Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Free google doc spreadsheet template for research writing #etcnau Useful to synthesize your thoughts.

December 8th, 2009
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The beauty of this spreadsheet mapping tool* for writing papers is that you end up with all your major points at-a-glance and can truly synthesize your research. It also comes in handy if you have to defend your writing.

Copy and paste to your liking. Share as you like. This tool has saved me countless headaches when organizing literature reviews. Makes writing papers a breeze and revisiting them for a defense, much less stressful.

Posted via web from Dallas’s posterous

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Web 2.0: The Cultural Tipping Point for Educators…

December 3rd, 2009
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Trent Batson’s excellent article about Cloud computing offering new faculty Innovation opportunities, is one of the best written yet and pinpoints clearly the problems and the promise of IT trends before teachers today. This is a must-read for any educator who wants to understand the impact of emerging technologies on pedagogical best practices and the corresponding dilemmas faced by IT administrators.

Research has confirmed Batson’s claim that, “We are as prisoners who have spent our lives in prison and cannot bear not having four walls around us, or those bars on the windows of our curiosity.” Therefore, the mindset – not the machine – is more of a challenge to tech integration today.

Here’s the summary breakdown of Batson’s report:

  • Web 2.0 is a global renaissance of flowering knowledge as never before
  • Old-think prevents our seeing the opportunities before us as educators
  • History proves how faculty took the lead in tech integration in the past
  • Continuous change (i.e. Web 1.0 to Web 2.0) is both tantalizing and frustrating
  • Unlike changes in automobile innovations that took 91 years, Web 1.0 to 2.0 took only five years!
  • Therefore, IT depts are too busy making admin changes, to help faculty with pedagogical needs

Conclusion: “It is therefore time for faculty and academic leaders to assume permanent, campus-wide, and official leadership to transform higher education to fit the cultural learning trends and opportunities of today.”

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What are Educational Technologist Leadership Competencies?

December 1st, 2009
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The cool possibilities about the more than 200 real-time web 2.0 tools under development (Like Google Wave) is that sync and async are being melded together along with multi-dimensional communication tools such as voice, text, image, video, etc.

When semantic web becomes the standard (searchable text becomes recognizable object) then tagging and bookmarking values will be reduced and personal and group collections will become more useful.

Such collections will not simply consist of some items “saved” to another location, but more likely will consist of “searched” items and “pointed to” results. http://popurls.com is demonstrating the real-time value of aggregating crowd sourced and theme specific topics. Studying such real-time results can be a great source of discussion for critical thinking development.

The most important quality for Ed Tech leaders is to understand trends and adapt their craft to emerging innovations. Higher education may do students a disservice by focusing too much on tool techniques and too little on trend research.

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The Network “IS” the Learning…

November 17th, 2009
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George Siemens, author of the Connectivist theory of learning, explains in less than 4 minutes, the how and why of our networked learning environments today…

YouTube link: The Network is the Learning

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Arabic Fastest Growing Language Users of Net…

November 16th, 2009
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Always great to get up to date charts and graphs that visually represent unique views of who, what, why, and where on the world wide web 2.0. :-)

Thanks to Internet World Stats for this graphic representation of language users on the Internet. Great tools for teachers and educators needing to teach critical thinking skills to students. Note the percent rate of growth. This is important when considering future trends.

Top 10 language users on the internet. Note the rate of growth.

Top 10 language users on the internet. Note the rate of growth.

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Community is Not Superficial…

November 5th, 2009
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Cooperation is working toward a common goal. Collaboration results in collateral material. However, community may or may not be present and/or result from either cooperative or collaborative efforts.

AND COMMUNITY IS THE GOAL!

Which is why teachers should be careful about assigning cooperative and collaborative work without a clear goal in mind of fostering community.

Community cannot exist without a sense of trust and belonging; a sense that each member’s contribution is valued and necessary; and the belief that what the community produces bears significant impact on MORE than the community itself.

I have pondered this phenomenon a great deal recently due to my position with iMMEDIA and have come up with our Mission statement as follows: Shaping communities of impact through professional development targeting technology integration.

