate how much they learn from a smoothly delivered lecture.
  • The lecture creates the perfect illusion
  • Students read material before class on an online platform
  • Students post comments on the reading and respond to one another’s annotations
  • comments drive the next class.
  • o answer each problem, students do four things: articulate the problem in their own words, devise a plan to answer it, execute it, and evaluate how well it worked.
  • omplete the problem sets alone before class and work in teams during it to correct errors
  • not graded on how correct their answers are but on their effort and their accuracy in judging how well they understood the problem.
  • udents do complete five hourlong "Readiness Assurance Activities" during the semester. In the first half-hour they solve the problems alone; they can consult the internet but not one another. In the second, they go over the problems again, this time with their teams. Their scores reflect individual mastery and collective contribution.
  • Project-based learning is the center of the new course. Students work in teams. Many projects have low-stakes competitions attached to them, like constructing the most secure safe by using magnets as locks. Other projects have an explicit social benefit, like building musical instruments for an orchestra for poor children in Venezuela.
  • Mr. Mazur has moved himself far offstage; he missed about 40 percent of the meetings this past semester. Class just rolls on without him.
  • Peers, Mr. Mazur says, are a far greater source of motivation than a professor.
  • His syllabus dedicates two paragraphs to the virtues of failure
  • They should see failures, he writes, as "learning opportunities, not negatives, as steppingstones to success."
  • Repeated failure, as he has learned, is necessary for success.
wlampner

Blackboard Mobile Learn App No Longer Free @insidehighered - 1 views

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    Hope this is not going to be a new LMS trend
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    From what the article says, they charged from the beginning... Seriously? Who does that?
Patrick Tabatcher

Glassboard: Know who you're sharing with. - 0 views

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    Pretty cool looking service. Glassboard lets you set up private social networks that can be accessed via the web and through mobile apps. Could be an interesting way to share information and resources with classes.
wlampner

DoubleTake by Purdue University - Mobile learning and video sharing - 1 views

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    DoubleTake provides instructors an easy way to assign, manage, and grade student video projects. Students can use the DoubleTake mobile application to produce and submit videos for course assignments or, alternatively, upload captured video through a separate Web interface. 
Patrick Tabatcher

U of Texas - Networking stats - 0 views

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    Interesting ratios of devices on the UT network. I wonder what the UA makeup is. iPhone dominates mobile. Mac dominates wireless. PC still ahead in wired. Read the full report here: http://www.utexas.edu/its/network/reports/Campus%20Network%20Report%202011.pdf
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