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Nigel Robertson

Time to Move to Competency-Based Continuing Professional Development « Educat... - 0 views

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    "Often, the word competency and skill are used interchangeably. While they are related, they are not the same. A competency is a demonstrated ability to perform a particular job or task. A competency includes skills, but also behaviors and the ability to apply those skills in order to perform a job or task. For example, a teacher may know how to use a computer and productivity software (skill), but may not know how to use those skills to increase collaboration and critical thinking in their students (competency)."
Nigel Robertson

Dunning-Kruger effect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

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    "The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which an unskilled person makes poor decisions and reaches erroneous conclusions, but their incompetence denies them the metacognitive ability to realize their mistakes.[1] The unskilled therefore suffer from illusory superiority, rating their own ability as above average, much higher than it actually is, while the highly skilled underrate their abilities, suffering from illusory inferiority. This leads to the situation in which less competent people rate their own ability higher than more competent people. It also explains why actual competence may weaken self-confidence: because competent individuals falsely assume that others have an equivalent understanding. "Thus, the miscalibration of the incompetent stems from an error about the self, whereas the miscalibration of the highly competent stems from an error about others."["
Nigel Robertson

Choosing the Best Technology | iTeachU - 0 views

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    Wheel of competencies, assessments and supporting technologies with a more useful table describing potential activities and fleshing out the competencies and rationale.
Stephen Harlow

RT @gsiemens: Mapping Digital Competence: Towards a Conceptual Understanding http://t.c... - 1 views

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    RT @gsiemens: Mapping Digital Competence: Towards a Conceptual Understanding http://t.co/Qu8WkUE1 (pdf) #digitalliteracy /cc @TraceyMorgan
Stephen Bright

A Key Competency for Online Instructors | Academic Impressions - 0 views

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    Key area for improvement - "active teaching". In terms of online workload - new online teachers are either not responsive enough or too responsive.
Nigel Robertson

Data, Technology, and the Great Unbundling of Higher Education | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    Long piece on breaking HE into component parts, technology and competency education.
Nigel Robertson

DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly: Designing Choreographies for the New Economy of Atte... - 0 views

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    The nature of the academic lecture has changed with the introduction of wi-fi and cellular technologies. Interacting with personal screens during a lecture or other live event has become commonplace and, as a result, the economy of attention that defines these situations has changed. Is it possible to pay attention when sending a text message or surfing the web? For that matter, does distraction always detract from the learning that takes place in these environments? In this article, we ask questions concerning the texture and shape of this emerging economy of attention. We do not take a position on the efficiency of new technologies for delivering educational content or their efficacy of competing for users' time and attention. Instead, we argue that the emerging social media provide new methods for choreographing attention in line with the performative conventions of any given situation. Rather than banning laptops and phones from the lecture hall and the classroom, we aim to ask what precisely they have on offer for these settings understood as performative sites, as well as for a culture that equates individual attentional behavior with intellectual and moral aptitude.
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    "The nature of the academic lecture has changed with the introduction of wi-fi and cellular technologies. Interacting with personal screens during a lecture or other live event has become commonplace and, as a result, the economy of attention that defines these situations has changed. Is it possible to pay attention when sending a text message or surfing the web? For that matter, does distraction always detract from the learning that takes place in these environments? In this article, we ask questions concerning the texture and shape of this emerging economy of attention. We do not take a position on the efficiency of new technologies for delivering educational content or their efficacy of competing for users' time and attention. Instead, we argue that the emerging social media provide new methods for choreographing attention in line with the performative conventions of any given situation. Rather than banning laptops and phones from the lecture hall and the classroom, we aim to ask what precisely they have on offer for these settings understood as performative sites, as well as for a culture that equates individual attentional behavior with intellectual and moral aptitude."
Stephen Bright

The Difference Between Digital Literacy and Digital Fluency | SociaLens Blog - 1 views

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    short overview of the differences between digital literacy and digital fluency - also a link to a book on Digital Fluency. Brings in the idea of 'concious competence'. 
Stephen Harlow

Science of the Invisible: Rant for the Day - 1 views

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    "Competencies not Literacies! Measurable, deliverable, understandable. Why are people trying to burden students [& staff] with things they can't even define?"<--hmm something rang true for me here.
Nigel Robertson

» JISC Online Conference session on digital literacy (#jiscel11) literaci.es - 0 views

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    "I've just been in an interesting panel discussion at the JISC Online Conference on the subject of 'digital literacy'. The recording of the Elluminate session is available. The session reinforced to me just how diverse people's views on digital literacies are. Most new to the field make the assumption that digital literacy is singular and consists of basic skills in the digital realm. In effect, digital competency. Those more experienced in the field, such as Helen Beetham, talk of the importance of this baseline - the 'ABC' of digital literacy as she called it, but higher-level skills as well."
Stephen Bright

Web Literacy Standard - Mozilla Webmaker - 0 views

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    A map of competencies and skills that a group of Mozilla stakeholders (including Doug Belshaw) thought was important for getting better at reading, writing and participating on the web. Organised under three headings: exploring, building, connecting
Stephen Harlow

2Degrees Huawei IDEOS U8150 Review « Ben.geek.nz - 1 views

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    "At $379 outright, you can't expect the U8150 to compete with the iPhone 4 or top-end android phones, but it performs admirably."
Nigel Robertson

Competencies for Online Instructors | Penn State Learning Design Community Hub - 0 views

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    Description of the skills needed to be an online instructor.
Stephen Harlow

Online and Hybrid Course Enrollment and Performance in Washington State Community and T... - 0 views

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    "As students became more competent with online courses, the completion rates increased to match face-to-face completion rates. This may suggest that online courses require time for familiarisation."
Dean Stringer

Master a new skill? Here's your badge - 1 views

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    "The Mozilla Foundation and Peer-to-Peer University (P2PU), among others, are working to create an alternative - and recognized - form of certification that combines merit-earned badges with an open framework. The Open Badges Project will allow skills and competencies to be tracked, assessed, and showcased."
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    May not have quite the same clout with the NZQA :) but though you guys might be interested in this...
Nigel Robertson

Informal learning and identity formation in online social networks - 0 views

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    "All students today are increasingly expected to develop technological fluency, digital citizenship, and other twenty-first century competencies despite wide variability in the quality of learning opportunities schools provide. Social network sites (SNSs) available via the internet may provide promising contexts for learning to supplement school-based experiences. This qualitative study examines how high school students from low-income families in the USA use the SNS, MySpace, for identity formation and informal learning. The analysis revealed that SNSs used outside of school allowed students to formulate and explore various dimensions of their identity and demonstrate twenty-first century skills; however, students did not perceive a connection between their online activities and learning in classrooms. We discuss how learning with such technologies might be incorporated into the students overall learning ecology to reduce educational inequities and how current institutionalized approaches might shift to accommodate such change."
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