Indiana
University, School of Education, Section 32743 Web/Online, Section 32742 FTF
Instructor:
Curt Bonk, Professor, Instructional Systems Technology Dept.
Online
R678 Syllabus: http://curtbonk.com/Syllabus_R678_Spring_of_2015.htm
See
also 2013 Syllabus: http://curtbonk.com/Syllabus_R685_Spring_of_2013.htm
Adobe Connect (i.e., Breeze) Meetings: http://connect.iu.edu/worldisopenspring2013
Multimedia Glossary Dec 2012 (from Ozgur Ozdemir): http://r685glossary.shutterfly.com/
Videostream: https://www.indiana.edu/~istream/cas/
TodaysMeet: https://todaysmeet.com/R678_Emerging_Learning_Technologies
Participant Bios and
Interests: http://www.trainingshare.com/r678bios.php
Online Role Play: http://www.trainingshare.com/r678roles.php
Instead of passive consumption-based
learning, we are living in a participatory age where learners have a voice and
potentially some degree of ownership over their own learning. Here at the start
of the twenty-first century, emerging technologies and activities– such as blogs, wikis, podcasts,
ebooks, YouTube videos, massive open online
courses (MOOCs), simulations, virtual worlds, and wireless and
mobile computing – are generating waves of new opportunities in higher
education, K-12 schools, corporate training, and other learning environments.
And today’s millennial learner, immersed in an
increasingly digital world is seeking richer and more engaging learning
experiences. Amid this rising tide of expectations, instructors across
educational sectors are exploring and sharing innovative ways to use technology
to foster interaction, collaboration, and increased excitement for learning. It
is time to take advantage of the new participatory learning culture where
learners build, tinker with, explore, share, and collaborate with others
online. It is also time to exploit
free and open educational resources, opencourseware, learning portals, and open
source software across educational sectors and income levels. Some of you will create
and publish a cross-cultural Wikibook. Others will create video blogs, and
still others will design YouTube-like videos.
The syllabus for this course is purposefully long. I
refer to it as “the monster syllabus.” I will be your online concierge or guide
through masses of online resources. In an age when eyeball-to-eyeball
learning is no longer necessary, effective online instructors do not simply
teach, but moderate, coach, and assist in the learning process. Today a
teacher, trainer, professor, or instructional designer often assumes the role
of concierge with a wealth of freely available tools and resources to guide her
learners. In this more open twenty-first century learning world, anyone can
learn anything from anyone else at any time.
After the course, students should be
able to:
1.
Explain
and demonstrate the educational benefits of podcasts, wikis, blogs, virtual
worlds, simulations, social networking software, digital books, mobile books, etc.
2.
Critique
articles and review books related to emerging learning technologies.
3.
Use,
recommend, or create online resources and portals in a variety of educational
settings.
4.
Design
an innovative research or evaluation project related to online learning;
5.
Successfully
submit research, grant, and other proposals related to learning technologies, MOOCs,
e-learning, etc. to conferences, foundations, summits, or institutes.
6.
Recognize
and potentially contact many of the key players and scholars in the field of
online learning, open education, MOOCs, and emerging learning technologies.
7.
Consult
with organizations to develop strategic plans or evaluate the effectiveness of
e-learning courses, programs, and events as well as MOOCs, open education, Web
2.0 technologies, etc.
8.
Make
recommendations regarding online learning initiatives, programs, and
strategies.
9.
Obtain
a model, guide, or framework for thinking about new technology tools and
resources in education. Use this framework for strategic planning reports,
retreats, consulting, and other situations where a macro lens on learning
technology and educational reform is needed.
10.
Obtain
the skills to train fellow teachers as well as learners in emerging learning technologies
and pedagogically effective instructional activities and approaches.
None!!! The world of learning
should be FREE!
Recommended
book: Bonk,
C. J. (July 2009). The World is Open: How
Web Technology is Revolutionizing Education. San Francisco, CA:
Jossey-Bass, a Wiley imprint. See: http://worldisopen.com/
Free
Book: Bonk,
C. J., & Khoo, E. (2014). Adding Some
TEC-VARIETY: 100+ Activities for Motivating and Retaining Learners Online.
OpenWorldBooks.com and Amazon CreateSpace. Note: Free eBook available at: http://tec-variety.com/; Paperback http://www.amazon.com/dp/1496162722/
and Kindle http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00KJ1FAC8
Curt
Bonk’s List of journals in educational technology and related fields:
http://www.trainingshare.com/resources/distance_ed_journals_and_online_learning_books.htm
Curt Bonk’s 27 free 10 minute videos on
how to teach online:
“Video Primers
in an Online Repository for e-Teaching and Learning” (V-PORTAL)
1.
Watch & Find
Resources (Firefox preferred): IU School of Ed Instructional Consulting
Office): http://www.indiana.edu/~icy/media/de_series.html
2.
For faster
access, watch in Bonk’s YouTube Channel (use any browser): http://www.youtube.com/user/TravelinEdMan
3.
Read about
Possible Uses:
http://www.trainingshare.com/keynotes.php#tasel
40 pts A. Tidbit and Video Reflection Paper (Tidbits:
March 9)
40 pts B. Discussion Moderator (pick a week: http://www.trainingshare.com/r685.php)
40 pts C. Participation in Oncourse (due each week)
50 pts D. Online Discussion and Lecture Reflection
Paper (Due: April 27)
60 pts E. Report or Strategic Plan Analysis (Due: March 9)
70 pts F. Final: Wikibook, MOOC Project, Video, or
Personal Selected Task (Due: April 27)
300 Total
Points
Total points will determine your final
grade. I will use the following grading scale:
A+
= 300 high score B- = 240 points
A = 280 points C+
= 230 points
A- = 270 points C
= 220 points
B+
= 260 points C - = 210
points
B
= 250 points F/FN = no work rec'd or signif.
inadequate/impaired
Lateness Policy: I usually accept anything turned in within 48 hours of the original due
date. After that, students lose 2 points for each day that it is past due
without an approved reason.
