Saturday, November 25, 2017
Saturday, November 18, 2017
Weekly Sporto bookmarks (weekly)
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Social Presence and online learning: a current view from a research perspective
tags: social presence online online learning online-learning
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tags: social presence online blended learning experiences online learning IN-ENGLISH online-learning blended-learning pedagogy
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The Future of Corporate Learning: Stepping Into Another Dimension - Training Industry
tags: artificial-intelligence artificial intelligence corporate-training training future learning
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How A.I. could affect the world of corporate training | InfoWorld
tags: artificial-intelligence artificial intelligence corporate-training training
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Employee Engagement And Artificial Intelligence In eLearning -eLearning Industry
tags: artificial-intelligence artificial intelligence elearning training corporate-training employee engagement
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How Artificial Intelligence enhances education
tags: artificial intelligence education
- The company’s goal is to create a platform that gives real-time feedback and helps online tutors become better at teaching. For instance, the system will detect if a student’s reaction to a concept follows a pattern of misunderstanding. By giving early warning to teachers, the platform can help prevent problems further down the road.
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tags: moodle h5p interactivity interactive authoring tool opensource
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10 Roles For Artificial Intelligence In Education
tags: artificial intelligence education
- So far, AI hasn’t made any such crazy waves, and in many ways has quietly become ubiquitous in numerous aspects of our daily lives.
- While AI may not ever be able to truly replace human grading, it’s getting pretty close
- nearly all kinds of multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank testing and automated grading of student writing may not be far behind
- essay-grading software is still in its infancy and not quite up to par, yet it can (and will) improve over the coming years, allowing teachers to focus more on in-class activities and student interaction than grading.
- This is a misleading statement. It gives the impression that there is no learning involved in the feedback and assessment that an instructor will provide to students writing. Assessment does not equal grading. One of the important learning moments is that where a student gets personalized feedback on their assessment activities. The grading is only part of this.
- greater levels of individualized learning
- Adaptive learning has already had a huge impact on education across the nation (especially through programs like Khan Academy), and as AI advances in the coming decades adaptive programs like these will likely only improve and expand
- When a large number of students are found to submit the wrong answer to a homework assignment, the system alerts the teacher and gives future students a customized message that offers hints to the correct answer.
- Rather than waiting to hear back from the professor, students get immediate feedback that helps them to understand a concept and remember how to do it correctly the next time around.
- These programs can teach students fundamentals, but so far aren’t ideal for helping students learn high-order thinking and creativity, something that real-world teachers are still required to facilitate.
- Some schools, especially those with online offerings, are using AI systems to monitor student progress and to alert professors when there might be an issue with student performance.
- Some are working to develop systems that can help students to choose majors based on areas where they succeed and struggle.
- Amazon makes recommendations based on previous purchases, Siri adapts to your needs and commands, and nearly all web ads are geared toward your interests and shopping preferences.
- on location
- Over the past few decades, AI-based systems have already radically changed how we interact with information
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Digital Workplace & Marketing Technology Vendor Map
tags: content management knowledge management CRM DAM marketing workplace collaboration portals sharing cloud socialsoftware
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Understanding and Contextualizing Corporate Universities | The EvoLLLution
tags: corporate-university corporate-training corporate university
- it should include at least these characteristics:
- Proactive: a corporate university must anticipate the needs of the organization and not simply work “on-demand.” It must act as a precursor of future needs, preparing the organization to face its future working environment and challenges.
- Metrics: Measurement of the impact of learning interventions is an essential part of the design of corporate initiatives.
- Influence: It should have an influence right across the organization, extending to the whole value chain, incorporating customers, suppliers, distributors, public and private stakeholders, etc
- Integration: It should work as a knowledge hub, integrating internal knowledge through co-design with learners, and adopting the most innovative learning methods and technologies through alliances with expert training providers
- The alignment of individual and organizational learning agendas is one of the key principles of the corporate university
- a persona approach; global-local considerations; the harness of technology.
- An appropriate combination of technology, learning methodologies and assessments allows us to capture real-time information about the development of the program, about how learning content is being incorporated into the daily performance of a business, aligning the corporate view with local interpretation.
- The same occurs with the design of just-in-time training and here we are seeing some innovative technologies.
- The corporate university is an extremely valuable institution, although its advantages are not always appreciated
- integrate internal knowledge with business performance, generate new ideas and create a sense of community and common vision
- Involving senior management as sponsors of initiatives generated by a corporate university.
- Ensuring learning outcomes are consistent with a company’s wider activities and projects.
- Supporting the transfer of learning content into daily business life by analyzing the impact of each initiative
- Following a partnership strategy, establishing alliances with learning providers to bring new knowledge into organizational thinking
- Creating space for reflection, critical thinking and debate.
