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 Lisa Durff

An Exploratory Study of Unsupervised Mobile Learning in Rural India | MobileActive.org - 0 views

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    " Kumar, A., Tewari, A., Shroff, G., Chittamuru, D., Kam, M., and Canny, J. (2010). An Exploratory Study on Unsupervised Mobile Learning in Rural India. Proceedings of the 28th International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Atlanta, GA. ACM. Vol 1-4. 743-752. "
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    Mobile Active. org
 Lisa Durff

EDUC 8845 Learning Theory - 2 views

  • Driscoll’s definition of learning theory and merge it with the criteria provided by Siemens in his paper Learning and Knowing in Networks. These two resources will provide the foundation for your analysis of learning theories throughout the course, and will be the basis of your final project.
    • Laurie Korte
       
      Good thing to remember. Thanks.
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      EDUC8845 I would like to work in a group using Papert. Anyone care to join me?
    • Laurie Korte
       
      I'll swim with you. I have little to no knowledge of Papert so it would be an exciting new study for me. Ready? ~Laurie
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      I don't swim well, but okay - gotta get through this holiday first
  • blogging on Wiki-styled websites requires learners to participate and collaborate with one another.
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  • But one teacher can invite the village
  • one teacher can invite the village
  • Seymour Papert
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      I would like to do Papert with a group of my peers in 8845. Anyone care to join me?
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      YAHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
  • four key psychological approaches to learning theory
  • Ertmer and Newby’s five “definitive questions”
  • Driscoll
  • criteria for learning theories
  • how behaviorism helps answer the fifth question as it relates to digital learning: What types of learning are best explained by behaviorism as it relates to learning and knowing in a digital age? Find examples of behaviorist uses of technology on the Web, and include a link to them in your post. 
  • Module 1 Blog Topics (Select One): What are your beliefs about how people learn best? What is the purpose of learning theory in educational technology? What are the critical elements of a learning theory? Did Driscoll and Siemens miss any key questions or criteria? Provide a thoughtful critique of their discussion of learning theory. Critique Siemens’s “metaphors of educators.” Which of these metaphors best describes the role you believe an instructor should take in a digital classroom or workplace? Is there a better metaphor to reflect your view of the role of instructors?
  • Focus on Ertmer and Newby’s five "definitive questions" for learning theories as they relate to the four paradigms discussed and how the role of the educator changes in digital learning. You will apply these questions to each of the theories throughout this course.
  • Seymour Papert
  • mastery learning
  • similar to and different
  • What are the main challenges in your workplace regarding the introduction of constructivist and collaborative activities for learning and engagement in the next two years? How can you overcome the barriers and challenges to help move your workplace forward? How might this help facilitate diversity and globalization in your workplace?
  • One way of knowing which learning theory or theories that are appropriate is to figure out how the learner is going to demonstrate mastery of the topic to you.
  • Alvin Toffler discussed the paradigm shift from the industrial age to the information age as having had a strong impact on every system in America, with the exception of education
  • develop a mind map that shows your network connections
  • social networking sites, personal learning networks, Web 2.0 and Web 3.0 resources, virtual worlds, other digital tools, blogs, people,
  • Focus on Kop and Hill’s arguments that provide insight into whether connectivism is or is not a learning theory, and how it meets the needs of learners.
  • journal writing
  • Donovan et al. (2007) found that certain types of off-task behavior could be misinterpreted as student engagement. Therefore, the integration of one-to-one computing (even in configurations that promote authentic learning) does not necessarily translate into increased student engagement in academic tasks (Donovan et al., 2007)
  • The study conducted by Donovan, Hartley, and Strudler (2007) illustrates that fact that the reality technology’s impact on student achievement and success is often rooted in a complex arrangement of variables. With innovation like one-to-one computing, schools districts need to consideration many things and engage in extensive research, planning, and preparation in order to ensure that the implementation and integration is truly successful.
  • The purpose of this study is to determine if in a self paced learning environment an increase in interaction between student and content as well as between student and student will be sufficient compared to a more traditional learning environment of interaction between student and teacher.
  • In the end it was found that interaction, although highly value, varied in need and desire as well as in relation to success dependent upon the learner, the course, the content, and the types of interaction available.
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    Behavioral learning theorists view learning as an extrinsic event which can be observed and measured by others. This is the traditional learning theory in education, the one most researched, peer-reviewed, and most funded in the USA. It stems from the epistemological tradition of objectivism which assumes reality is an outwardly observable event. Melding the behaviorist theory with Driscoll's definition of a learning theory as persistent change as a result of experience, one would get a theory of learning which involves an observable and persistent change. Siemens considered metaphors that involved making connections from four educators. John Seely Brown saw educators as master artists or ateliers who worked with students in a learning studio. Clarence Fisher considered educators to be network administrators who enabled students to form their own learning networks. Curtis Bonk viewed the educator as a concierge who could invite students to partake of possible offerings. George himself thought of educators more like curators or expert learners who set up learning spaces for students. Another possible metaphor is the conductor of a symphony orchestra, where each student is playing a different instrumental part (differentiation), learning the same basic concepts but using different paths. When one plays music, one constructs not only the physical sound, but the phrasing, the mood, and the emphasis of the notes. This is important in constructing the overall sound, or in this case, learning. All these metaphors have to do with learners constructing knowledge. Behaviorism, however, has more to do with teachers writing on "tabulae rasae", sequences of substeps, and rewarding acceptable behavior while punishing unacceptable behavior. Some educational applications of behaviorism in classrooms include contracts, rewards, punishments, reinforcements, and extinction plans. Those are the obvious ones, but shouldn't any student act that has been learned through the student'
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    invite the village !
 Lisa Durff