=========================================================================
Week 1. (January 12) Introduction to the
Open World
Week 2. (January 19) Neo Millennial
Learners and 21st Century Skills
Week 3. (January 26) The Sudden
Explosion of E-Books and E-Book Readers
Week 4. (February 2) The Expansion of
Blended and Fully Online Learning
Week 5. (February 9) Extreme,
Nontraditional, and Adventure Learning
Week 6. (February 16) Open Educational
Resources (OER) and OpenCourseWare (OCW)
Week
7. (February 23) Open Education and Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)
Week
8 (March 2) More MOOCs and Open Education Around the World
Week
9. (March 9) Motivation in Informal and Self-Directed Online Learning Environments
(including online language learning)
Week
10. (March 23) Connectivism, Social Media, and Participatory Learning
Week 11. (March 30) Wikis, Wikipedia,
Wikibooks, and Collaborative Writing
Week 12. (April 6) Shared Online Video
and Audio
Week 13. (April 13) Flipping the
Classroom
Week 14. (April 20) Interactive and
Collaborative Learning (including learning spaces)
Week 15. (April 27) Mobile, Wireless,
and Ubiquitous Learning
Week 16+. (Future)
Networks of Personalized Learning (e.g., online tutoring and mentoring, on
demand learning, etc.)
==========================================================================
Tidbits (40
points): Besides
reading 3-4 assigned articles each week, during the semester I want you to read
at least 40 total tidbits during the semester from the list of tidbit readings or
about 2 or 3 per week (preferably more than 40). Typically these are very short
online news or magazine articles. I also want you to watch at least 5 videos listed
below related to our course (or similar ones that you find). On March 9th, you will
turn in a list of your top 20 tidbits read so far (best ones at the top) and
top 2-3 videos watched. You might also note a few tidbits that you did not
enjoy. After those lists, I want you to reflect for 1-2 single spaced pages on
what you learned from those tidbits. I am not
asking you to summarize each article or video; instead reflect on your
learning in general. What themes, trends, or concepts were clarified for you?
What new insights did you gain? What inspirations did you feel? You might
include brief comments at the beginning or end of the paper on why you ranked
the tidbits and videos the way you did. I will send an email with examples upon
request. Post your tidbit reflection to your Oncourse dropbox or send to me via
email.
Summarizer and
Starter Activities Related to the Readings (40 points): At the start of
each week, I want one person in this class to post a short summary to Oncourse
on at least 4 of the main articles assigned for that week. That person is the
starter for discussion. Other students will add to their conversation with
their reflections and reactions. As a summarizer
or starter, you might: (1) state reactions, questions, and suggestions for the
upcoming readings; (2) point out the relationship of upcoming week topic or
articles to past lectures or readings; (3) discuss the position of a researcher
or pioneer in the field (or perhaps even write to him/her); (4) discuss a
recent speech or colloquium you attended related to the week or a visit to a
technology center or exhibit; or (5) generally relate the articles for the week
to prior learning and discussion in the course. At the end of the week, you
might react and reflect on the class discussion that transpired as well as the
questions and concerns raised. You can sign up for this task at: http://www.trainingshare.com/r685.php
Course
participation in Oncourse (40 points): This is worth 40 points as follows: 36-40
for high participators; 32-36 for medium participators; 28-32 for low
participators; and 0-31 for others. Course participation includes contributing
to the online discussion in Oncourse, sharing resources, responding to peers, providing
feedback on tasks and resource recommendations, and so on. While these will be
mainly assessed as to the number of posts, I will also take into consideration
qualitative factors such as those listed below.
Discussion and
Lecture Reflection Paper (50 points): At the end of the semester, you are to
reflect on what you learned from weekly discussions in Oncourse each week as
well as from my recorded lectures and discussions that I will deliver each week
via videoconferencing. You should include at least 7 of the weeks in your
reflection. What were the ideas, issues, concepts, facts, figures, diagrams,
etc., that struck a chord with you? What did you learn during the semester? How
did your thinking change in a particular week or over time? What inspired you?
What did you find disappointing? What is next?
Videostreaming
live and recorded each Monday at 7:00-9:45 pm:
Go to here: https://www.indiana.edu/~istream/cas/
Type username and password:
Select spring 2015 and select
#32742 (NOT 32743)
Watch it live or watch the recording
later.
Using
these questions as a guide, please write a 2-3 page single-spaced reflection
paper on this activity by April 27th (50 points). Though not required, it would
help if you included a fourth page with a recap table, chart, figure, or some
type of summary of key themes, concepts, terms, etc., mentioned in the
reflection paper. This is to be a meta-reflection of your growth in the course,
unique learning insights, personal gains, etc., at least in part, from your
weekly discussions and responding to your peers. What were the key concepts you
grappled with this semester? How has your thinking evolved? What are the gaps
in the research that you might target now? What weeks or particular articles
inspired you and why? Post your reflection paper to your Oncourse dropbox or send
to me via email.
Reflection
Paper Grading Criteria (50 Points; 10
points each):
1.
Relevancy to class: meaningful examples, relationships drawn, interlinkages,
connecting weekly ideas.
2.
Insightful, Interesting, Reflective, Emotional: honest, self-awareness,
interesting observations
3.
Learning Depth/Growth: takes thoughts along to new heights, exploration,
breadth & depth, growth.
4.
Completeness: thorough comments, detailed reflection, fulfills assignment,
informative.
5.
Connections: linking threads in the discussion, lectures, and readings.
Note: During the past
few years, the students in this course engaged in blogging, video blogging, and
podcast activities. Below are some of the examples.
Prior
R685 Class Blogging Examples:
1.
Fall
of 2007 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/Blogs-R685-Fall-2007.htm
2.
Fall
of 2008 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/friends.htm
3.
Fall
of 2010 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/Student-Reflection-Options-and-Critical-Friends.htm
4.
Spring
of 2011 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/Student_Blogs_Critical_Friends_and_Instructional_Assistants.htm
5.
Fall
of 2011 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/R685-Student-blog-url.htm
6.
Spring
of 2012 blog postings: http://curtbonk.com/R685-Spring-2012-Blogging-and-Discussion.htm
Prior Podcast Examples:
1.
Carrie
Donovan (Oify your life—future of HE libraries): http://2point0ify.blogspot.com/
2.
Christy
Wessel-Powell (Read Aloud blog and podcasts): teacherchristy.tumblr.com
3.
