Skip to main content

Home/ ALT Lab/ Group items tagged post

Rss Feed Group items tagged

sanamuah

MediumSounds Mashes Up Medium And SoundCloud To Feature Audio On Your Post | TechCrunch - 0 views

  •  
    "Medium does a lot of things well. Its easy-to-use interface for composing blog posts creates a clean, distraction-free environment for the reader. But one thing it doesn't do well is audio. Music, radio shows, and podcasts aren't a featured part of the product. London-based developer Roman Mittermayr put together MediumSounds so he could mash together what he liked about the Medium design with the musical content he posts to SoundCloud. His creation adds a missing element to what Medium offers - a way for sound to be a main feature, not just an embedded part of the post."
Joyce Kincannon

JOLT - Journal of Online Learning and Teaching - 0 views

  •  
    1. For complex written assignments that require synthesis of material from the entire semester, divide the assignment into phases and have students submit interim deliverables for feedback. 2. Use rubrics to guide student activity on the discussion board as well as in written assignments. 3. For courses that teach dense, technical material, self-check quizzes can be very effective to oblige students to complete the required reading and help them (and instructors) gauge their understanding of the material. 4. Make use of synchronous technologies, where appropriate. Many of the challenges instructors face when teaching online are the result of the distant, asynchronous nature of most online learning. Web conferencing and telephone conferencing can help "close the gap" that asynchronous communication introduces. 5. Explore the use of peer-assessment strategies to foster community development and give students chances to learn through analyzing and critiquing the work of others. Rubrics are a must for this kind of activity. 6. Look for appropriate opportunities to address the entire class so as to reduce the time spent giving the same feedback to multiple students. After a big assignment, post an announcement summarizing some of the trends in the submissions, along with recommendations for next steps. Maintain a "Q&A" discussion board to which students can post questions for everyone to see. Monitor the board regularly, but also urge students to assist one another when appropriate.
Tom Woodward

Do I Own My Domain If You Grade It? | EdSurge News - 3 views

  •  
    "This past year, Davidson College introduced "A Domain of One's Own" to a portion of the student body through faculty willing to use it in their teaching. I saw two styles of 'Domains' rise out of the initiative. The first type of 'Domain' took audience into account, considering the implications of public scholarship, representation, and student agency. The second, in many ways, mirrored the traditional pedagogical structure by assigning papers or short answer assignments to be posted online through blogs. This is not necessarily bad, but also doesn't necessarily empower. The problems with the second approach can be wrapped up into two key questions beginning with: Why post an assignment online if…"
  •  
    Also related to the distinction between having an eportfolio program and creating a domain of one's own; very different creatures that sometimes get discussed as if they're the same thing.
Jonathan Becker

Dammit, the LMS -e-Literate - 0 views

  •  
    "There. I did it. I wrote the damned "future of the LMS" post. And I did it mostly by copying and pasting from posts I wrote 10 years ago. I am now going to go pour myself a drink. Somebody please wake me again in another decade."
Tom Woodward

Writing Proficiency | OwenM - 0 views

  •  
    I really liked this post.
Tom Woodward

My Library tagged example vcu - 2 views

  •  
    This is a collection of courses, students posts etc. (some VCU specific, some from other institutions) that might be useful.
Tom Woodward

Virtual Reality: A Nature Loving Programmer's Point of View | Anonymous Octopus's Virtu... - 0 views

  •  
    Nice student blog post on virtual reality, meditation, and nature.
Tom Woodward

Meet the 26-year-old who's taking on Thomas Piketty's ominous warnings about inequality... - 1 views

  •  
    "It was 2:45 a.m. on a Thursday last April. Matthew Rognlie was still awake, like a lot of graduate students. He had just finished typing 459 words and a few equations. They totaled six paragraphs, which he posted to the comments section of a popular economics blog. Thus begins the unlikely story of, arguably, the most-influential critique of the most influential economics book of this century."
anonymous

From bingo games to brackets, The Washington Post is building "alternative st... - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting to see how journalists are sometimes leading in presenting serious information in original, creative, engaging ways.
Jonathan Becker

Opportunities and Predictions, 2014 A.D. - 3 views

  •  
    FWIW, I think Mike Caulfield is one of the brightest and most thoughtful people in higher ed. I like this post very much.
anonymous

A New Pedagogy is Emerging... and Online Learning is a Key Contributing Factor | Contac... - 4 views

