Skip to main content

Home/ Technology Enabled Learning & Teaching @ UNSW/ Group items tagged courses

Rss Feed Group items tagged

mpinspace

What folks included in their training Moodle best practices course - 1 views

  •  
    It is possible to see what exactly was included in this course if you watch it in full screen mode. Unfortunately, there is no guest access to this course (I tried)
Kristin Turnbull

Make your Moodle course look more like a web page - 13 views

  •  
    Interesting video on using the HTML block as a way of creating links to navigate through course topics - avoiding excessive scrolling.
  •  
    The navigation links on the left hand side are nice but for a completely new (for a learner) technical issue I would rather include the icons. Also, in Moodle 1.9.6 "Book" as a resource type was allowing for reaching the same outcome without complications of inclusing HTML blocks.
Kristin Turnbull

elearning and Moodle Essentials - 1 views

  •  
    Winner of Cool Courses competition
anonymous

The Role of Student Peer Review and Assessment in an Introductory Project-Based Enginee... - 0 views

  •  
    The Role of Student Peer Review and Assessment in an Introductory Project-Based Engineering Design Course UNSW 2007
Kristin Turnbull

Moodle News - Converting static web pages to activities in Moodle - 1 views

  •  
    A video on how to clean up a Moodle course by changing a static web page (with a video and some notes) into an online activity without having to start from scratch.
Lyn Collins

Guidelines for Online Course Accessibility | Faculty Focus - 1 views

  •  
    Good summary article that canvasses the technical and pedagogical challenges as well as the solutions.
Lyn Collins

Is making your course accessible important? | MQASMQAS - 0 views

  •  
    "According to the Australian Disability Clearninghouse on Education and Training (ADCET) The number of students with disability in university study has increased from 11,656 in 1995 to 42,111 in 2011 and that one in five people in Australia have one or more disabilities, which is increasing. This means that 1 in 20 students has a disability that impacts on their study. Improving student outcomes requires us to "build-in" equitable policies and practices across the organisation, as statistically as much as 20% of the student-body need it, and have a right to it."
John Paul Posada

OpenBadges.me » Fonts & graphics - 4 views

  •  
    A good online tool for creating badges to use in courses.
Lyn Collins

What's the Difference Between OCWs and MOOCs? Managing Expectations. - 1 views

  •  
    We're seeing a huge anti-MOOC backlash now, but never saw an anti-OCW backlash. Why? Perhaps because even though to the public mind they're doing essentially the same things - publishing large collections of curated, high quality, freely available course content - OCW managed the public's expectations better.
  •  
    Critical point: Manage expectations or it will fail
Lyn Collins

Lessons Learned from Vanderbilt's First MOOCs | Center for Teaching | Vanderbilt Univer... - 1 views

  •  
    The lessons learned at Vanderbilt are consistent with lessons learned in other MOOCs offered elsewhere. The lessons include, briefly: Teaching online is a team effort. There's more to MOOCs than lecture videos. Open content is our friend The cognitive diversity seen in MOOCs is far greater than in closed courses MOOC students are well-motivated students Cognitive Diversity + Intrinsic Motivations = Crowdsourcing Success MOOC students can be producers as well as consumers of information Accommodating students on different time tables can be challenging Instructor presence is important, even in a MOOC Good stuff; good article.
Niki Fardouly

eLearning Blog // Don't Waste Your Time » Online Induction: What happened? - 2 views

  •  
    icebreakers for online courses
Karsten Sommer

WebEx University - 3 views

  •  
    Basic to Advanced training courses for WebEX
Robyn Jay

What to Do With Wikipedia - 0 views

  • Wikipedia is an affront to academia, because it undercuts what makes academics the elite in society.
  • Embracing the World of Wikipedia Figuring out what to do with Wikipedia is part of a larger question: When is academia going to acknowledge the elephant in the room? Over the past decade, the web has become the primary informational environment for the average student. This is where our students live. Wrenching them out of it in the name of academic quality is simply not going to work. But the genius of the web is that it is a means, not an end. The same medium that brings us Wikipedia also brings us e-reference and ejournals. Thus we have an opportunity to introduce Wikipedia devotees to three undiscovered realities: 1. Truth to tell, much of Wikipedia is simply amazing in its detail, currency, and accuracy. Denying this is tantamount to taking ourselves out of the new digital reality. But we need to help our students see that Wikipedia is also an environment for shallow thinking, debates over interpretation, and the settling of scores. Wikipedia itself advises that its users consult other sources to verify the information they are finding. If a key element in information literacy is the ability to evaluate information, what better place to start than with Wikipedia? We can help students to distinguish the trite from the brilliant and encourage them to check their Wikipedia information against other sources. 2. We need to introduce students to digital resources that are, in many cases, stronger than Wikipedia. Some of these are freely available online, like the amazing Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu). Others may be commercial e-reference sources with no barrier except a user name and password. 3. The most daring solution would be for academia to enter the world of Wikipedia directly. Rather than throwing rocks at it, the academy has a unique opportunity to engage Wikipedia in a way that marries the digital generation with the academic enterprise. How about these options: • A professor writes or rewrites Wikipedia articles, learning the system and improving the product. • A professor takes his or her class through a key Wikipedia article on a topic related to the course, pointing out its strengths and weaknesses, editing it to be a better reflection of reality. • A professor or information literacy instructor assigns groups of students to evaluate and edit Wikipedia articles, using research from other sources as an evaluative tool. • A course takes on specific Wikipedia topics as heritage articles. The first group of students creates the articles and successive groups update and expand on them. In this way, collections of key “professor approved” articles can be produced in many subject areas, making Wikipedia better and better as time goes on. If you want to see further options, Wikipedia itself provides examples (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:School_and_university_projects). What to Do with Wikipedia When academia finally recognizes that Wikipedia is here to stay and that we can either fight it or improve it, we may finally discover that professors and students have come to a meeting of minds. This doesn’t mean that Wikipedia articles will now be fully acceptable in research paper bibliographies. But surely there is a middle ground that connects instruction on evaluation with judicious use of Wikipedia information. Ultimately, the academy has to stop fighting Wikipedia and work to make it better. Academic administrators need to find ways to recognize Wikipedia writing as part of legitimate scholarship for tenure, promotion, and research points. When professors are writing the articles or guiding their students in article production and revision, we may become much less paranoid about this wildly popular resource. Rather than castigating it, we can use it as a tool to improve information literacy.
John Paul Posada

HMH Fuse: California tests a full year Algebra course on an iPad app - 2 views

  •  
    I'd be happy to see the day when kids don't need to lug around bags heavier than them full of textbooks to and from schools.
Timothy Allen

iPad replaces uni textbooks at University of Adelaide science faculty | Adelaide Now - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting article about ipad replacing traditional course books at Uni of Adelaide
Robyn Jay

iApps Project | Stanford University - 0 views

  •  
    "At Stanford, we envision the iPhone as having a profound potential to break barriers in the way we provide information and services to students - in how they converse with the institution, their curriculum, the faculty, and each other. With an enduring entrepreneurial, innovative, and technological leadership, those same qualities that helped shape Silicon Valley, Stanford is in a unique position to chart yet another new course, this time using the iPhone. "
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 100 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page