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Stephanie Cooper

When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain | UChicago News - 2 views

  • Beilock’s work has shown, for instance, that writing about math anxieties before a test can reduce one’s worries and lead to better performance.
    • Stephanie Cooper
       
      Yet another reason to encourage reflective writing in the math classes!  This may actually help the math phobic students to perform better on their tests.  
Keith Hamon

Open Education for Writers | Academe Blog - 1 views

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    I'm delighted to report that our efforts to grow Writing Commons like an academic journal have worked out really well.  We've reviewed over 75 new webtexts, and we are in the process of publishing some excellent free resources for college students.  Perhaps the most exciting result is that traffic is really blowing up!  Since February of this year, 105,532 unique visitors have accessed Writing Commons.
Keith Hamon

What You Need to Know About MOOCs - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    Colleges and professors have rushed to try a new form of online teaching known as MOOCs-short for "massive open online courses." The courses raise questions about the future of teaching, the value of a degree, and the effect technology will have on how colleges operate. Struggling to make sense of it all? On this page you'll find highlights from The Chronicle's coverage of MOOCs.
Keith Hamon

'Networked minds' require fundamentally new kind of economics - 0 views

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    Economics has a beautiful body of theory. But does it describe real markets? Doubts have come up not only in the wake of the financial crisis, since financial crashes should not occur according to the then established theories. Since ages, economic theory is based on concepts such as efficient markets and the "homo economicus", i.e. the assumption of competitively optimizing individuals and firms. It was believed that any behavior deviating from this would create disadvantages and, hence, be eliminated by natural selection. But experimental evidence from behavioral economics show that, on average, people behave more fairness-oriented and other-regarding than expected. A new theory by scientists from ETH Zurich now explains why. 
Keith Hamon

Five Ways to Flip Your Classroom With The New York Times - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Five ways to use The New York Times to "flip" your classroom.
Keith Hamon

Eric Mazur on new interactive teaching techniques | Harvard Magazine Mar-Apr 2012 - 1 views

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    This innovative style of learning grew into "peer instruction" or "interactive learning," a pedagogical method that has spread far beyond physics and taken root on campuses nationally. Last year, Mazur gave nearly 100 lectures on the subject at venues all around the world. (His 1997 book Peer Instruction is a user's manual; a 2007 DVD, Interactive Teaching, produced by Harvard's Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, illustrates the method in detail.)
Stephanie Cooper

Special Learning Types on Learnist | Learnist - 0 views

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    A new alternative to class wikis??  I see many possibilities.  
Stephanie Cooper

Learnist - a 'Pinterest for Education' - releases apps for iPhone, iPad - Tech News and... - 0 views

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    Another cool platform to consider as an online resource for your classes.
Keith Hamon

The Writing Revolution - Peg Tyre - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Deirdre DeAngelis began a detailed investigation into why, ultimately, New Dorp's students were failing. By 2008, she and her faculty had come to a singular answer: bad writing. Students' inability to translate thoughts into coherent, well-argued sentences, paragraphs, and essays was severely impeding intellectual growth in many subjects. Consistently, one of the largest differences between failing and successful students was that only the latter could express their thoughts on the page.
Thomas Clancy

Open Online Courses: Higher Education of the Future? - The Network: Cisco's Technology ... - 1 views

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    Sounds like MOOCs have a bright future and are here to stay!!
Stephanie Cooper

The Virtues of Blogging as Scholarly Activity - The Digital Campus - The Chronicle of H... - 3 views

  • My academic identity—I'm a professor of educational technology at the Open University in the United Kingdom—is strongly allied with my blog
  • A key aspect of the digital revolution is not the direct replacement of one form of scholarly activity with another, but rather the addition of alternatives to existing forms.
    • Stephanie Cooper
       
      Very true!  We need to remember that technology is just new  tools that allow us to express ourselves in ways we couldn't before.  
  • "Looking back on the history," he writes, "one clear trend stands out: Each new technology increased the complexity of the ecosystem."
Keith Hamon

