Skip to main content

Home/ Wcel_Team/ Group items tagged peer

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Dean Stringer

When Getting Rid of College Lectures Makes Sense - Slashdot - 1 views

  •  
    "NPR reports that Harvard physicist and professor Eric Mazur has largely gotten rid of the lecture in his classes, after finding that in lecture-based classes, students tend to commit to memory formulae and heuristics, but fail to develop deep understanding of concepts. Mazur has tried - and seemingly succeeded - to cultivate deeper learning with a combination of small group peer-instruction and a tight feedback loop based on in-class polling about particular problems."
  •  
    Hey guys. Happy new year, hope yaz had a nice break. The idea posted in this thread at /. no doubt isnt new to you all, neither the whole learning-styles thing, but the thread itself is actually not a bad read, lots of differing opinions, not all geeks.
Nigel Robertson

3 Strikes response - phil-steele.pdf - 0 views

  •  
    Great post in the consultation about the current NZ 3 strikes law.
Stephen Harlow

Annotum - 1 views

  •  
    "...fantastic new tool to author and publish beautiful, peer-reviewed scholarly articles and journals."
Nigel Robertson

OpenStax College - 0 views

  •  
    "OpenStax College offers students free textbooks that meet scope and sequence requirements for most courses. These are peer-reviewed texts written by professional content developers. Adopt a book today for a turnkey classroom solution or modify it to suit your teaching approach. Free online and low-cost in print, OpenStax College books are built for today's student budgets."
Stephen Bright

Deakin MOOC explores innovations in assessment - 0 views

  •  
    Deakin trying out a MOOC with some interesting assessment ideas - mainly assessed via peer review and awarding of badges, formal credit on payment of $495 fee involves an interview with the student as well as learning artefacts. 
Nigel Robertson

Moodle Peer Review Assignment Type - 0 views

  •  
    This looks clean and has a good workflow and indication of what is required. Would be worth trying out.
Nigel Robertson

iPeer - 0 views

  •  
    First stable release in 2003 - the following description sounds uncannily familiar! "iPeer is an open source web application application that allows instructors to develop and deliver  rubric-based peer evaluations, to review and release student comments, to build progress report forms online, and to analyze evaluation results. iPeer features a built-in user management system, data import/export, and an easy-to-use installer."
Stephen Harlow

Social media savvy: the universities and academics leading the way | Higher Education N... - 0 views

  •  
    "...research is a social process, and that building a network of peers is nothing new, but significantly increased by the use of social media."
Stephen Harlow

Academic publishing: Of goats and headaches | The Economist - 0 views

  •  
    "Academic journals generally get their articles for nothing and may pay little to editors and peer reviewers. They sell to the very universities that provide that cheap labour." Nice business model!
Stephen Harlow

DTLT Today: Episode 22: Learning Catalytics - 1 views

  •  
    .@DTLTToday discuss @Eric_Mazur's @LCatalytics s/w http://t.co/gwTCXAo #lecture + #clickers + peer instruction #pedagogy (via @philshapiro)
Nigel Robertson

Dead Drops | Un-cloud your files in cement! 'Dead Drops' is an anonymous, offline, peer... - 0 views

  •  
    Project to embed usb drives in walls etc for anonymous, no connection, sharing. Could be like e-geocaching!
Nigel Robertson

AcademicPub - Custom Books for Higher Education - 1 views

  •  
    THE ACADEMICPUB APPLICATION GIVES EDUCATORS THE ABILITY TO CREATE THEIR OWN CUSTOM BOOKS - IN PRINT AND E-BOOK FORMAT. Our application provides real-time copyright clearance and an ever-expanding content library along with the ability to add your own materials and articles from the web. And - peer recommendations from colleagues in your discipline can present new possibilities to enrich your courses.
Nigel Robertson

http://www.qaa.ac.uk/en/Publications/Documents/Digital-capability-and-teaching-excellen... - 0 views

  •  
    Digital capability for TEL Overarching principles: 1 start with pedagogy every time 2 recognise that context is key 3 create a digital capability threshold for institutions 4 use communities of practice and peer support to share good practice 5 introduce a robust and owned change management strategy 6 develop a compelling evidence-informed rationale 7 ensure encouragement for innovation and managed risk-taking.
Nigel Robertson

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).
Nigel Robertson

New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile learning in higher education - 0 views

  •  
    The purpose of this e-book is to explore the use of mobile devices in learning in higher education, and to provide examples of good pedagogy. We are sure that the rich variety of examples of mobile learning found in this book will provide the reader with the inspiration to teach their own subjects and courses in ways that employ mobile devices in authentic and creative ways. This book is made up of a collection of double blind peer-reviewed chapters written by participants in the project New technologies, new pedagogies: Using mobile technologies to develop new ways of teaching and learning.
Nigel Robertson

Five Things to Do or Change in Higher Education - Law, Policy -- and IT? - Inside Highe... - 0 views

  •  
    1. Agitate openly and very publicly about the role higher education is designed to play 2. Collaborate strategically about how to reorganize resources given information and Internet technologies 3. Fix tenure and our aging faculty demographic 4. Fix peer review 5. Incorporate digital and information fluency in every discipline
  •  
    Blog post on some things that need fixing in HE and the role that ICT has in many of them. Final one on digital fluency is useful.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 40
Showing 20 items per page