November 30, 2015
by eSchool News
ASCD has launched ASCD myTeachSource–a classroom-focused, teacher-driven digital subscription that delivers monthly topic packs on popular instructional strategies. The new product, which debuted at the 2015 ASCD Conference on Educational Leadership in San Diego, Calif., is designed for ease of use and is accessible from computers or mobile devices. Teachers can learn about all of the product’s features and sign up for a free trial at myteachsource.ascd.org. “At ASCD, we strive to provide professional learning solutions to meet the diverse needs of all educators, and the launch of ASCD myTeachSource is the next major step in that mission,” said Deborah S. Delisle, ASCD executive director and CEO. “This digital subscription product will empower teachers to take charge of their own professional learning by accessing the resources most relevant to them at the times when new tools, strategies, and ideas are needed the most.
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/11/27/digital-resource-teachers-484/
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By Ran Oelgiesser, eCampus News
Student meetings, course requests and more can be streamlined with online tools to reduce time wastes for faculty and admin. Thanksgiving has just ended and faculty and academic staff will soon dive into a full spring course load post holiday season. Professionals in the education industry know that meetings, paperwork, and other administrative tasks can be just as important to ensure a successful school year. However, they can often take up too much of an educator’s time. A study conducted at Boise St University in 2014 estimated these administrative tasks are taking up 30 percent of an education professional’s weekly workload, taking away from their abilities to properly serve their students.
http://www.ecampusnews.com/technologies/admin-online-tools-910/
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By Abi Mandelbaum, eCampus News
From recruitment to distance learning, and from alumni relations to more culturally diverse courses, virtual reality has mass appeal to today’s institutions. Virtual reality (VR) is emerging as a powerful technology, projected to grow into a $30 billion industry in the next 5 years. Major brands across various industries have already begun using VR as a marketing tool to get customers to try their product, service, or visit their location. But when it comes to higher education, has VR’s dramatic rise impacted colleges and universities?
http://www.ecampusnews.com/technologies/colleges-virtual-reality-941/
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November 29, 2015
By Brenda Bernet, Arkansas Online
Two school districts are preparing to offer students free options for online instruction next fall, pending approval of the Arkansas Board of Education. A state Charter Authorizing Panel last week recommended the state board approve the Fayetteville School District’s plan to open Fayetteville Virtual Academy, as well as the Springdale School District’s plan to convert its School of Innovation into a charter school with options for online instruction. The state Board of Education is expected to consider the panel’s recommendations at its December meeting. The board can accept the panel’s decisions or conduct separate hearings on the applications. “This is very new for a traditional [kindergarten through 12th grade] school district to adopt this education system,” said Kim Garrett, Fayetteville associate superintendent for secondary education.
http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2015/nov/24/2-districts-asking-to-go-online-2015112/
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By SCOTT MCKIE B.P., ONE FEATHER
EBCI tribal member Constance Owl might go to school across the country, but she still gets to speak and hear her native language. “There’s already interest in having the course offered next year,” said Owl who chairs the Stanford Cherokee Club. The joint project is a part of WCU’s Community Outreach programming, and Dr. Francis said the online classes have been beneficial to all. “Even Western Carolina University can be a bit far from the Boundary or from Snowbird, and so we have found our online classes to be one of the best ways to reach the community.” He said they post electronic lessons and short audiovisual pieces to the WCU Cherokee Language Facebook page. “The formal class structure that we share with Stanford and the very formal online class structure for credit through WCU is quite different from the informal Facebook posting,” said Dr. Francis, “but, all of these modes help us reach the community and further Cherokee language scholarship.”
http://theonefeather.com/2015/11/stanford-adds-cherokee-language-class/
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By Ellie Kaufman, Tech Mic
While the success of blended learning programs is debatable, incorporating technology more actively into any subject helps students learn basic tech skills they will need later in life. And it engages them with material in a completely new, potentially more effective, way. Tracy Rudzitis teaches technology and digital media classes at the Computer School, a public middle school in New York City’s Upper West Side neighborhood. She teaches computer programming and other courses in which students design and build real-world projects using PCs. “If they are using technology and computers, they are using them because those are really powerful tools that allow students to create and construct powerful ideas,” Rudzitis told Mic. “They can use a computer to create a program, which is much more powerful than drawing a picture.”
http://mic.com/articles/126856/blended-learning-is-making-teachers-more-productive-in-the-classroom-here-s-how#.K0nDTvIhJ
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November 28, 2015
BY CARLY NYMAN, Brown and White
The number of sheets of paper that the Office of Institutional Research consumed to conduct course evaluations last spring is 25,842. With only 22 percent of Lehigh faculty opting for the online evaluation form, Institutional Research is left with the lengthy and environmentally-unfriendly process of mass producing the forms and vibrant orange envelopes that land on professors’ podiums at the end of each semester. This process has created a debate between the use of online versus paper course evaluations. Faculty members that use paper generally believe they receive better response rates because they can administer the evaluation forms in person to students who are already sitting at a desk ready to fill them out. Students, however, are left feeling pressed for time and may not provide as thorough feedback as if they took it online at a different time.
