Skip to main content

Home/ EDUC 439/639 Social Networking - Fall 2012/ Group items tagged Notes

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Mathieu Plourde

7 Mobile Apps Students Can Use to Never Lose Handwritten Notes Again - 0 views

  •  
    " Try one or all of these seven apps ff you have students that prefer to handwrite their notes or if you prefer to handwrite your notes, but you're worried about those notes getting lost."
Mathieu Plourde

Google Keep vs. Evernote - Pros and Cons of Both - 0 views

  •  
    "So everyone with Google account should have Google's new note taking service Keep. The launch has generated lots of buzz, as do most of Google's additions. But is it going to last and is it worth moving from other note taking productivity apps already in existence?"
Mathieu Plourde

Flipped Classrooms: ASQ Before You Teach - 1 views

  •  
    As they are acquiring, students take notes, make drawings, make videos of their own, voicethreads, blog posts, Google Docs and sometimes they even use Post-It notes. I may require students to use a particular medium for a follow-up assignment or assessment, but letting them choose what they are going to use gives them more ownership of their learning and naturally moves them on to higher order thinking skills.
Mathieu Plourde

Teaching with MOOCs: Four Cases - 2 views

  •  
    "Last month in a blog post titled "Better Than a Textbook?", I noted that some faculty find it easier to think about the massive open online courses (MOOCs) provided by vendors like Coursera as "super-textbooks" than as actual courses. Earlier this month, Vanderbilt computer science professor Doug Fisher wrote a guest post for the blog ProfHacker titled "Warming up to MOOCs," in which he described his experiments in using MOOCs in this fashion."
Mathieu Plourde

Fair Use Guidelines: Bridgewater State University - 0 views

  •  
    "Fair Use Guidelines Guidelines on the limitations of fair use and when you must seek permission:" (Note: I think Renee Hobbs would say this is bogus - Mathieu)
Mathieu Plourde

Ten Years Later: Why Open Educational Resources Have Not Noticeably Affected Higher Edu... - 0 views

  •  
    "Fast-forward to October 2012: OERs have failed to significantly affect the day-to-day teaching of the vast majority of higher education institutions. Traditional textbooks and readings still dominate most teaching venues even though essentially all students are online: Course management systems are used only for the dissemination of syllabi, class notes, general communications, and as a grade book. OERs are out there…somewhere. Why aren't they on campus?"
Tina Trimble

http://www.videonot.es/ - 0 views

Note taking while taking a MOOC....

MOOC Notes Video

started by Tina Trimble on 24 May 13 no follow-up yet
Mathieu Plourde

Using MOOC-like technologies in the new media classroom - 0 views

  •  
    "During the second half of the semester, student work outside the classroom is focused primarily on the completion of specialization badges. Students are encouraged to forge their own path through the course material by completing badges from the following categories: coding, industry analysis, graphic design, user experience, power user skills, and entrepreneurship. In order to earn an A grade on the badge component, students must master at least eight specialization badges. To ensure breadth, all students must complete at least one badge in each category in order to pass the course. (Note: Students were also allowed to pitch their own badges if they could make the case for the badge's connection to course themes.)"
Mathieu Plourde

6 Great Alternatives to iGoogle - 0 views

  •  
    "The deadline for the demise of iGoogle, Google's start page, is getting closer (read how to export your igoogle feeds). While nothing will completely replace iGoogle, there are some alternatives out there. Before we get to the alternative sites we need to define what a Start Page is. For this article a start page is a website that enables you to have various websites, news feeds, and widgets in one place. Most start pages have links to news, popular email services, weather, videos, calendars, To Do lists, maps, sticky notes, TV listings and access to all your social media such as Facebook. "
Mathieu Plourde

MOOC Mania: Debunking the hype around massive open online courses - 0 views

  •  
    "Georgia Tech's Tucker Balch, an associate professor at the School of Interactive Computing, released the following information based on the survey of students who took part in his recent Coursera class, "Computational Investing." Of the 2,535 students who completed the course (or 4.8 percent of those enrolled), 34 percent were from the United States and 27 percent came from non-OECD countries. The average age of participants was 35 (ranging from 17 to 74). Seventy percent were white. Ninety-two percent were male. And more than 50 percent of the students already had a master's degree or a PhD. Clearly, this is hardly the "typical" undergraduate population (although it's worth noting that "Computational Investing" isn't really a "typical" or introductory class). Nonetheless, these figures do raise questions about who exactly is being served by today's MOOCs: Is it "learners" from around the world? Or, for lack of a better word, is it "knowers" from the U.S.?"
Mathieu Plourde