- catalyst for cascading innovation, recruiting and retaining talent
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Saturday, November 11, 2017
Weekly Sporto bookmarks (weekly)
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7 Ways to Get Started with Analytics & Reports in Moodle - Moodle.com
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Promising Practices in developmental education - Reconsidering the MOOC: 10 years of progress?
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Massive Open Online Courses Temporal Profilingfor Dropout Prediction
tags: MOOC MOOCs profile data mining dropout prediction analysis analytics
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Resource Usage Analysis from a DifferentPerspective on MOOC Dropout
tags: MOOC MOOCs data mining dropout analysis analytics resources
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Making Sense of the Learning Sciences « Competency Works
tags: competency-based learning competency-based learning-sciences
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Memorization is Still Important, Even in Deeper Learning « Competency Works
tags: competency-based learning competency-based learning-sciences memorization memory
- but my mistake has been in undervaluing memorization.
- we should lift the knowledge about how to memorize in the long-term into that set of skills every student should know.
- Cognitive Principle: Each subject area has some set of facts that, if committed to long-term memory, aids problem-solving by freeing working memory resources and illuminating contexts in which existing knowledge and skills can be applied. The size and content of this set varies by subject matter
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Academic LMS Market Share: A view across four global regions -
tags: LMS market marketshare online learning e-Literate Phil Hill
- I described the trajectory of Moodle, noting that "the data seem to indicate a collapse of Moodle selections in the US and Canada, and potentially a significant slow-down in other regions
- market share as the percentage of primary systems at degree-granting institutions for each of four global regions: North America (US and Canada), Europe, Latin America, and Oceania (Australia, New Zealand and surrounding island countries).
- across the globe we essentially have had a duopoly in this market - Moodle and Blackboard Learn
- North America is the only region where a third-place solution (Canvas) or fourth-place (D2L), comes close to these two systems in market share.
- Europe has the largest number of long-tail systems. Sakai, Ilias, Olat, Stud.IP, Claroline, itsLearning, and Fronter are all second-tier competitors
- Canvas either has a long way to go to join Moodle and Blackboard as overall market leaders, or Canvas has a tremendous amount of headroom to continue its growth both in North America and in international regions.
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OII Network Visualisation Example
Open education: citation network
tags: open content open education guide
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Features for interacting with your audience - Mentimeter
tags: webinar live presentation interaction interactive engagement tool synchronous training synchronous
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tags: LMS market trends analysis e-Literate feldstein Phil Hill moodle moodlerooms
- In every region outside of North America (US and Canada), Moodle has largest market share by far, and it is second place in North America.
- But the trajectory of Moodle new implementations (higher education degree-granting institutions moving from another LMS to Moodle as the primary LMS) is striking
- Remembering that 2017 is partial-year data, this view still shows that Moodle's selection as a new LMS has virtually ceased in the US and Canada after peaking in 2010.
- While we should avoid over interpreting 2017 partial-year data, the data seem to indicate a collapse of Moodle selections in the US and Canada, and potentially a significant slow-down in other regions.
- Instructure has signaled very strongly to investors that it plans to target the installed Moodle base for growth of its LMS, Canvas. Just last week the University of Minnesota, a long-time Moodle customer, announced that its 80k students and 6 campuses would be moving to Canvas.
- When you combine the precipitous drop in new implementations with the observed movement from standalone or mom-and-pop Moodle installations to larger Moodle Partners like Moodlerooms, you see a broader movement towards cloud hosting and enterprise solutions. This is interesting in that Moodle is not feature-poor, but the support and hosting models of the big three proprietary vendors and the larger Moodle Partners seems to be a key driver for change
- there is no risk in the near term for the installed base to reduce to unhealthy levels
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A Note on Data Used for LMS Market Analysis -
tags: LMS market trends analysis data e-Literate feldstein Phil Hill
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The Self-determined Learning Model of Instruction (SDLMI) - Teacher's guide
tags: heutagogy self-determined learning self-direct self-efficacy
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tags: digital literacy curriculum course design blog digital
- our learners being able to thrive in a digital world
- the evidence is that complex, specialised digital practices need the support of subject specialists – people who understand their value and can introduce them in a subject context.
- Digital capabilities are subject specialised
- Focus curriculum conversations on the four ‘situated practices’ in the centre of the framework.
- creation, problem-solving and innovation.
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OII Network Visualisation Example
tags: open education open openness history network bibliography map citation
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Openness and education: a beginner's guide | GO-GN
tags: open education open openness
- In order to do this we used a citation analysis approach,
- You can explore the network over on Katy’s site.
- This is a must see.
- a range of coverage and type of publication
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Beyond Pedagogy: How Our Rigid Belief in Learner Passivity is Stunting Innovation | The EvoLLLution
tags: pedagogy innovation engagement evolllution learners
- It often carries over the very elements of our educational system that are least effective and most actively encourage passivity, e.g., the use of lectures, multiple choice exams, cookie-cutter assignments and mandatory discussion boards that are more often make-work than meaningful discussions.