Hesham Alsarhan: http://halsarhan.podbean.com/
4.
Jia-Sheng
Lin: http://jl941013.blogspot.com/
(this one is a blog that became a podcast)
Find and evaluate a summary report,
technical report, or a strategic plan of a company, university, non-profit
organization, school, state, province, country, or region related to e-learning,
blended learning, mobile learning, or emerging learning technologies of some
type and critique it. For instance, you might pick the state or country where
you were born or perhaps where you plan to live after graduation. You might
find the strategic plan online or request a hardcopy version. I want you to not
simply read and critique the report but to also interview someone who created it
or is/was affected by that report. You might discuss and critique the online
learning technologies highlighted, proposed pedagogical plans, intended
training methods, targeted skills or competencies, or evaluation methods
detailed. You might visit the institution or organization or write someone an
email. What might this organization do differently in planning for e-learning
or using some emerging learning technology? What are its competitors doing, for
instance? Has there been an update? You are encouraged to work in teams on this
report. When done, you will present an overview of the report to the class. Testimonials,
graphs and trends of indicated growth, comparisons, and other data or handouts
are welcome. You are also encouraged to directly contact the organization that
developed the report or plan and receive additional product information (e.g.,
DVDs, brochures, white papers, technical reports, product comparison sheets,
videotapes, company annual report, customer testimonies, data sheets, Web site
information, etc.). Your evaluation, critique, and extension paper should be
4-6 single-spaced pages (excluding references and appendices; those working in
teams are expected to have 7-10 single spaced page papers, not counting
references and appendices). Please post it to your Oncourse dropbox or send to
me via email on or before March 9th.
Sample
reports:
1.
U.S.
Army Learning Concept 2015: http://www.tradoc.army.mil/tpubs/pams/tp525-8-2.pdf
2.
IU
Strategic Plan for Online Education (2011, March 9): http://www.indiana.edu/~newacad/docs/IU-online-educ-strategic-plan-2011.pdf
3.
The
Bicentennial Strategic Plan for IU, December 5, 2014: http://strategicplan.iu.edu/doc/iu-strategic-plan.pdf
Summary
Report/Strategic Plan Grading (10 pts for each of the following dimensions)
1. Review of Plan or Document (clarity, related to class, organized,
facts, data, relevant, style)
2. Relevant Resources and Digging (citations/refs, linkages to class concepts, extensive)
3. Soundness of Critique (depth, clear, complete, practical,
detailed, important, coherence)
4. Creativity and Richness of Ideas (richness of information, elaboration,
originality, unique)
5. Knowledge of Topic (learning breadth & depth, growth,
displays understanding of topic)
6. Recommendations, Insights, and
Implications (contains relevant
recommendations, guides)
Sample
Format Naturalistic/Research Activities:
I. Title
Page (Name, affiliation, topic title, acknowledgements)
II. Topic
Literature and Method
1. Res topic &
materials;
2. Brief stmt of problem
and why impt
3. Brief review of the
relevant literature
4. Methods:
a. Subjects & design
(i.e., who/how selected);
b. Materials/setting
(i.e., hard/software, text)
c. Procedure (i.e., how
data was obtained)
d. Coding Schemes &
Dep. meas/instr (i.e., how segment/code data);
e. Analyses or comparisons
III. Results and Discussion 1. Preliminary
Results; 2. Discussion of results
IV.
References (APA style: see syllabus for example)
V. Appendices (e.g., pictures, charts,
figures, models, tests, scoring criteria, coding procedures)
Sample Grading of
Major Project (60 Total Points or 10 pts each dimension)::
1. Review of the Problem/Lit/Purpose (interesting,
relevant, current, organized, thorough, grounded)
2. Hypothesis/Research Questions/Intentions (clear,
related to class and theory, current, extend field)
3. Method/Procedures (subjects/age groups approp,
materials relevant, timeline sufficient, controls)
4. Research Activity/Design/Topic/Tool (clear,
doable/practical, detailed, important)
5. Overall Richness of Ideas (richness of
information, elaboration, originality, unique)
6. Overall Coherence and Completeness (unity,
organization, logical sequence, synthesis, style, accurate)
Midterm
Option 3:
Other
options to the midterm might be grant proposals, research interventions (as
opposed to observations), technology tool design proposals, curriculum
integration plans, or conference research papers. If one of these appeals to
you, write to the instructor for additional information and guidance.
In this
option, you help with a Wikibook related to emerging technologies. About seven
years ago, students from five universities designed a wikibook on “The Web 2.0
and Emerging Learning Technologies” (The WELT); see http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Web_2.0_and_Emerging_Learning_Technologies.
If you write a unique chapter for the WELT, it should be a minimum of 2,000
words. A 2-3 page reflection paper on what you learned from this wikibook activity
needs to be included. Describe what you learned from the task including
specific course concepts and ideas mentioned in your chapter as well as ideas
related to the social construction of knowledge. Attached to your reflection
paper will be documentation of what you contributed to the wikibook, including
your chapter (with highlights or special notations of your contribution),
highlights to the chapters worked on, and perhaps even print outs of the
wikibook chapter editing history. Your paper and chapter will be graded
according to the dimensions listed below.
Wikibook
Grading (60 Total Points or 10 pts each dimension):
1. Chapter and reflection paper
relevance: Contribution is meaningful to class, we learn from it
2. Chapter and reflection paper
coherence: flow, well organized, good layout, enjoyable to read
3. Chapter and reflection paper
completeness: Sufficient coverage of info, extends topic and class
4. Overall chapter creativity: Original
and distinctive ideas, insightful points, something unique in it such as a
figure, model, graph, timeline, comparison chart, acronym, quote or set of
quotes, etc.
5. Overall reflection paper
insightfulness, depth of thought, flow, informational content, etc.
6. Shared and discussed in Oncourse and
in Class
7. Overall quality of assignment
=================================================
So you want to be cool? You want to be
creative? In this option, you are to create a shared online video (e.g.,
YouTube) related to this class. You cannot be the only person in it. What do
different topics in this course mean to you? Alternatively, you can design a
YouTube video for someone else. You should post this video of at least 5 minutes
in length. You will turn in a 2-3 page single-spaced summary reflection of your
design. Your video and paper will be graded according to the dimensions
listed below.