A study on the relationship between technology diffusion and new product di... - 0 views

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    Study investigates diffusion of mobile phones in Korea.
 Lisa Durff

literature review, social change - 0 views

  • Social change is important to study
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      There is nothing as constant as change.
  • Technology can be a coincidental factor or part of a systematic process
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      Consider the inventions of the slate, quill pen, printing press, papyrus, paper, all these were followed by eruptions of change in cultures.
  • western societies
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  • higher literacy, education, urbanization
  • political, economic, cultural
  • Latin American or Asian countries, beyond a certain point, there was a negative correlation between some sociodemographic factors (e.g., literacy and urbanization) and institutional capacity for sustained growth
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      Reference or stats for this claim?
  • culture is a system of collective habits
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      Murdock - culture is a system of collective habits
    •  Lisa Durff
       
      So change, for Murdock, would be a change in a culture's habits ?
 Lisa Durff

Lego Robotic: Construct Knowledge and Nurture CreativityEducation Theory and Case Studies - 0 views

  • children are involved in creating something, making something, building something, they are simultaneously building knowledge in their minds. They are trying out ideas, making theories and testing them, making connections between them and reorganizing them " in short, they are building knowledge structures.
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    Is the only difference between Piaget and Papert the kids constructing something?
 Lisa Durff

Module 2 Dsc - Social Change and the Work of Tyack and Cuban - 2 views

Social change is demonstrated through the change in public schooling from the pre-Civil war era to the late twentieth century. It is remarkable that such change in the way schools are organized too...

EDUC8111

started by Lisa Durff on 27 Dec 10 no follow-up yet
 Lisa Durff

Kukulska-Hulme et al IJMBL_pre-print.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    Not sure if this study works
 Lisa Durff

Rogers diffusion researc:& diffusion traditions - 3 views

Week 2: Rubric for Defense of Innovation for Multimedia Presentation You identify and describe one innovation, including its potential use and benefit to your industry, as the topic of your course ...

EDUC8111 diffusion

jencarbonneau

Curriki - About - 0 views

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    Curriki, the online education community, is building the first website to offer free, open-source instructional materials for K-12. We have thousands of free worksheets, lesson plans, exams, project ideas and activities for English language arts, math, science, social studies, technology integration and other subjects.
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