My point is that unless we visionize our student groups with the why; then the “what” and the “how” remain irrelevant and dysfunction results. The assignment may get done but not community resulted and in my opinion, we have done nothing more than drive the herd to market. I find this distasteful to the uttermost.

If there is not impact, members feel like they are given busy work. If the only goal is self enlightenment, members grow tired of the monotony of self centered foci.

If we ask them to cooperate, there must be a bigger reason than the subject matter alone. If we ask them to collaborate, the resulting collateral material should impact a wider audience than the group/class itself. It may work for awhile. But eventually everyone will see through the gloss and look elsewhere to satisfy their innate need to pursue the greater good.

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Cyborg Learning Theory in Education…

November 2nd, 2009
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Cyborg Learning Theory (CLT) explains how future generations perceive and experience their universe. CLT contextualizes a human identity that is merging with technology intrinsically; the electro-chemical human merging with the electro-mechanical innovation (think of biomedical, nano-technological developments, etc.).

Implications for teachers in the classroom, whether face-to-face (f2f) or online, are far-reaching. Educators must lead the next generation by » More: Cyborg Learning Theory in Education…

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eLearn 2009 Chock Full of Useful Tools & Ideas…

October 28th, 2009
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When hundreds of educators from all over the earth gather to share current research about the integration of technology in education, the results are bound to be exciting and eLearn 2009 in Vancouver, B.C. has been no exception.

Research about Web 2.0 tools, education trends, learning theory, instructional design, content development and MORE are explained and discussed in dozens of concurrent sessions held day by day during the week long gathering.

The experience confirms my own educational experience is up-to-date. The questions I bring to the table are the same questions being researched around the planet. There are no easy answers but many useful tips are shedding light on the path ahead. Here are just a few encouraging highlights…

1. The digital divide is not just about personal access to technology in a remote region. We learned of many organizations who use technology to raise support for charitable efforts. Those efforts, in turn, benefit people who may still not enjoy direct access to the technology but who receive aide from the organization nonetheless. This needs to be considered when we discuss the digital divide.

2. Gaming research is demonstrating unique possibilities for online textbook design that engages students who need to conquer levels (chapters) in order to move on. They can cooperate online and share tips with one another as they learn the game (material). The possibilities are limitless.

3. Outside forces such as economic stress, are forcing the creation of networked communities in order to accomplish mutual goals and fulfill mutual needs. The communities themselves are distilling various Web 2.0 tools in order to simplify to the lowest common denominator, a platform for collective information and action.

4. Open sourcing, open education, and open publishing are flattening access to scholarship.

5. Technology is the answer. What was the question? The question concerns Wider Access, Higher Quality, and Lower Cost. These are the drivers of current Web 2.0 applications.

Resource links:

http://aace.org/conf/elearn/

Free books: http://aupress.ca

http://publicationshare.com

http://communitiesofinquiry.com

Of course, the same questions many of us have been asking, remain. How do we motivate teachers to create network communities for professional development in light of the time barrier? Many researchers here are working on the creating of Bot Tutors to guide individuals according to the assessment of their aggregated work and present needs and future dreams. As computer processing speeds up, we will see the creation of computer generated simulations and suggestions customized to users based on such things. The future is now. We just need to get rid of the trees in order to see the forest. lol ;-)

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Separation of Science and State…

October 19th, 2009
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Bracing for Impact…

October 19th, 2009
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If we believe the transformation from the current technological, post-modern era to the forthcoming electrical, post-human era requires a human catalyst, then the posts thus far are as good a guess as any: visionary communication fused with enthusiasm.

Your question presupposes that we can strategize some plan of action to effect change seemingly slowed by heel-dragging participants. The premise is not unusual but rooted in our post-industrial mentality of “managing” change.

However, I believe we are on a collision course with the coming changes. The convergence of the electro-mechanical with the electro-chemical is emerging at the speed of LIFE and will hit the future square between the eyes.

My suggestion to those stuck in the institutionalized rut? Brace yourselves for impact.

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