Video
Grading (70 Total Points or 10 pts each dimension):
1. Insightfulness,
creativity, and originality;
2. Design
and visual effects;
3. Coherence
and logical sequence;
4. Completeness;
5. Relevance
and accuracy of the content;
6. Shared and
discussed in Oncourse and in class;
7. Overall quality
of assignment
YouTube
Video Final Project Examples (from R685 from 2010, 2011, and 2012):
Perhaps,
like me, you like history. A version R685 was first co-taught at West Virginia
University by Dr. W. Michael Reed and myself back in the fall of 1990. Since
that time, this course has evolved into many formats. Below are links to more
than a dozen syllabi from the course including the present one. Unfortunately,
I have yet to locate the original version but did find an outline of the topics
addressed. If you select this option, I want you to track the history of this
course over time. For instance, you might explore the topics, people, concepts,
etc., that were popular in the 1990s, 2000s, and today. You will turn in a 4-5
page single spaced paper on what you discovered. Additional pages may be attached
such as reference lists, visuals depictions mapping out trends over time,
correspondences with researchers about their articles from previous versions of
the course, and interviews with scholars about their perceptions of changes in
the field over time. You might, in fact, gather oral histories or accounts from
experts as well as former students about how the field has changed.
Many
questions can be asked. Among them, are there any topics that remain popular
over the past two decades? How did the focus of this course change over time?
Is this course more or less important today than it was back in the 1990s? Is
the total number of pages any indicator of how the field has changed? If so, in
what ways? Please compare the tasks from 1995 to those in 2001 or 2002 as well
as 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2015. Please look at the books, journals, new sources,
online resources, etc. that now comprise this course and note how they have
changed over time. Is there anything from the 1990s that remains important
today and should be added back to the current syllabus? Are there any tasks,
activities, or articles that you found interesting and want to know more about?
Is there anything that remains missing despite the fact that the current
syllabus is now over 60 pages long? What do see about the field of education or
educational technology from browsing through these syllabi and resources?
You
should end your paper with 1-2 page single spaced reflection of your own
learning in this course. Included in that summary should be an account of what
inspired or mattered to you. In addition, you might reflect on the areas wherein
you learned or grew the most during the semester.
Sample Prior P600/R685/R678 Syllabi:
History
Evaluation Grading (70 Total Points or 10 pts each dimension):
1. Insightfulness,
creativity, and originality;
2. Learning
growth displayed;
3. Coherence
and logical sequence;
4. Completeness
and fulfills spirit of the assignment;
5. Relevance
and accuracy of the content;
6. Shared and
discussed in Oncourse and in class;
7. Overall quality
of assignment
Students choosing Option 4 might design their
own final project or combine ideas together into something truly unique (i.e.,
a mash-up). As part of this effort, they might create or perform a meaningful
activity for the class. For example, you might summarize the learning
principles embedded in different articles or readings for each week of the
course. Or, they might create a unique categorization scheme of the technology
tools and resources studied during the semester. The more ambitious of you might
create an interactive multimedia glossary or comprehensive Website for the
course as an individual or as part of a team. Still others might create an
online database of articles from two or more open access journals related to
emerging learning technologies including links to the major themes and trends
in those journals over a significant period of time (e.g., 3-5 years).
There are still more options. Among
them, you might create a mobile application, an educational activity in a
virtual world, an interesting global collaboration activity or partnership, or
a mobile book. Others might organize a class mini-conference or real conference
symposium or demonstrate a set of e-learning tools to your school, company, or
organization and then reflect on it. Such tools might have relevance in K-12,
military, corporate, or higher education settings or perhaps in more informal
settings such as a museum, zoo, or computer club.
You might also engage in a major problem-based
learning project related to this class with a school, company, organization, or
institution. In this option, you make the contact and find out what needs to be
resolved and then get it approved by the instructor. The final product might be
a distance learning evaluation project. It might involve the design of e-learning
tools and resources. It might entail the creation of a strategic plan, white
paper, or vision statement. Whatever the problem or task, it must be authentic.
Anyone selecting this option should include a 2-4 page single-spaced reflection
paper on what your learned (Note: any final project report to an organization
or institution can substitute for that final reflection paper). The grading
scheme will be project specific.
Student
Selected Option Examples:
1.
Abdullah
Altuwaijri (Prezi on class): http://prezi.com/8h7grxlyaymv/the-world-is-open/
2.
Annisa Sari: Article
Database for R685 Class:
http://r685articledatabase.weebly.com/
3.
Kate Holden: “Mobile Devices & Learning: How Mobile Devices
are Re-Shaping the Field of Education” (a downloadable mobile book): http://www.bookrix.com/_mybookpid-en-kdxp88_1303531945.4344129562-kdxp88
or http://bit.ly/faG3Wd
4.
Kevin McGrath: Open Newsroom Learning: http://newslearning.wordpress.com/
5.
Kristen Swangin (Prezi): http://prezi.com/ihmhhl59xd46/is-the-world-open/
6.
Laurie McGowan (presentation for teaching 1st year students at U.
of Notre Dame): http://www3.nd.edu/~lthiel/portfolio/documents/Information_Literacy_Tutorial_Presentation.pdf
7.
Sonja Strahl (summary of R685), Final Project in
Articulate, December 2012
http://oit.nl.edu/rich_content/Faculty_Content/Strahl/final_project_r685v2/player.html
8.
Ozgur Ozdemir: Multimedia Glossary in Shutterfly for
R685, December 2012
http://r685glossary.shutterfly.com/
9.
Mo Pelzel. Academic Technology Resource Guide,
December 2012
http://mopelzel.wordpress.com; Screencast video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8N1RIwpQcjg&feature=plcp
10.
Jeff Pankin, MIT, Prezi, Emerging Learning
Technologies: http://prezi.com/tzbawrgjrnzf/emerging-learning-technologies/?auth_key=4ec2f45a718fab699b35ea460e91a46d9e1bdac7
11.
Jeffrey Barnette, Today’s World: http://prezi.com/-ijzyothst-r/r685-final-project
12.
