Make students curators - 0 views
Flipped Learning Journal - Welcome - 0 views
Free Technology for Teachers: Jeopardy Labs: Make Your Own Online Jeopardy Game - 0 views
Online Learning: A User's Guide to Forking Education | Online Learning | HYBRID PEDAGOGY - 0 views
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At exactly this moment, online education is poised (and threatening) to replicate the conditions, courses, structures, and hierarchical relations of brick-and-mortar industrial-era education. Cathy N. Davidson argued exactly this at her presentation, "Access Demands a Paradigm Shift," at the 2013 Modern Language Association conference. The mistake being made, I think, is a simple and even understandable one, but damning and destructive nonetheless. Those of us responsible for education (both its formation and care) are hugging too tightly to what we've helped build, its pillars, policies, economies, and institutions. None of these, though, map promisingly into digital space. If we continue to tread our current path, we'll be left with a Frankenstein's monster of what we now know of education. This is the imminent destruction of our educational system of which so many speak: taking an institution inspired by the efficiency of post-industrial machines and redrawing it inside the machines of the digital age. Education rendered into a dull 2-dimensional carbon copy, scanned, faxed, encoded and then made human-readable, an utter lack of intellectual bravery.
The Best Posts On The "Flipped Classroom" Idea | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of... - 0 views
10 Ways To Use Technology To Teach Writing - 1 views
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There are a variety of tech tools and methods out there for teaching writing that can make the process easier and more fun for both teachers and students. While not every high-tech way of teaching writing will work for every class or every student, there's enough variety that there's bound to be something for everyone.
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.
How to Create Excellent Courses with Open Education Resources | online learning insights - 0 views
Reacting to the Past: An Open Game Based Pedagogy Workshop at Duke, January 19-20 - Pro... - 1 views
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Reacting to the Past (RTTP) is a series of elaborate games, set in the past, where students take on the roles of historical characters, and through arguments and gameplay, have the potential to reshape history. In order for students to "win" the game, they have to thoroughly master literary and historical texts for their games' time period, and to be able to fight against their in-game opponents through a series of oral presentations and written work. In other words, students in Reacting to the Past have to basically do everything their professors want them to do in a college class-read and analyze texts, learn about historical contexts, learn how to construct forceful and convincing arguments-but in the guise of a game.
When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain | UChicago News - 2 views
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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.
What Will Higher Education Look Like in 25 Years? - 1 views
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Futurists surveyed for The Future of Higher Education report by the Pew Internet and American Life Project pontificated on what higher education would look like in 2020. Thirty-nine percent said higher education wouldn’t look much different than it does today. But 60 percent said higher education would be different, complete with mass adoption of teleconferencing and distance learning. In their written responses, however, many of them painted scenarios that incorporated elements of both.
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Futurists view the coming decades as an opportunity for teacher/student relationships to occur almost purely through technology — an approach known as technology-mediated education. But faculty members look to maintain the university model that’s been in place for centuries, with a sprinkle of technology integration.
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