Three Kinds of MOOCs - 1 views

  •  
    "At the Ed-Media conference, I attended a session by Sarah Schrire of Kibbutzim College of Education in Tel Aviv. In her discussion of Troubleshooting MOOCs, she noted the dificulties in determining her own direction in offering a MOOC in the "Stanford model" MOOCs versus the "connectivism" MOOCs. I found myself breaking it down into three categories instead."
Mathieu Plourde

(RE)VITALIZE VISUALS » The Community Mural at Educon 2.5 - 0 views

  •  
    I have somewhere around 25-30 pages of visual notes, which I will share in the next few days. For now, I wanted to share our community mural and the little video we created to introduce it to the world.
Mathieu Plourde

The methods behind our #educon madness - 0 views

  •  
    While the participants in each conversation deserve the most credit for jumping into play as a pathway for transforming professional practice, the aforementioned facilitators helped scaffold dynamic settings for learning during our time together which felt both entirely awesome and all too short. In response to both on-site and online feedback, I wanted to share some notes on practice before too much time goes by.
Mathieu Plourde

My fake college syllabus - 1 views

  •  
    "After the student presentation, which should cover structure and theme but will seldom rise above rote plot summary, I will provide whatever historical and biographical context is both critical to our understanding of the book and available on Wikipedia. But I will sound so authoritative and well-versed that you'd never know this, even if you had the book's Wikipedia page open on the laptop you're pretending to take notes on, rather than your Facebook newsfeed."
Mathieu Plourde

China's new education reform: Reducing importance of test scores - 0 views

  •  
    "China just began a major education reform effort that is aimed at reducing the importance of standardized testing in determining school quality and including factors such as student engagement, boredom, anxiety, and happiness. It also seeks to cut back on the amount of school work students are given. As scholar Yong Zhao notes in the following post, the approach is the opposite of the education reform path in the United States, which in recent years has increased the importance of test scores for accountability purposes."
Mathieu Plourde

How I Study: Reflections of a "Digital Native" - 0 views

  •  
    "I also love using Pocket and Evernote. Pocket saves all the interesting articles and blog posts that I want to read later. I could not survive without it. Evernote helps me remember notes and acts as my on-the-go text editor (plus it saves all the good restaurants I have tried, too). I also use Evernote+my Moleskine as my day organizer. Every day I create a grid and categorize my to-do's as either quick or long, and either high or low priority. Then I take a picture with my Evernote, have the picture always up on my screen, and use reminders to nudge me at the end of the day to reflect on my productivity. "
Mathieu Plourde

UCISA Digital Capabilities Survey - 0 views

  •  
    "In 2014 the UCISA Digital Capabilities Group (then the User Skills Group) launched the inaugural Digital Capabilities survey of the UK higher education sector. The survey focussed on what has been variously referred to as digital capabilities, digital literacies or digital competencies. The need to improve the country's digital capabilities has been highlighted in a House of Lords committee report published in February 2015. Make or break: the UK's digital future notes that the higher education sector "has not responded to the urgent need for reskilling" and calls for institutions to develop courses to give students the skills they need."
Mathieu Plourde

Microcredentials and Educational Technology: A Proposed Ethical Taxonomy - 0 views

  •  
    "Though there are likely many other issues than covered here, a resourceful start is a classification system based on three primary ethical concerns: shifting powers, archiving the future, and building trust. Likewise, it is noted that the focus on microcredentialing should be as a concept rather than as a specific technology, protocol, or practice."
Mathieu Plourde

Virtual Worlds Emerging From the Trough of Disillusionment - 0 views

  •  
    "Note that Virtual Worlds is chugging out of the Trough of Disillusionment, with only 5-10 years to arrive at the Plateau of Productivity. Big Data and Gamification have a bit more hype to hype before their demise. In-Memory Analytics and Text Analytics are just now descending into the Trough! On, no! While Predictive Analytics is cruising!"
Mathieu Plourde

The social imperative - 0 views

  •  
    Some of these lateral interactions are what we would call social relationships. They are outside the official hierarchy. As Verna Allee has noted, for complex environments, or "un order", we need stronger networks and looser hierarchies. Or you could say that we need more lateral interactions.
1 - 20 of 49 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page