Mintian Guo (April 2013): http://myapp.is/r685final; The App Builder: http://www.theappbuilder.com/
Recently, there is a huge explosion of open educational
contents. Among these new learning resources are open educational resources
(OER), OpenCourseWare (OCW), and massive open online courses (MOOCs). OCW and
OER typically are freely available contents without direct contact with
instructors. MOOCs are instructor-driven courses which are usually free and
open to the world community, thereby involving large enrollments. An optional
assignment idea for this class is to explore or enroll in one or two massive
open online courses (MOOCs) related to learning, cognition, and instruction.
Some possibilities related to our course are below; most of which will be
offered this fall (see bolded titles below). Even if you do not select this task,
you might explore a few of these MOOCs and observe how they are conducted. And
then reflect, reflect, reflect!
You could replace the midterm or final by enrolling in one or
more MOOCs and writing a 2-4 page single spaced reflection paper on what you learned
as it relates to various topics from this course (Note: you might include a
recap table or chart at the end summarizing key concepts or ideas mentioned in
your paper). You would NOT have to complete the course; just sit in and lurk if
you want. Your
MOOC review paper should include your insights about the learning environment
and learning theories relied upon as well as a few specific examples of
instructional tasks and ideas from the course. It will be graded for: (1) connections to course content; (2)
coherence and organization; and (3) overall insights and conceptual
understandings.
If you complete the course or get a certificate (Coursera calls
these “Signature” courses), you can replace your final assignment. Even if you
do you not complete a MOOC, you could replace your final assignment if you
write a longer reflection paper or extend the assignment in some way (e.g.,
interview the MOOC instructor(s) about their instructional approaches and
beliefs about learning; interviewing other participants/students taking this
course about their learning experiences; etc.). As part of these efforts, you
might also explore some of the open educational portals and contents listed in
your syllabus or that you find online.
Some questions you might ask before writing your
paper:
Portals to MOOC courses:
MOOC
Lists:
MOOC Review Grading Criteria if a Final Project (70 Points; 10 points each):
Grading Note: Extra consideration (and the potential for bonus points) given
for those who cite references on MOOCs or open education, create a summary or
recap table of terms or concepts mentioned in their reflection paper,
participate in more than one MOOC, and those who actually complete the course.
Summary or recap tables are especially welcome.
Class Sharing of
Final Projects: I
want you to post your final projects to Oncourse (my instructional assistants
can help). In addition, during our final class session on April 27, some people
might briefly share their final projects.
=================================================
We will
read 3-4 main articles and 2-3 tidbits per week—it is your choice what to read.
Week 1. (January 12) Introduction to the
Open World (Skim or read
portions of World is Open book. http://worldisopen.com/)
i.
http://www.amazon.com/Charles-A.-Wedemeyer/e/B001KDB9TM
(used books)
Week
1 Tidbits:
a. September 2014, Cathy Davidson, The End of Higher Education, available: http://connectedcourses.net/thecourse/why-we-need-a-why/
b. Nisen, M. (2013,
May 23). Three stories about Steve Jobs, Einstein, and Ben Franklin prove that
creative beats smart. San Francisco
Chronicle. Retrieved from http://www.sfgate.com/technology/businessinsider/article/Three-Stories-About-Steve-Jobs-Einstein-And-Ben-4543503.php
c. September 2013, The
Untold Story of Google’s Quest to Bring the Internet Everywhere—By Balloon (Google Wi-Fi from the Sky), Steven Levy, pp.
126-131, Wired, Available: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/08/googlex-project-loon/
d. April 15, 2013, Google boss: Entire world will be online by 2020, Doug
Gross, CNN, Available: http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/15/tech/web/eric-schmidt-internet/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
e. Ben Austen (2012, August). The Story of Steve Jobs: An Inspiration or a
Cautionary Tale?, Wired, pp. 73-79. Available:
http://www.wired.com/business/2012/07/ff_stevejobs/all/
f. Walter Isaacson (2011, October 29). The Genius of Jobs. NY Times.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/opinion/mona-simpsons-eulogy-for-steve-jobs.html?_r=1&emc=eta1
g. Jon Swartz and William M. Welch (October 6, 2011). Apple co-founder Steve
Jobs dies, USA Today: Timeline and
article. http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2011-09-22/steve-jobs-dies/50672498/1
h. David Gelernter (October 6, 2011). Steve Jobs and the coolest show in
Earth. Wall Street Journal Online. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203388804576614951355580150.html
i.
Brandon Griggs, (2011, October
5). Apple Founder Steve Jobs Dies.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/05/us/obit-steve-jobs/index.html?iref=BN1&hpt=hp_t1
Note: Similar books from the MacArthur Foundation: http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/series/john-d-and-catherine-t-macarthur-foundation-series-digital-media-and-learning)
Week 2 Tidbits:
a.
January 30, 2015, Can
Students Have Too Much Tech?, The New York Times, Susan Pinker
b. danah boyd, Zachary Gold, Alex Rosenblat (2014, December 3). Enabling
Connected Learning, http://www.datasociety.net/initiatives/enabling-connected-learning/
c. May 16, 2014, Defining the Gen Y Leader,
Chief Learning Officer, Frank Kalman
http://www.clomedia.com/articles/5595-defining-the-gen-y-leader
d. May 20, 2013, The New Greatest Generation: Why Millennials will Save Us
All, Time, Joel Stein, available: http://users.clas.ufl.edu/msscha/goodlife/millenials.pdf
e. Rob Jenkins (2012, October 15). The New 'Traditional Student‘, The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Available: http://chronicle.com/article/The-New-Traditional-on/135012/
f. NPR (2010, June 2). 'The Shallows': This Is Your Brain Online. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127370598
g. Author Nicholas Carr (2010, May 24). The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires
Brains. Wired. http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/05/ff_nicholas_carr/
2.
John
L. Hilton III, & David A. Wiley (2010, August 2). A sustainable future for
open textbooks? The Flat World Knowledge story. First Monday, 15(8). http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2800/2578
3.
Jon
T. Rickman, Roger Von Holzen, Paul G. Klute, & Teri Tobin (2009). A
Campus-Wide E-Textbook Initiative. EDUCAUSE
Quarterly, 32(2). http://www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSE+Quarterly/EDUCAUSEQuarterlyMagazineVolum/ACampusWideETextbookInitiative/174581
4.
