Looking For Learning In 21st Century Classrooms - A leadership guide to supporting and ... - 0 views
Developing 21st century skills: Web 2.0 in higher education - A Case Study - 0 views
-
" In this article we provide a compact summary of two courses with innovative curricula integrating (1) Web 2.0 as the course subject, and (2) Web 2.0 as tools to support teaching/learning. We particularly focus on pedagogical approaches, applied methodologies and evaluation outcomes, indicating achieved impacts and possible ways to transform practice in higher education"
Learning Through Digital Media - 2 views
ePIstudy - e-portfolio implementations - 0 views
-
Site to support this JISC project on implementing eportfolios. The ePI study is exploring large-scale implementations of e-portfolio use in Higher and Further Education and professional organisations in the UK . It is JISC funded and led by the University of Nottingham. The study seeks to:Identify a range of examples of wide scale e-portfolio implementations within HE/FE institutions and professional bodies that will inform practice/strategy;Gather a range of case studies to support the articulation of models of implementation;Develop an appropriate means of disseminating the outcomes that enables a potential user to understand the implementation issues and identify the cases that are most relevant to their own contexts.
Grading Practices: Liabilities of the Points System - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 1 views
An Open Future for Higher Education (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAUSE - 1 views
-
Education, and in particular higher education, has seen rapid change as learning institutions have had to adapt to the opportunities provided by the Internet to move more of their teaching online1 and to become more flexible in how they operate. It might be tempting to think that such a period of change would lead to a time of consolidation and agreement about approaches and models of operation that suit the 21st century. New technologies continue to appear,2 however, and the changes in attitude indicated by the integration of online activities and social approaches within our lives are accelerating rather than slowing down. How should institutions react to these changes? One part of the answer seems to be to embrace some of the philosophy of the Internet3 and reevaluate how to approach the relationship between those providing education and those seeking to learn. Routes to self-improvement that have no financial links between those providing resources and those using them are becoming more common,4 and the motivation for engaging with formal education as a way to gain recognition of learning is starting to seem less clear.5 What is becoming clear across all business sectors is that maintaining a closed approach leads to missing out on ways to connect with people and locks organizations into less innovative approaches.6 Higher education needs to prepare itself to exist in a more open future, either by accepting that current modes of operation will increasingly provide only one version of education or by embracing openness and the implications for change entailed. In this article we look at what happens when a more open approach to learning is adopted at an institutional level. There has been a gradual increase in universities opening up the content that they provide to their learners. Drawing on the model of open-source software, where explicit permission to freely use and modify code has developed a software industry that rivals commercial approaches, a proposed
Google+ Hangouts: Six Practical Uses for Online Education by Jeremy Vest : Learning Sol... - 1 views
Blended Synchronous Learning Handbook - 0 views
-
"The Blended Synchronous Learning Handbook is the primary output of the Blended Synchronous Learning Project. It includes the summative findings of the Blended Synchronous Learning case studies, a Blended Synchronous Learning Design Framework, and a range of other resources and information to support blended synchronous learning design research and practice."
oia-good-practice-framework-disciplinary-procedures.pdf - 0 views
Practical action for academics to make engineering education more inclusive - Royal Aca... - 1 views
Three generations of distance education pedagogy | Anderson | The International Review ... - 2 views
-
"This paper defines and examines three generations of distance education pedagogy. Unlike earlier classifications of distance education based on the technology used..."
-
This paper defines and examines three generations of distance education pedagogy. Unlike earlier classifications of distance education based on the technology used, this analysis focuses on the pedagogy that defines the learning experiences encapsulated in the learning design. The three generations of cognitive-behaviourist, social constructivist, and connectivist pedagogy are examined, using the familiar community of inquiry model (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000) with its focus on social, cognitive, and teaching presences. Although this typology of pedagogies could also be usefully applied to campus-based education, the need for and practice of openness and explicitness in distance education content and process makes the work especially relevant to distance education designers, teachers, and developers. The article concludes that high-quality distance education exploits all three generations as determined by the learning content, context, and learning expectations.
Moodle performance testing: how much more horsepower do each new versions of Moodle req... - 2 views
Increase student engagement with Moodle conditional activities & badges | I Teach With ... - 0 views
Gamifying a Moodle course. What difference does it make? Week 1 | I Teach With Moodle |... - 0 views
« First
‹ Previous
81 - 100 of 134
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page