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Tracey Morgan

TED Blog | Flip this lesson! A new way to teach with video from TED-Ed - 0 views

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    "With this feature, educators can use, tweak, or completely redo any video lesson featured on TED-Ed, or create lessons from scratch based on a TEDTalk or any video from YouTube. How? Just plug the video in and start writing questions, comments, even quizzes - then save the lesson as a private link and share with your students. The site allows you to see who's completed the lessons and track individual progress. It's still in beta, but we're so excited about this feature we had to share."
Nigel Robertson

Decision Making Exercise using Moodle's Lesson Module - 0 views

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    Good description of setting up a lesson as a decision making exercise.
Stephen Harlow

Guided Lessons - Google Apps Learning Space - 2 views

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    "This section contains lessons and seminar recordings that demonstrate how easy it is to collaborate on a project using Google Apps."
Nigel Robertson

The LMS Features That Drive Employee Engagement | IndustryView 2014 - 1 views

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    Short lessons, gamified and mobile - 3 key lessons from business use of LMS's
Nigel Robertson

"The sleeping lion needed protection" - lessons from the Mbube (Lion King) debacle - 0 views

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    "In 1939 a young musician from the Zulu cultural group in South Africa, penned down what came to be the most popular albeit controversial and internationally acclaimed song of the times. Popular because the song somehow found its way into international households via the renowned Disney's Lion King. Controversial because the popularity passage of the song was tainted with illicit and grossly unfair dealings tantamount to theft and dishonest misappropriation of traditional intellectual property, giving rise to a lawsuit that ultimately culminated in the out of court settlement of the case. The lessons to be gained by the world and emanating from this dramatics, all pointed out to the dire need for a reconsideration of measures to be urgently put in place for the safeguarding of cultural intellectual relic such as music and dance."
Nigel Robertson

Firedocs eLML Editor - 0 views

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    The University of Zurich has been trying to build an editor for eLML for a long time (nearly since the beginning of the eLML project). After two unsuccessful approaches a third approach based on the Mozilla Firefox Plugin technology led to success. In summer 2008 the first beta version of the Firedocs eLML Editor was released. So what is Firedocs? Firedocs is a webbased XML editor for Mozilla Firefox that the University of Zurich has developed for both its Content Management System UniCMS and for eLML, the eLesson Markup Language. Both the UniCMS and eLML are XML-based strategic tools of the University of Zurich and needed an easy to use editor. The Firedocs project has now become an autonomous open source project but it offers extensions for both eLML and UniCMS. The editor provided on this website is already compiled containing the eLML extensions you will need to create and edit eLML lessons.
Nigel Robertson

Ning: Failures, Lessons and Six Alternatives - 0 views

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    Some lessons on the fall of Ning and some alternative options.
Nigel Robertson

On the Identity Trail - Lessons From the Identity Trail - 0 views

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    During the past decade, rapid developments in information and communications technology have transformed key social, commercial, and political realities. Within that same time period, working at something less than Internet speed, much of the academic and policy debate arising from these new and emerging technologies has been fragmented. There have been few examples of interdisciplinary dialogue about the importance and impact of anonymity and privacy in a networked society. Lessons from the Identity Trail: Anonymity, Privacy and Identity in a Networked Society fills that gap, and examines key questions about anonymity, privacy, and identity in an environment that increasingly automates the collection of personal information and relies upon surveillance to promote private and public sector goals.
Tracey Morgan

Nine Dangerous Things You Were Taught In School - Forbes - 1 views

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    "Be aware of the insidious and unspoken lessons you learned as a child. To thrive in the world outside the classroom, you're going to have to unlearn them."
Stephen Harlow

Google is Not God: We Need a New Philosophy for Education and Technology #cha... - 2 views

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    "The message to students is clear: the internet is not looking out for you, and it's certainly not going to do the thinking for you. Educators miss the chance to teach such valuable lessons when they restrict the use of the internet for research."
Nigel Robertson

This Creepy App Isn't Just Stalking Women Without Their Knowledge, It's A Wake-Up Call ... - 0 views

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    One for the privacy lessons even though the app has been pulled. It's not the app itself, it's the lack of realisation about what data we are sharing and what can be done with it.  It's like Miss Marples in a digital age!
Nigel Robertson

Digital Citizenship lessons from Google - 0 views

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    Aimed at secondary school, there looks to be some good stuff here that we can use or repurpose.
Nigel Robertson

Lessons to Be Learned From Paulo Freire as Education Is Being Taken Over by the Mega Rich - 2 views

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    Article on Freire and relevance in current economics and education
Stephen Harlow

CSU System Shares E-book Pilot Results - 0 views

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    "After piloting a digital textbook rental program in fall 2010, the California State University system learned a few lessons about how the e-books worked for students."
Nigel Robertson

New Media Literacies - 0 views

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    "Our Space is a set of curricular materials designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments. Through role-playing activities and reflective exercises, students are asked to consider the ethical responsibilities of other people, and whether and how they behave ethically themselves online. These issues are raised in relation to five core themes that are highly relevant online: identity, privacy, authorship and ownership, credibility, and participation. For more information, download the Introduction to Our Space [pdf], FAQ [pdf], and Road Map [pdf]. All curricular units and lessons are free and available for download below. The full casebook [pdf - 133MB] can be downloaded using the link at the bottom of the page." Critiqued by @downes for not addressing the issue properly "This is "a set of curricular materials designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments." The content divides into five major subject areas: participation, identity, privacy, credibility, and authorship and ownership. I'm not sure these are the top five things I would list when thinking of ethical dimensions of new media environments. While it's useful that there is a section on flamers, lurkers and mentors I think there should be something about hate, racism and bulling. And while a section on credibility is a good idea, it should be based on the principles of reason and inference, not outrageously bad definitions like this: "Networking-the ability to search for, synthesize, and disseminate information." And this: "Collective intelligence-evidence that participants in knowledge communities pool knowledge and compare notes with others toward a common goal." Wow, those are just wrong. Maybe I need to review this and criticize it more closely."
Nigel Robertson

Twitter Twitter Tweet Tweet - 0 views

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    Some slides on using Twitter in education - meant to be part of a tutorial lesson - OK.
Nigel Robertson

Five lessons learned at the Open Textbooks Summit 2014 | BCcampus - 0 views

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    Why Open Textbooks are an answer (at least)
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