- I no longer believe, however, that teaching is the only or even the best way to learn.
- Learning and engagement are intertwined; passivity is the death knell of engagement
- The attitude that “the presence of a faculty member” equals “education” has serious consequences
- The good news is that taking the education of adult students seriously gives us the impetus to rethink the professor-centric worldview for all students
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- Students need to be involved in the planning and evaluation of their instruction;
- Experience (including mistakes) provides the basis for learning activities;
- Students are most interested in learning about subjects that have immediate relevance to their job or personal life;
- Learning is problem-centered rather than content-oriented
- Information and skills to be learned can be directly applied across borders between subjects and outside the classroom in situations where the information and skills are used (natural transfer)
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Future-forward: How to incorporate the 5th 'C' of 21st Century learning | eSchool News
tags: 21stcenturylearning 21st Century Skills 21st century readiness career
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Why Moodle Supporters Should be Concerned -
tags: moodle LMS e-Literate feldstein
- While Moodle is still by far the most widely adopted LMS in higher education globally and is no danger of disappearing any time soon, I believe that our data should give the Moodle community cause for considerable concern about their long-term future and should trigger some soul searching about how the community can ensure it continues to have the development resources necessary to continue to be relevant in the long term.
- Notice the scope of the chart: It does not include the US and Canada
- our coverage of these areas of the world are not as complete as they are in the US and Canada, so trends we see in our data for these parts of the world should be considered directional and somewhat provisional rather than pinpoint accurate.
- When we look at installed base, Moodle still looks formidable:
- The second caveat is that the chart shows new adoptions.
- So the issue we’re talking about is not that Moodle is disappearing but rather that it is losing ground during new adoption cycles.
- We measure higher education institutional adoptions
- But institutional higher education adoption is a particularly meaningful measure for Moodle’s long-term health
- his is what is sometimes known as the “benevolent dictator” model of open source
- However much input the company may take from the community, the ultimate decisions and, perhaps more importantly for this post, the work of implementing those decisions, fall under the purview of Moodle Pty, a for-profit company that must generate revenue to pay the employees who actually write that code
- In richer countries, adopters could afford to pay hosting or management companies to run their mission-critical instances.
- In poorer countries, they could adopt Moodle themselves without paying a hosting or support vendor. Moodle has always been unusually easy to install and run on even modest hardware relative to its competition, so poorer schools could still manage to adopt it with the resources that they had
- But the problem is potentially worse for Moodle, because we’re beginning to see a pattern take hold in international markets as they reach a certain level of maturity, and it’s not good a good one for Moodle
- Moodle’s Robin Hood model is under threat because whenever a market becomes rich enough to generate significant revenue for Moodle Pty, it also becomes rich enough for universities to consider switching to cloud hosting by one of Moodle’s commercial competitors.
- According to our analysis, Moodle has over 80% of Brazil’s higher education institutional LMS market share. It’s entirely possible that we would not have seen that kind of growth in access to education if Moodle had not existed.
- If the data patterns we are observing hold, then that engine may be under long-term threat. While Moodle has far too broad an installed base to disappear any time soon and just received an infusion of investor money, the fact is that its sustainability model is now in question.
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Saturday, November 4, 2017
Weekly Sporto bookmarks (weekly)
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Connecting Credentials report: Making All Learning Count
tags: connecting-credentials credentials digital badges Lumina_Foundation
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Connecting Credentials report: Improving Learner Mobility
tags: connecting-credentials credentials digital badges Lumina_Foundation
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Connecting Credentials report: Applying demand and Supply Signals
tags: connecting-credentials credentials digital badges Lumina_Foundation
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Connecting Credentials Report: Building Trust in Credentials
tags: connecting-credentials credentials digital badges Lumina_Foundation
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The Best Online Survey Tools of 2017 | PCMag.com
tags: online survey tools forms
- The 10 web-based online survey tools I evaluated in this roundup are Campaign Monitor GetFeedback, Checkbox Survey, FluidSurveys, Outside Software eSurveys Pro, SoGoSurvey, SurveyGizmo, SurveyMonkey, SurveyPlanet, WorldApp KeySurvey, and Zoho Survey.
- All of these apps are excellent; you won't be disappointed in any of the choices (even the free versions thereof).
- SurveyGizmo stood out from its competitors. Each of its features always did things a tiny bit better than its competitors
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The 20 Best Online Survey Builder Tools - The Ultimate Guide to Forms and Surveys - Zapier
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A New Definition of Rigor | Edutopia
tags: rigor
- There it is. Rigor is the result of work that challenges students' thinking in new and interesting ways. It occurs when they are encouraged toward a sophisticated understanding of fundamental ideas and are driven by curiosity to discover what they don't know
- Let's take them to that intersection of encouragement and engagement, where they confront ideas and problems that are meaningful.
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