http://thebrownandwhite.com/2015/11/23/departments-debate-efficacy-of-online-paper-course-evaluations/
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By Alan November, eSchool News
Google has amazing tools for finding school-worthy sources. Too bad most kids don’t know they exist. When confronted with examples of using the advanced features of Google, the students who previously laughed at the question, “Do you know how to use Google?” are stunned, and in some cases even embarrassed or mad. They wonder why they have never been taught how to perform this type of search. They often are quick to ask: “What else don’t I know?” There is great news in this response. Students do not want to feel inadequate when they use the internet. Once you start to teach them the tricks of deep research they will often ask for more.
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/11/23/how-search-google-592/
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By Tonya Prewett, THE Journal
Lee-Scott Academy provided an all-day “Digital Storytelling Playground” for teachers to experience and “play” with technology tools for their classrooms. More than 20 iPad and laptop stations, featuring a variety of apps, were available for teachers to explore in the atrium. One highlight of the playground was the green screen area that allowed teachers to discover ways to incorporate green screen technology in their classrooms. The results of this playground have been very exciting. After several months, teachers continued to find new ways to incorporate what they learned.
https://thejournal.com/articles/2015/11/10/a-digital-storytelling-playground.aspx
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November 27, 2015
by Ashok Subramanian P, Financial Express
E-education is commonplace now. A new trend we notice is edutainment, where companies have started blending education with entertainment to ensure that the process of learning doesn’t become boring after a point of time. E-education is a commonplace notion. A new trend that we notice in this space is that of edutainment, where companies have started blending education with entertaining environment to ensure that the process of learning doesn’t become boring after a point of time. In fact, we at ConveGenius recently launched Battle of Minds, a social edutainment network, which is aimed towards doing exactly this by ‘appifying’ the paradigms of learning and making it fun and rewarding, all at the same time. The benefits of such app-based, edutainment-driven learning are numerous.
http://www.financialexpress.com/article/industry/jobs/what-role-are-mobile-learning-apps-playing-in-the-ed-tech-revolution/169125/
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by Erik Rédli, Slovak Spectator
The seismic spread of free online courses for life-long education in some countries has caused an outflow of students from institutionalised online education. However, in Slovakia online learning is still a product offered by universities. They offer courses in management, marketing, communication, finances, human resource management and accounting. All of these fields require an active approach and constant learning, which is reflected in the profile of the students. Indeed, online study is different from day-to-day school attendance and isn’t suitable for lazy students. “Interactive online programs of LIGS University are for students who want to work on their skills and at the same time they consider their time carefully,” Dagmar Makovská, executive director at LIGS, said.
http://spectator.sme.sk/c/20064319/online-learning-is-for-the-disciplined.html
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by Julie Wurth, News-Gazette
Not everyone would show clips of the unfortunately named British game show “Golden Balls” to illustrate a microeconomics lesson, but Jose Vazquez is not a typical teacher. The UI professor no longer uses the centuries-old “chalk and talk” lecture style. Vazquez has chosen to “flip” his Principles of Microeconomics course — having students watch videos of his lectures online before coming to class in the cavernous Foellinger Auditorium.
http://www.news-gazette.com/news/local/2015-11-22/students-flip-over-profs-class-which-blends-online-and-class-learning.html
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November 26, 2015
By Stephen Noonoo, eSchool News
Looking to give students — or your colleagues — a way to hone their thinking and problem-solving skills while having fun? These free puzzles and games might do the trick. The website APPitic.com, an app resource site with more than 6,000 apps in more than 300 subcategories, offers a number of apps to help build student thinking skills. Here, we’ve gathered a handful of those apps, and you can access more on the APPitic site. All apps were originally curated by Apple Distinguished Educators.
