Access :: Future - 0 views
Matt Blaze: Shaking Down Science - 0 views
Structural Knowledge » Stealing Ideas - 0 views
DO-IT Video Collection - 0 views
ACCESS-ed: ACCESS-ed Home - 0 views
Digital Innovators - Canarie Blog - 0 views
-
"a community of advanced network users, developers, visionaries and champions, together with an online space where they can share information and discuss issues impacting the community. Through this blog, we hope to enhance the visibility of Canada's advanced network alliance and the uses and benefits of advanced networks in the research, education and innovation communities."
Research Skill Development - 0 views
Learning Through Digital Media - 0 views
-
In their work, academics build on the research of their peers, but when it comes to pedagogy, this is not always so. This selection of essays hopes to contribute to changing that by exploring how we learn through digital media; the authors ask how both ready-at-hand proprietary platforms and open-source tools can be used to create situations in which all learners actively engage each other and the teacher to become more proficient, think in more complex ways, gain better judgment, become more principled and curious, and lead distinctive and productive lives.
Langara Course Web - 0 views
Educational Support and Development - 0 views
Learning about Technology - 0 views
Understanding Teaching Technology Use - 0 views
-
Understanding Teaching Technology Use By Generation, Knowledge and Career Cycle October 1, 2010 Susan Crichton, Curtis Slater and Karen Pegler Author’s Note: The authors wish to thank the Alberta Teachers’ Association for the invitation to submit this abridged version of their paper, and they encourage readers with significant interest in this topic to contact Susan Crichton at susan.crichton@ucalgary.ca for the complete article. Introduction Prensky’s (2001) notion of digital immigrants/digital natives,[1] which has permeated the literature, suggests that older teachers struggle when they use technology to connect with their students and, by extension, with their younger colleagues. In questioning that suggestion we learned that teachers’ career cycles (Steffy et al. 199
-
Prensky's (2001) notion of digital immigrants/digital natives,[1] which has permeated the literature, suggests that older teachers struggle when they use technology to connect with their students and, by extension, with their younger colleagues. In questioning that suggestion we learned that teachers' career cycles (Steffy et al. 1999), possibly even more than their generation, impacts their use of information and communication technology (ICT) and how they integrate it into the curriculum. These findings are significant for their impact on commonly held assumptions and their support for differentiated professional development in the areas of pedagogy, technology and content knowledge.
« First
‹ Previous
121 - 140 of 141
Next ›
Showing 20▼ items per page