Why Flip The Classroom When We Can Make It Do Cartwheels? | Co.Exist: World changing id... - 4 views

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    In some ways, the flipped model is an improvement. Research shows that tailored tutoring is more effective than lectures for understanding, mastery, and retention. But the flipped classroom doesn't come close to preparing students for the challenges of today's world and workforce. As progressive educational activist Alfie Kohn notes, great teaching isn't just about content but motivation and empowerment: Real learning gives you the mental habits, practice, and confidence to know that, in a crisis, you can count on yourself to learn something new. That's crucial in a world where, according to the U.S. Department of Labor Statistics, adults change careers (not just jobs) four to six times or where, as an Australian study predicts, 65% of today's teens will end up in careers that haven't even been invented yet. We don't need to flip the classroom. We need to make it do cartwheels.
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    I find this paragraph particularly telling: "The cartwheeled classroom not only connects text books and classrooms to the real world, but it also inspires, uplifts, and offers the joy of accomplishment. Transformative, connected knowledge isn't a thing--it's an action, an accomplishment, a connection that spins your world upside down, then sets you squarely on your feet, eager to whirl again. It's a paradigm shift." Imagine what this could mean for our ASU QEP, for example, if we told our twelve 2012-2013 teachers that each of their QEP courses was going to be taught within the larger context of being meaningful to the population of a Haitian, African, Muslim, or Afghan village or community. The difference for the students in their real-world learning would be immeasurable.
Keith Hamon

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Opening New Spaces in the Digital Writing Works... - 3 views

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    Three weeks ago I added another layer to our digital writing workshop:  I introduced students to Google Docs, and with it learned the power and potential of yet another space that again is changing writing instruction as I know it.
Thomas Clancy

New study on advantages for black graduates of black colleges | Inside Higher Ed - 1 views

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    This article does not touch on writing "per se," but we here at Albany State in Georgia are an HBCU school, so I wanted to share this mildly optimistic news with our faculty.
Thomas Clancy

Math learning software and other technology are hurting education. - Slate Magazine - 0 views

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    Now I KNOW this article is about MATH and not writing, but please skim/read it over and apply what is being said here to what we know about the teaching of English -- grammar and writing -- and how we have our favored "old" way of learning and teaching and how that often contrasts with new and "improved" methods that we see.
Keith Hamon

450 Free Audio Books: Download Great Books for Free | Open Culture - 4 views

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    Download hundreds of free audio books, mostly classics, to your MP3 player or computer. Below, you'll find great works of fiction, non-fiction and poetry.
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    Keith, this is amazing, astounding, and literally science-fiction come to life for us oldsters -- throws the concept of "home schooling" into an entirely new light, not to mention expanding the conventional classroom. In just poking around a little at the site, I also found "gutenberg.org" and "librivox.org" mentioned as sources of more and more treasures. Thanks for this gift!
Keith Hamon

http://www.open.ac.uk/personalpages/mike.sharples/Reports/Innovating_Pedagogy_report_Ju... - 2 views

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    This series of reports explores new forms of teaching, learning and assessment for an interactive world, to guide teachers and policy makers in productive innovation. The first report proposes ten innovations that are already in currency but have not yet had a profound influence on education.
Keith Hamon

Five Forms of Filtering « Innovation Leadership Network - 1 views

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    Filtering is what helps us deal with the vast amount of information available to us. We try to filter information so that we end up with something that is relevant to us - it helps us learn something, it helps us solve a problem, it helps us develop a new hypothesis about the world around us. These are all connections - and this is what really drives value creation. However, we can't connect without some filtering going on.
Keith Hamon

Blogging Like a Beast? - Brainstorm - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

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    on-line exchanges between researchers and research subjects, exchanges modeled on the back-and-forth interactions between bloggers and blog readers, might be the beginning of the end for traditional forms of ethnographic writing, differently configuring those conventional relationships in radically new ways.
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