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Times Higher Education - Oxford opens up on graduate destinations - 1 views

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    By this autumn, every university in England will have published a new set of information about every undergraduate course on offer. These Key Information Sets will include data on areas such as contact hours, graduate salaries and student satisfaction. But with little fanfare, one institution has already put itself ahead of the game by displaying information about its graduates in a way that could set a benchmark for the sector. The University of Oxford has created an online tool for comparing data about its graduates' careers and salaries. Tucked away on its main careers website and organised into a set of user-friendly tables, it allows immediate comparisons of the salary and employment status of its alumni from 2008-09 and 2009-10 - undergraduate and postgraduate - sorted by subject area, individual course and even constituent college.
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Widening the Graduate Attribute Debate: a Higher Education for Global Citizenship - 1 views

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    Modern graduate attributes and why they shouldn't be just about making good workers.
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Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns for the Information Age | Brain Pickings - 0 views

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    "Data visualization is a running theme of visual literacy here, and Manuel Lima has been one of its biggest advocates since 2005 when, shortly after graduating from the Parson School of Design, he launched VisualComplexity - an ambitious portal for the visualization of complex networks across a multitude of disciplines, from biology to history to the social web."
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Feature: The Australian test - uncapped student numbers | Features | Times Higher Educa... - 0 views

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    The sky hasn't fallen in because Australia moved to an uncapped environment but there are questions about graduating standards.
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Free Online University Receives Accreditation, in Time for Graduating Class of 7 - NYTi... - 0 views

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    Another OERu style of initiative?
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MIT tool shows why metadata is really a big deal | It's a Gadget - 0 views

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    "Meta-data contains a great deal of information, and when gathered together it forms a startlingly clear picture of the person it comes from. A point that Professor César Hidalgo and graduate students Daniel Smilkov and Deepak Jagdish of MIT are trying to get across. They have created a new program called Immersion. It works by signing you into your Gmail account and collecting only the meta-data from your account usage history. From there you can get a picture of your emailing habits from that single account, and you will be shocked at what you see."
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Sydney eLearning - 0 views

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    University of Sydney documentation on eLearning - strategies and plans - note also the graduate attributes publications
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Navigating course prerequisites | University Affairs - 1 views

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    "A universally frustrating experience for undergraduates is the struggle to determine the prerequisites they need to graduate in their chosen fields. But help is close at hand."
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UnBoxed: A Journal of Adult Learning in Schools - 0 views

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    "UnBoxed is a journal of reflections on purpose, practice and policy in education, published twice yearly by the High Tech High Graduate School of Education."
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How curriculum mapping in Moodle might work « The Weblog of (a) David Jones - 0 views

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    "The purpose of this post is to provide a concrete description of how curriculum mapping of a Moodle course might work.", i.e., "Map how well the activities, resources and assessment within their Moodle course aligns with a set of outcomes." Gives the example of graduate attributes.
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Higher Education's Toughest Test - 0 views

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    "The days of jamming 500 students into lecture halls supervised by graduate students and charging them several hundred dollars per credit hour for the 'privilege' of learning in this fashion may be numbered."
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Times Higher Education - So last century - 2 views

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    "About 100 years ago, higher education restructured to meet the needs of the industrial age. It has changed little since, even as the internet has transformed life. Another revolution is needed, says Cathy Davidson, to modernise universities and prepare graduates for a 21st-century working environment"
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College students' use of Kindle DX points to e-reader's role in academia - 1 views

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    A study of how University of Washington graduate students integrated an Amazon Kindle DX into their course reading provides the first long-term investigation of e-readers in higher education.
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Globalisation: Where on earth does HE start? - 0 views

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    "Globalisation is partially about extending opportunity and breaking boundaries. There is a growing expectation that higher education creates graduates that are 'global citizens'. Individuals set their own routes into a wealth of subjects, with as many limitations and restrictions set aside as possible."
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8 Critical Skills For A Modern Education - 1 views

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    I like most of these skills and think that they could inform discussion about graduate profiles and student digital literacies.
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Rhizomatic Education : Community as Curriculum - 0 views

  • as Horton and Freire (1990) argue, "If the act of knowing has historicity, then today’s knowledge about something is not necessarily the same tomorrow. Knowledge is changed to the extent that reality also moves and changes. . . . It’s not something stabilized, immobilized"
  • The traditional method of expert translation of information to knowledge requires time: time for expertise to be brought to bear on new information, time for peer review and validation. In the current climate, however, that delay could make the knowledge itself outdated by the time it is verified (Evans and Hayes 2005; Meile 2005). In a field like educational technology, traditional research methods combined with a standard funding and publication cycle might cause a knowledge delay of several years.
  • Alec Couros’s graduate-level course in educational technology offered at the University of Regina provides an ideal example of the role social learning and negotiation can play in learning (Exhibit 3). Students in Couros’s class worked from a curriculum created through their own negotiations of knowledge and formed their own personally mapped networks, thereby contributing to the rhizomatic structure in their field of study. This kind of collaborative, rhizomatic learning experience clearly represents an ideal that is difficult to replicate in all environments, but it does highlight the productive possibilities of the rhizome model (Exhibit 4).
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