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Brian Maki

Colleges looking beyond the lecture - The Washington Post - 0 views

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    The lecture hall is under attack. Science, math and engineering departments at many universities are abandoning or retooling the lecture as a style of teaching, worried that it's driving students away. The faculty at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore has dedicated this academic year to finding alternatives to the lecture in those subjects. Johns Hopkins, Harvard University and even the White House have hosted events in which scholars have assailed the lecture.
Theron DesRosier

How Moderator Works - Google Moderator Help Center - 0 views

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    This is the tool used to moderate questions during Obama's campaign. It is also used to some extent in the Stanford AI course. This tool allows the community to moderate the questions that it thinks are most important to answer. In the case of Stanford AI, the highest rated questions receive video responses by the faculty.
Theron DesRosier

Intro to AI -Stanford Open Course - 1 views

  • Quizzes There will be online quizzes as well, which enable you to demonstrate your knowledge of the AI topics you just learned about. If you get a question wrong, no problem. Quizzes don't count towards your score. But you may find that you will be asked to watch specific videos that discuss certain mistakes you may have made.
  • Asking questions of the professors The course will offer a forum in which you can pose your questions directly to the instructors. You can also see the questions of other students in this class and vote on them. The instructors will answer the top-voted questions. So for your question to make it to the top of the list, you will have to ask a question that appeals to many other students. Discussions There will also be a general discussion forum, in which you can discuss questions and interact with other students. You are not allowed to post solutions to active homework assignment and exams here, but you are allowed to discuss the material covered in class; and you can of course pose questions. Once the answers to a homework assignment have been posted you are free to discuss them, as well as sharing any code you may have written.
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    Asking questions of the professors The course will offer a forum in which you can pose your questions directly to the instructors. You can also see the questions of other students in this class and vote on them. The instructors will answer the top-voted questions. So for your question to make it to the top of the list, you will have to ask a question that appeals to many other students. Discussions There will also be a general discussion forum, in which you can discuss questions and interact with other students. You are not allowed to post solutions to active homework assignment and exams here, but you are allowed to discuss the material covered in class; and you can of course pose questions. Once the answers to a homework assignment have been posted you are free to discuss them, as well as sharing any code you may have written. Video Lessons Video lectures are the primary method for communicating content in this class. They are posted weekly, and are composed of many small chunks of 1 to 15 minutes in length. Professors Thrun and Norvig will cover key concepts of AI in these lectures. Lectures will be posted weekly for each topic, and you can view lectures at your own pace once they have been posted until the end of the course. Quizzes There will be online quizzes as well, which enable you to demonstrate your knowledge of the AI topics you just learned about. If you get a question wrong, no problem. Quizzes don't count towards your score. But you may find that you will be asked to watch specific videos that discuss certain mistakes you may have made. Homework assignments These are just like quizzes, but now your submission counts towards the score. Homework assignments will be available all week, and you must complete all the questions during the week they are available; otherwise they count for 0. We plan for a total of 8 homework assignments, of which your two lowest scores will not be counted towards your score. The remaining 6 assignments taken together
Theron DesRosier

Death Knell for the Lecture: Technology as a Passport to Personalized Education NYTimes... - 0 views

  • At Stanford, we recently placed three computer science courses online, using a similar format. Remarkably, in the first four weeks, 300,000 students registered for these courses, with millions of video views and hundreds of thousands of submitted assignments. What can we learn from these successes? First, we see that video content is engaging to students — many of whom grew up on YouTube — and easy for instructors to produce. Second, presenting content in short, bite-size chunks, rather than monolithic hourlong lectures, is better suited to students’ attention spans, and provides the flexibility to tailor instruction to individual students. Those with less preparation can dwell longer on background material without feeling uncomfortable about how they might be perceived by classmates or the instructor. Conversely, students with an aptitude for the topic can move ahead rapidly, avoiding boredom and disengagement. In short, everyone has access to a personalized experience that resembles individual tutoring. Watching passively is not enough. Engagement through exercises and assessments is a critical component of learning. These exercises are designed not just to evaluate the student’s learning, but also, more important, to enhance understanding by prompting recall and placing ideas in context. Moreover, testing allows students to move ahead when they master a concept, rather than when they have spent a stipulated amount of time staring at the teacher who is explaining it. For many types of questions, we now have methods to automatically assess students’ work, allowing them to practice while receiving instant feedback about their performance. With some effort in technology development, our ability to check answers for many types of questions will get closer and closer to that of human graders.
Theron DesRosier

Creating new models for on-line CS learning « Computing Education Blog - 0 views

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    Though the origin of this post is a blog on computing education, the strategies discussed could be used in any discipline.
Theron DesRosier

Salman Khan: Let's Use Video To Reinvent Education - 0 views

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    For those who haven't seen this yet, it is worth a watch. Some simple innovations that have a huge impact on the scale and quality of learning. Many of these principles could be transferred to our learning space.
Theron DesRosier

lessons-learned-from-a-blended-learning-pilot4.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    "blendmylearning project brought together Envision schools, google, khan academy, and stanford university d.school to chronicle the performance and engagement of low-performing high school algebra students receiving a mix of traditional teacher led instruction and self-guided instruction through the khan academy website."
Theron DesRosier

Don't Lecture Me | American RadioWorks - 1 views

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    "Rethinking the Way College Students Learn College students spend a lot of time listening to lectures. But research shows there are better ways to learn. And experts say students need to learn better because the 21st century economy demands more well-educated workers."
Theron DesRosier

Physicists Seek To Lose The Lecture As Teaching Tool : NPR - 0 views

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    "The lecture is one of the oldest forms of education there is. But lecturing has never been an effective teaching technique and now that information is everywhere, some say it's a waste of time. Indeed, physicists have the data to prove it."
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