  • continuing development of new knowledge, making it difficult to compress all that learners need to know within the limited time span of a post-secondary course or program.
  • ncreased emphasis on skills or applying knowledge to meet the demands of 21st century society, skills such as critical thinking, independent learning, knowing how to use relevant information technology, software, and data within a field of discipline, and entrepreneurialism.
  • developing students with the skills to manage their own learning throughout life
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Today’s students have grown up in a world where technology is a natural part of their environment. Their expectation is that technology will be used where appropriate to help them learn, develop essential information and technology literacy skills, and master the technology fluency necessary in their specific subject domain.
  • Recent developments in digital technologies, especially web 2.0 tools such as blogs, wikis and social media, and mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets, have given the end user, the learner, much more control over access to and the creation and sharing of knowledge.
  •  
    Via Stephen Downes's recent post; a nice accessible summary discussion for non-techies about how technology is changing teaching. Good teaching resource, I think.
Jonathan Becker

Wrapping a MOOC: A Case Study in Blended Learning - 0 views

  •  
    "Students appreciated the MOOC's ability to support structured, self-paced learning. Students often watched the short (10-to-15-minute) lecture videos at double speed with the captions turned on, at times that fit the students' schedules. Students described Andrew Ng as a highly effective lecturer, which added to the value of the lecture videos. Students did not actively participate in the discussion forums provided by the MOOC, choosing instead to use each other and Professor Fisher as resources when they needed help with the material. Occasionally, a student with a specific question would check to see if that question had already been asked and answered in the forums. It often was, and so the forums were a study resource for the students even if they didn't post to the forums themselves. Doug's students appreciated the in-class active learning facilitated by the "flipped" approach. By shifting explanatory lectures outside of class, class time was made available for more discussion, interaction, and application of that material. The students described Doug's role as "facilitator," guiding class discussions and making sure that every student understood the material. The biggest challenge identified by the students was a misalignment between the MOOC material and the additional readings Doug provided. These readings took the students beyond the introductory ideas presented in the MOOC, focusing on recent and seminar research in the field. The readings weren't designed for novices in the field, as Andrew Ng's lecture videos were, and they required "a different kind of learning," as one student put it. Nor did the readings always build on the week's MOOC content in clear ways."
Jonathan Becker

Let's get systematic, baby… | Abject - 3 views

  •  
    GREAT annotated curation of recent blog posts about the LMS
Tom Woodward

The Online Photographer: Oops! And, Hmbl. Ed. Needs Advice - 0 views

  •  
    Modeling a number of things in this post that would have strong parallels in faculty/student blogging.
sanamuah

A reminder that your Instagram photos aren't really yours: Someone else can sell them f... - 0 views

  • This month, painter and photographer Richard Prince reminded us that what you post is public, and given the flexibility of copyright laws, can be shared — and sold — for anyone to see. As a part of the Frieze Art Fair in New York, Prince displayed giant screenshots of other people’s Instagram photos without warning or permission.
Tom Woodward

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

  •  
    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

The end of capitalism has begun | Books | The Guardian - 2 views

  •  
    Provocative techno-enthusiast claim of coming post-capitalitsm, in part due to digital technology
Yin Wah Kreher

Learning Through Reflection - 1 views

  •  
    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.
  •  
    Great article that I can link to my course.
sanamuah

How to Maintain Your Digital Identity As An Academic | Vitae - 0 views

  •  
    "Take control. In a nutshell, if you do not have a clear online presence, you are allowing Google, Yahoo, and Bing to create your identity for you. As a Lifehacker post on this topic once noted: "You want search engine queries to direct to you and your accomplishments, not your virtual doppelgangers.""
Tom Woodward

How I reverse-engineered Google Docs to play back any document's keystrokes «... - 6 views

  •  
    "What's neat about this is that I didn't have to use any special software while I was writing to make this "video" possible. I was working in plain old vanilla Google Docs. And to show you this one paragraph I liked, I didn't have to present you with the whole document (all 39,154 revisions of it) - I could extract bits and pieces that I thought were interesting, and interleave them in a blog post. Imagine what a high school English teacher could do with that. Imagine what you could do with that if instead of a minor effort by ol' Somers here you had, say, a piece by Ta-Nehisi Coates. (I've always wanted to watch how TNC writes. If he's ever used Google Docs, it's now possible.)"
  •  
    I love this: "I worry that most people aren't as good writers as they should be. One thing is that they just don't write enough. Another is that they don't realize it's supposed to be hard; they think that good writers are talented, when the truth is that good writers get good the way good programmers get good, the way good anythings get good: by running into the spike. Maybe folks would understand that better if they had vivid evidence that a good writer actually spends most of his time fighting himself."
1 - 20 of 69 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page