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Tom Woodward

Letter: What We've Learned - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "It's no accident that many of the most-read New York Times articles of the last few years have been complex takes on serious subjects in a form other than a traditional article: an explainer of the Ebola crisis, a photo essay on aging, a video on ISIS and, from us, the rent-vs.-buy calculator, a graphic on nonemployed men, a map on poverty and an interactive on generational politics."
Joyce Kincannon

Teaching in a Digital Age | The Open Textbook Project provides flexible and affordable ... - 1 views

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    "Guidelines for designing teaching and learning for a digital age The book examines the underlying principles that guide effective teaching in an age when everyone,and in particular the students we are teaching, are using technology. A framework for making decisions about your teaching is provided, while understanding that every subject is different, and every instructor has something unique and special to bring to their teaching."
sanamuah

Writing Syllabi Worth Reading | Tona Hangen - 2 views

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    "Giving a syllabus a profound inside-out reorganization is more than just window dressing. It involves deep thought about your course content and how a student encounters it. Marshall McLuhan said, "the medium is the message" and while the traditional medium for a syllabus is a portrait-oriented 8.5×11 text document printed on paper and handed out the first day of class… it needn't be the only possibility.
Tom Woodward

Empathy: The designer's superpower - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    Key element in instructional design as well. "When I reflected on what I wanted people to understand, what the core thing was, it wasn't a technique. It wasn't a visual style. It wasn't learning a certain program. The core thing was making sure that you never thought about the product from your point of view, but from somebody else's point of view. That's what prompted the [The Paradox of Empathy] post. "
anonymous

Sense of Place | University Business Magazine - 0 views

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    Ongoing series of profiles on new University building construction, including a few learning spaces.
Yin Wah Kreher

Learning Through Reflection - 1 views

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    My students need more help to reflect and write their reflection posts. #vcuthink To be reflective means to mentally wander through where we have been and to try to make some sense out of it.
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    Great article that I can link to my course.
sanamuah

Rethinking Twitter in the Classroom | Vitae - 6 views

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    Ah, this is so interesting. Over lunch I announced that I love how Twitter is being used in OLE. I can see integrating it in a similar way that OLE is: As a way to announce that assignments (or makes) are complete. Given that 'ah hah' moment with me, and this article, it's pretty clear that there's a lot you can do with it, on many levels. Knowing your audience and making sure it meshes with the parameters and goals of the course are key.
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    "They were so busy hating Twitter they didn't realize how much they were learning or how much they were thinking critically."
sanamuah

One million schoolchildren to be given BBC micro computer - Telegraph - 0 views

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    ""We happily give children paint brushes when they're young, with no experience - it should be exactly the same with technology. "The BBC micro:bit is all about young people learning to express themselves digitally, and it's their device to own."
Tom Woodward

How 'Deprogramming' Kids From How to 'Do School' Could Improve Learning | MindShift | K... - 0 views

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    "Holman also asked students to read "Sermons For Grumpy Campers," by Richard Felder, a graduate level professor who never lectured. In it, Felder describes his students grumbling that they hated group work and that it was his job to teach them, not the other way around. Holman's students said the complaints sounded like they came from kindergarteners or themselves and were amazed to find out the complainers were graduate level engineering students. "
Tom Woodward

16 things I learned at Imgur - Medium - 1 views

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    I removed product from the title as it seems to apply pretty broadly.
Yin Wah Kreher

NANSLO Web-based Labs: Real Equipment, Real Data, Real People! « WCET Frontiers - 0 views

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    Web-based labs for STEM learning
Tom Woodward

The No. 1 Predictor Of Career Success According To Network Science - Life Learning - Me... - 1 views

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    "The bottom line? According to multiple, peer-reviewed studies, simply being in an open network instead of a closed one is the best predictor of career success. In the chart, the further to the right you go toward a closed network, the more you repeatedly hear the same ideas, which reaffirm what you already believe. The further left you go toward an open network, the more you're exposed to new ideas. People to the left are significantly more successful than those to the right. In fact, the study shows that half of the predicted difference in career success (i.e., promotion, compensation, industry recognition) is due to this one variable."
Tom Woodward

Why Scientists Need to Learn How to Share - 1 views

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    "THE EDITORS OF THE Public Library of Science (PLOS) family of scientific journals recently decided to give their authors much more specific instructions for sharing data. They announced that "authors must make all data publicly available, without restriction, immediately upon publication of the article." They defined data as "any and all of the digital materials that are collected and analyzed in the pursuit of scientific advances," and now require authors to provide a "data availability statement" that serves the purpose of "describing where and how others can access each dataset that underlies the findings.""
Tom Woodward

Why I use twitter | Mallemaroking - 5 views

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    "I cannot sit on the fence. I like twitter and what it offers. I have learned things I never would, built genuine relationships with international people who I would have perhaps have only met over a quick coffee at a conference. And I have changed the way I speak about science. It is interesting, and often funny. It can of course be a harsh and challenging space. I am genuinely horrified at what I have seen some colleagues endure online - particularly the women: but it is here to stay. I wish my female colleagues and women in general were always treated well, and as people, but the only thing I can personally do is contribute to a positive space. I believe twitter is a strong positive for science, and it is a worthwhile investment of your time. This short document has a few ill-considered ideas about what I like about it.   "
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