Barry
W. Cull (2011, June 6). Reading revolutions: Online digital text and
implications for reading in academe. First
Monday 16(6). http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3340/2985
5.
David
McCarthy (2011, March/April). Mobile
Perspectives: On e-books E-Reading: The Transition in Higher
Education. EDUCAUSE Review, 46(2). http://www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSE+Review/EDUCAUSEReviewMagazineVolume46/iMobilePerspectivesOnebooksibr/226161
6.
John Levi Hilton III, Neil Lutz, & David Wiley (2012,
April). Examining the
reuse of open textbooks. International
Review of Research on Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL), 13(2). Article: http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1137/2130
Week
3 Tidbits:
a.
January 29, 2015, Texas approves Discovery Education
Social Studies Techbook for statewide use, eSchool News
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/01/29/texas-discovery-education-843/
b.
January 28, 2015, Are digital textbooks worth it?,
eSchool News, Mary Axelson, http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/01/28/digital-textbooks-673/,
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/01/28/digital-textbooks-673/print/
c.
January 26, 2015, The Cobweb: Can the Internet be
archived?, The New Yorker, Jill Lepore, Available: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/01/26/cobweb
d. October 1, 2014, Gates Foundation Picks Seven To Vie for $20 million
Digital Courseware Investments, Campus Technology, Dian Schaffhauser,
Available: http://campustechnology.com/articles/2014/10/01/gates-foundation-picks-seven-to-vie-for-$20-million-digital-courseware-investments.aspx
e.
August 5, 2014, OpenStax Aims To Bring Free Digital
Textbooks to High Schools, David Nagel, THE Journal, Available: http://thejournal.com/articles/2014/08/05/openstax-aims-to-bring-free-digital-textbooks-to-high-schools.aspx
f.
October 23, 2014, New Amazon Kindle is a Voyage into
eReader luxury, USA Today, Edward C. Baig, Available: http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/baig/2014/10/23/amazon-kindle-voyage-is-voyage-into-ereader-luxury/17781255/
g.
October 21, 2014, Sexy iPad Air 2 is fabulous but
not a must upgrade, Edward Baig, USA Today, available: http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/baig/2014/10/21/ipad-air2-fabulous-tablet-is-not-must-upgrade/17658295/
h.
April
7, 2013, Reading habits rapidly going
digital, USA Today, Bob Minzesheimer, Available: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/books/2013/10/06/e-books-reading/2877471/
i.
Jennifer Howard (2012, November 26). With 'Social
Reading,' Books Become Places to Meet. Chronicle
of Higher Education. Available: http://chronicle.com/article/Social-Reading-Projects/135908/
j.
Husna
Haq, (2011, July 6), In South Korea, all textbooks will be digital by 2015.
Christian Science Monitor. http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2011/0706/In-South-Korea-all-textbooks-will-be-e-books-by-2015
Videos:
E-Book
Resources and Companies (mobile ones too):
1.
Amazon
Create Space (formerly BookSurge): https://www.createspace.com/
2.
Beyond
Textbooks: http://beyondtextbooks.org/
3.
BookRix:
http://www.bookrix.com/
4.
Bookyards:
http://www.bookyards.com/
5.
CK-12
Foundation: http://about.ck12.org/
6.
Copia: http://www.copiaedu.com/
7.
Discovery Education Techbook:
http://www.discoveryeducation.com/what-we-offer/techbook-digital-textbooks/index.cfm
8.
Digital Textbook Playbook (USA):
http://www.fcc.gov/encyclopedia/digital-textbook-playbook
9.
Flat
World Knowledge: http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/
10.
GetYa
Learn On: http://www.getyalearnon.com/
11.
The
Global Text Project (creating books for underdeveloped countries): http://globaltext.terry.uga.edu/
12.
GoKnow:
http://www.goknow.com/
13.
Google
Books: http://books.google.com/books
14.
International Children’s Digital Library. http://en.childrenslibrary.org/
(Note: The ICDL collection includes 4,619 books in 59 languages;
users come from 228 different countries.)
15.
The
Internet Archive: http://www.archive.org/index.php
16.
LearningField (Australia): http://learningfield.com.au/
17.
LibiVox:
http://librivox.org/
18.
Lumen
Learning: http://lumenlearning.com/
19.
ManyBooks.net:
http://manybooks.net/
20.
NetLibrary:
http://www.netlibrary.com/
21.
NY
Public Library Portal to Children’s e-books: http://kids.nypl.org/reading/Childrensebooks.cfm
22.
OCLC
(Online Computer Library Center): http://www.oclc.org/us/en/global/default.htm
23.
OpenCollegeTextbooks:
http://collegeopentextbooks.org/
and http://collegeopentextbooks.ning.com/
24.
Open Utopia: http://theopenutopia.org/
25.
OpenStax College: http://openstaxcollege.org/
26.
Project
Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
27.
Questia:
http://www.questia.com/
28.
Rethink Books: http://rethinkbooks.com/
29.
Rosetta
Books: http://www.childrensbooksonline.org/ABC_Bicycle_Book/index.htm
30.
Seeds
of Empowerment (Paul Kim, creating tools for the underdeveloped world; e.g.,
iPhone applications for storytelling and social entrepreneurship)
http://seedsofempowerment.org/
31.
Subtext:
http://subtext.com/
32.
Tumblebooks:
http://www.tumblebooks.com/
33.
World
Public Library: http://worldlibrary.net/
Infographic: http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/Opening_the_Curriculum_infographic.pdf
i.
Informgraphic: http://www.onlinelearningsurvey.com/reports/OnlineLearningSurvey-Infographic.png
4.
Insung Jung (2012, April). Asian learners’ perception of quality in distance education and gender
preferences. International
Review of Research on Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL), 13(2). Article: http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1159/2128
i.
Note: The above Blended Reports from the Innosight Institute: http://www.innosightinstitute.org/media-room/publications/education-publications/classifying-k-12-blended-learning/
ii.
Blended Learning Universe, Clayton
Christensen Institute; https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWoz9cN2KT93VujFnGqL8MQ; http://blendedlearning.org/
iii.
Video: What is
Blended Learning? Clayton
Christensen Institute; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSPgvwZMdS8
Week
4 Tidbits:
a.