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/11/20/student-thinking-skills-173/
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By Amanda Ronan, Edudemic
Back in 2012, Jason Blanchard wrote an article for Edudemic about the problems with Course management systems (CMSs), such as Blackboard and Moodle. At that time, CMSs were centralized platforms that host software tools essential for online course instructors and students. Let’s be honest, 2010 was a long time ago, especially in the world of technology. So we’ve decided to update the Blanchard CMS article. Our goal was to revisit his concerns with the systems in use in 2010 and to see what, if anything has improved since then. What we found was that CMSs are really a platform of the past. They’ve all turned into larger, more powerful Learning Management Systems. (LMS). Let’s take a look at where CMSs started and how they morphed into LMSs.
http://www.edudemic.com/whatever-happened-course-management-systems/
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by iNACOL
On Thursday, December 17, 2015, from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. ET, the International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL) is hosting a Teacher Talk Webinar featuring Paula Barr, recently honored as the 2015 Blended and Online Learning Teacher of the Year at the iNACOL Blended and Online Learning Symposium, held in Orlando, Florida. In this webinar, Paula will share her perspective on how blended and online teaching improves student engagement, provides for greater personalization of learning, and how a veteran classroom teacher has adapted to a new teaching and learning environment. Paula will share examples of successes and challenges she experienced in the journey of becoming an outstanding blended learning teacher. This webinar is free to attend—participants are invited to register here for final details and login information.
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/inacol-teacher-talk-webinar-features-national-blended-and-online-learning-teacher-of-the-year-300182510.html
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November 25, 2015
By Cathie Norris, Elliot Soloway, THE Journal
In our blog post of Oct. 6, 2014 we panned blended learning, and now, in what follows, we are about to say blended learning is the greatest thing since sliced bread. If we were politicians we would be labeled as flip-floppers, a derogatory term in the political argot. But, thank goodness we are not politicians, but an educator (C) and a technologist (E) coming to a new understanding of what the future holds, amongst higher-minded colleagues who eschew fallacious ad hominem arguments.
https://thejournal.com/articles/2015/11/17/blended-learning-is-the-future.aspx
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By Mike Tomei, Campus Technology
When designing audiovisual systems in higher education facilities, accessibility standards are often overlooked. Here are the latest ADA Standards to keep in mind for any classroom AV project. Classroom audiovisual systems can quickly turn into complex designs integrating a mix of technology, furniture and room design into one (hopefully) cohesive system. AV designers are not only tasked with determining the equipment needed in the system, but also the required infrastructure design specifications to make sure the system adheres to building, electrical, structural and life safety codes. In the midst of all those specifications, one often overlooked — but critical — aspect of AV system design is compliance with the ADA Standards for Accessible Design.
https://campustechnology.com/articles/2015/11/11/decoding-ada-standards-for-classroom-av.aspx
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By Mary Grush with Bernard Luskin, Campus Technology
Our institutional missions can be extended into the future and supported by the same vision and community values that originated them. But technology change, often spurred on by external markets, may come in waves of extreme and dramatic change, with steep learning curves for leadership and practitioners alike. To get some perspective on technology change for higher education, CT spoke with Ventura County Community College District’s chancellor, Bernard Luskin.
https://campustechnology.com/articles/2015/11/17/building-technology-for-a-generation-we-will-never-see.aspx
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November 24, 2015
By Chris Berdik, Slate
This fall, after getting to know each other in online video exchanges, some Ugandan high school students told a group of students in New Orleans that most Ugandans have no reliable electricity and use candles or lanterns after dark. Over the following weeks, the students worked together to build solar-powered lights. An education technology startup called Level Up Village supplied both schools with solar cells, batteries, and LEDs, along with 3-D printers to fabricate the housings, tutorials on electricity and computer-aided design, and an online workspace for posting notes and swapping ideas. Global learning initiatives like this are booming, because the technologies that long made our world seem smaller are finally at the point where they can seamlessly make classrooms that much bigger.
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2015/11/online_global_education_initiatives_are_expanding_the_classroom_and_connecting.html
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by Kelsey Warner, Christian Science Monitor
The space agency announced Tuesday will award two Valkyrie robots, a 6-foot-tall, 290-pound humanoid, to Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass., and Northeastern University in Boston for intensive research and development into the robot’s applications in extreme environments. “Advances in robotics, including human-robotic collaboration, are critical to developing the capabilities required for our journey to Mars,” said Steve Jurczyk, associate administrator for the Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “We are excited to engage these university research groups to help NASA with this next big step in robotics technology development.” The space agency became urgently interested in robotics following the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station incident in Japan, which the agency says “illustrated, rather candidly, how inadequate current robotic technologies are for use in highly unstructured human environments.”
http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2015/1118/Why-NASA-is-sending-humanoids-to-college
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BY GEORGE LORENZO, Fast Company
What if you could earn a technology-centric credential at a similar level to a postgraduate for less than $1,000? And what if earning that high-level credential took about six to nine months? What if, after earning this credential, you went into a job interview with solid evidence revealing your skills, backed by several relevant projects you created that very clearly disclosed your innovativeness and creativity, along with showing how advanced you were in relation to the latest developments in your field of study?
http://www.fastcompany.com/3053305/the-future-of-work/could-nanodegrees-be-the-solution-to-the-student-debt-crisis
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