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Kurt Kiefer

Some top colleges offer free online classes; what does that mean for UW? - 0 views

    • Kurt Kiefer
       
      The Google Apps for Education WI state liaison just left Google for Coursera.  She LEFT Google for Coursera.
  • announcing a similar initiative in April called Coursera.
  • but students who complete the classes don't earn university credit toward a degree. Instead they receive a certificate of completion, sometimes referred to as a badge.
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • if credits were to someday be awarded for these courses — or if significant numbers of employers were to start accepting these badges as a means into the workforce — higher education could be quickly and significantly altered
  • the tipping point has arrived where the university must seriously examine its current enterprise and rethink what kind of educational experience it wants to offer in the decades to come
  • We really need to start thinking differently about what we do and how we support that
  • until recently there was little pressure — either from outside the institution or from within — to significantly change
  • "flipping" the classroom, a technique in which students generally amass information outside of class by taking in recorded lectures or reading. And when students are in class, they work with professors, teaching assistants and peers on solving problems or other forms of homework.
  • "Big breakthroughs happen when what is suddenly possible meets what is desperately necessary.
  • The plan now is to accelerate this process by moving 75 percent of engineering's core courses to a blended learning model over the next five years
  • "It's not for everything," Moses says of making use of online tools. "But it's for an awful lot."
  • instruction combining both online and face-to-face elements was even more successful.
  • I'm a coach in the midst as opposed to the sage on the stage."
    • Kurt Kiefer
       
      What is making our situation desperate in K-12?
  • implemented by Stanford last year to host free online classes for more than 350,000 enrollees from nearly every corner of the globe
  • The courses feature online lectures broken down into concepts and delivered in 10- to 15-minute snippets. Those who sign up can take frequent, interactive quizzes to help increase retention of material and track progress. Exercises are graded automatically to give instant feedback. And although there is no one-on-one interaction with professors, students can connect with others in the class by posting questions and comments online, and having others vote on how helpful the comments are.
stevesanders

Nation's Digital Learning Report Card | Digital Learning Now - 0 views

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    In developing their plans, states should adopt a sense of urgency around certain policy areas: establishing a competency-based education that requires students to demonstrate mastery of the material,providing a robust offering of high quality courses from multiple providers,ending the archaic practice of seat-time,funding education based on achievement instead of attendance,funding the student instead of the system,eliminating the all-too-common practice by school districts of prohibiting students from enrolling with approved providers, either by withholding funding or credit, andbreaking down the barriers, such as teacher-student ratios and class size limits, to effective, high quality instruction.
Victoria Rydberg

Here's Why Slide Count is Irrelevant to Your E-Learning Course » The Rapid eL... - 0 views

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    This blog entry provides some best practice ideas when developing e-learning modules. I haven't explored the rest of the blog yet, but it may be relevant to our work. 
Vince Breunig

A Principal's Reflections: What Constitutes Good Instruction? - 0 views

  • Clearly stated objectives as to what the students are expected to learn or do by the conclusion of the lesson. Asking open and closed-ended questions during direct instruction in order to check for understanding, engage, and assess.  I like to see my teachers randomly call on students so that they don’t get lost during the course of a lesson.  An emphasis is also placed on the lecture being only 10-15 minutes if necessary. A do-now or anticipatory set that motivates the learner, reviews prior learning, and makes connections to the new content being presented.  Students need to find meaning and relevancy in what they are learning or else they will be disengaged. Interdisciplinary connections. A variety of student-centered learning activities where students are afforded the opportunity to think critically, solve problems, work in cooperative groups, and create manifestations that demonstrate learning is taking place.  Students need to be actively involved in the learning process. Informal and formal means of assessment in which the students have a clear indication of their performance in relation to expected learning outcomes.  Rubrics or scoring guides should accompany any activity that is to be graded. The routine use of positive reinforcement to commend and praise students for taking risks, whether they are wrong or right.  A stimulating learning environment that promotes inquiry with student work proudly displayed.  Tied to this are classroom management techniques that afford all students the opportunity to learn. Effective technology integration. Teacher enthusiasm.  If teachers aren’t enthusiastic about the lesson or content then how can they expect their students to be? A closure activity that reinforces the objectives of the lesson.
    • Vince Breunig
       
      Areas to look at during observation
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    A discussion of the arbitrary nature of teacher observation 
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