February 5, 2015, Time, Starbucks For America, Rana Foroohar, http://time.com/3696580/howard-schultz-starbucks-america/
(or: http://unchartedterritory.blog.fc2.com/blog-entry-1121.html)
b.
February 5, 2015, The
MOOC Hype Fades, in 3 Charts, Steve Kolowich, The Chronicle of Higher
Education
c. February
5, 2015, 3
Things Academic Leaders Believe About Online Education, Steve Kolowich, The
Chronicle of Higher Education
d. February
5, 2015, Online
Enrollment Growth Slows, But Still Outpaces Brick-and-Mortar, Campus
Technology, Rhea Kelly
e.
January 30, 2015, Texas What students think of their
blended learning teachers, eSchool News
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2015/01/30/blended-learning-teachers-730/
f.
January 29, 2015, Coursera, K12, Inc. make bold
moves to drive learning, Michael B. Horn, Clayton Christensen Institute
http://www.christenseninstitute.org/coursera-k12-inc-make-bold-moves-to-drive-learning/
g.
January 28, 2015, Designing a Blended Learning
Program, Michael Horn and Heather Staker, THE Journal, Available:
http://thejournal.com/articles/2015/01/28/designing-a-blended-learning-program.aspx
http://thejournal.com/Articles/2015/01/28/Designing-a-Blended-Learning-Program.aspx?p=1
h.
January 27, 2015, How Blended Learning and
Gamification Increase Student Engagement, Dan Gordon, THE Journal, Available:
http://thejournal.com/articles/2015/01/27/how-blended-learning-and-gamification-increase-student-engagement.aspx
http://thejournal.com/Articles/2015/01/28/Designing-a-Blended-Learning-Program.aspx?p=1
i.
January 27, 2015, U Central Florida Debuts Blended
Learning MOOC for Educators, Joshua Bolkan, THE Journal, Available:
http://thejournal.com/articles/2015/01/27/u-central-florida-launches-blended-learning-mooc-for-educators.aspx
j.
January 23, 2014, Gates Newsletter, http://www.gatesnotes.com/2015-annual-letter?page=0&lang=en&WT.mc_id=01_21_2015_AL2015-BG_PFPL_Img1_Top_20
a.
Video:
January 21, 2015, Bill & Melinda
Gates: Our Big Bet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DmpncBDibA
k.
January 21, 2015, Students Are Welcome to Shop
Online During My Lectures, The Chronicle of Higher Education, David von
Schlichten, Available:
http://chronicle.com/blogs/conversation/2015/01/21/students-are-welcome-to-shop-online-during-my-lectures/?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
l.
June 15, 2014, Starbucks offers workers 2 years of
free college, CNN Money, Gregory Wallace, (from Arizona State online programs);
http://money.cnn.com/2014/06/15/news/economy/starbucks-schultz-education/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
m.
June 15, 2014, Starbucks
to Provide Free College Education to Thousands of Workers, Richard Perez-Pena,
The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/16/us/starbucks-to-provide-free-college-education-to-thousands-of-workers.html
n.
February
13, 2014, Online learning is 'the
blackboard of the future', February 13, 2014, The Independent, UK, by Richard
Garner
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/online-learning-is-the-blackboard-of-the-future-9117075.html
o. January 10,
2014, The New-School Virtual Leader, Chief
Learning Officer, Sharat Sharan, Hotel chain Marriott created a
leadership program with a goal to provide training to 733 hotels in 23
countries. Certified 5,000 managers trained; and 10,000 more given big picture
training, Available: http://www.clomedia.com/articles/the-new-school-virtual-leader
p.
Bonk, C. J. (2010, January 11).
Overcoming the Technology Resistance Movement, Inside
the School,
Magna Publications (http://www.magnapubs.com/),
Madison, WI. Available: http://publicationshare.com/Overcoming-the-Technology-Resistance-Movement-Inside-the-School.htm
q.
Bonk, C. J. (2009, December 11). R2D2: A Model
for Using Technology in Education, eCampus
News. Available: http://www.ecampusnews.com/top-news/r2d2-a-model-for-using-technology-in-education/
or http://www.ecampusnews.com/top-news/r2d2-a-model-for-using-technology-in-education/print/
r.
Bonk,
C. J. (2009, November 23). Benefits and Audiences of Online Learning in K-12
Environments, Inside the School, Magna
Publications (http://www.magnapubs.com/),
Madison, WI. Available: http://publicationshare.com/Benefits-and-Audiences-of-Online-Learning-in-K-12-Environments-Inside-the-School.htm
s.
Curtis J. Bonk (2009, October 19). The
Wide Open Learning World: Sea, Land, and Ice Views. Association for Learning Technology (ALT) Online Newsletter, Issue
17, http://archive.alt.ac.uk/newsletter.alt.ac.uk/newsletter.alt.ac.uk/1h7kpy8fa5s.html
Week
5 Tidbits:
a.
September 16, 2014,
Panipat Teen Develops Device to Convert Breath Into Words, NDTV, available: http://www.ndtv.com/article/offbeat/panipat-teen-develops-device-to-convert-breath-into-words-591199?site=classic
b.
September 18, 2014,
E-learning more about education, less about tech
Yoon Min-sik (featuring Tom Reeves, University of Georgia), The Korea Herald,
Available: http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20140918000767
c.
September 16, 2014, Google Expands Map Resources for Educators and Students, Campus
Technology, David Nagel
http://campustechnology.com/articles/2014/09/16/google-expands-map-resources-for-educators-and-students.aspx
d.
August 1, 2014, Can
You Really Teach a MOOC in a Refugee Camp?, Chronicle of Higher Education,
Steve Kolowich, Available: http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/can-you-really-teach-a-mooc-in-a-refugee-camp/54191?cid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
e.
July 8, 2014, What
Makes an ‘Extreme Learning’, MindShift
http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/07/what-makes-an-extreme-learner/
f.
July 8, 2014, What Makes
an ‘Extreme Learning’, MindShift, Linda Flanagan
http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/07/what-makes-an-extreme-learner/
g.
April 17, 2014,
Cornell U. Researchers Put Robots in Conversation, and the Result Is
Surprisingly Human, Chronicle of Higher Education, April 17, 2014, Steve
Kolowich, Available: http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/cornell-u-researchers-put-robots-in-conversation-and-the-result-is-surprisingly-human/51775?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
h.
August 14, 2013, Even
though he is now very elderly Vinh Bao (age 96) still teaches music, using his
computer to coach pupils across the globe. BBC News Asia, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-23497559
i.
February 20, 2013, Star Trek-like holodeck may be closer to reality than you think
Matt Hartley, Financial Post, Canada, available: http://business.financialpost.com/2013/02/20/star-trek-like-holodeck-may-be-closer-to-reality-than-you-think/?__lsa=054d-d58d
j.
January 7, 2013, Globes Offer a Dynamic Vision, NY Times, Mark Vanhoenacker
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/08/science/digital-globes-a-new-way-to-view-the-world.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130108&_r=0
k.
Reeve Hamilton (2012,
November 29).The Texas Tribune: An 80-Year-Old Graduate With an Online
Marketing Degree Kept His Promise. New
York Times. Available:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/30/us/80-year-old-graduate-of-wgu-texas-kept-his-promise.html?ref=education&_r=0
l.
Ivana Kottasova
(2012, October 5). First woman to cross Antarctic solo: I've never felt so
alone, CNN. Available: http://www.cnn.com/2012/10/05/travel/felicity-aston-antarctic-explorer/index.html?hpt=hp_c1
m.
Doug Gross (2012, May 22). Apple's new 'spaceship' campus: What will the
neighbors say?, CNN. Available: http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/22/tech/innovation/new-apple-campus/index.html?hpt=hp_bn11
n.
John Leland (2012,
March 9). Adventures of a Teenage Polyglot, New
York Times. Available:http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/11/nyregion/a-teenage-master-of-languages-finds-online-fellowship.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
Videos:
Outdoor/Environmental/Adventure Learning People and Web Sites:
Live
and Immediate Science
http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/463/966 (audio file)
Note Free Books:
Week
6 Tidbits:
Video:
Ivory Tower: Is College Worth the Cost?, CNN; Coding
Bootcamp: A college alternative (2:21)
http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/cnnmoney/2014/11/14/ivory-coding.cnnmoney.html
Optional
Article Added:
Short
Videos on MOOCs and Open Education:
2.
Sophia Pink, High School Student,
An escape from High School. Washington Post, August 22, 2013, 2:33 minutes: Video: http://www.washingtonpost.com/posttv/opinions/an-escape-key-from-high-school/2013/08/21/294e8fe4-09cb-11e3-8974-f97ab3b3c677_video.html; Article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/why-i-spent-10th-grade-online/2013/08/22/f2001640-ed8a-11e2-bed3-b9b6fe264871_story.html
3.
UK enters expanding online learning market with MOOCs,
BBC, Sept. 18. 2013, 2:20; Video and Article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24153128
4.
Will Massively Open Online Courses Transform the Way,
Aspen Institute, June 30, 2013; Full Session (59:25): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAlu1HUiUg8;
5.
Anant Agarwal
Explains MOOCs High Drop-Out Rates (3:19): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXpEJqluIho
6. Andrew Ng and Anant
Agarwal on the Creation of the MOOC Movement (4:07;
use last 2 minutes on active learning and peer-to-peer learning in MOOCs): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXn1DstAEuE
7.
What is a MOOC,
July 1, 2013, BBC, 8:23 minutes: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-23127327
8.
The Benefits of
Online Learning, Anant Agarwal,
the founder and president of edX, an online education
company, shares what he considers the top six advantages of online learning.,
October 8, 2013, 2:20 minutes: Article: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303759604579093400834738972.html;
Videos: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303759604579093400834738972.html#project%3DMOOCchrtPRINT%26articleTabs%3Dvideo
Week
7 Tidbits:
MOOC-Related
Videos and Audios:
1. What is a MOOC? by Dave Cormier,
December 8, 2010: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eW3gMGqcZQc
2. Siemens,
G. (2011). George Siemens on massive open online courses (MOOCs) [Online
Video]. May 5, 2011: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMfipxhT_Co
3. Chuck Severance (2012, November 26). Internet
History, Technology, and Security Coursera Office Hours - Manila, Philippines.
Available: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6zlQZcM72o and Barcelona: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JzNHvmSv8TI
Inexpensive
Online Learning and MOOC Related Organizations and Institutions:
1.
Coursera:
https://www.coursera.org/
2.
edX:
https://www.edx.org/
3.
edX
high school initiative: https://www.edx.org/high-school-initiative
4.
edX
partners: https://www.edx.org/schools-partners
5.
MITX:
https://www.edx.org/university_profile/MITx
6.
Peer
2 Peer University (P2PU): https://p2pu.org/en/
7.
Straighter Line: http://www.straighterline.com/courses-run-by-professors.html
8.
Udacity:
http://www.udacity.com/
9.
Udemy:
http://www.udemy.com/
10. University of
the People: http://www.uopeople.org/
Week
8 Tidbits:
a.
January 22, 2015, Bringing MOOCs Back to Life, Lara
Walsh, Chief Learning Officer, http://www.clomedia.com/articles/6046-bringing-moocs-back-to-life
b.
Ellen Brandenberger (2015, January 7). Course
Development and MOOCs (Part 1): The Emergence of a Role, Inside Higher
Education, Available:
https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/higher-ed-beta/course-development-and-moocs-part-1-emergence-role
c.
October
29, 2014, King of Free Online Courses
May Soon Add Videochats With Professors, Cade Metz, Wired
http://www.wired.com/2014/10/king-free-online-courses-may-soon-add-videochats-professors
d.
September
16, 2014, The MOOC Where Everybody
Learned, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Steve Kolowich, Available:
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/the-mooc-where-everybody-learned/54571?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
e.
September
12, 2014, MOOC on MOOCs? A novel yet pragmatic approach, University World News,
Kirk Perris, Available: http://www.universityworldnews.com/article.php?story=20140903154113518
f.
August
2014, MOOCs: Symptom, Not Cause of
Disruption MOOCs and technology to advance learning and learning research
(Ubiquity symposium), Lewis J. Perelman, Ubiquity, ACM,
Available: http://ubiquity.acm.org/article.cfm?id=2591680#FN8
g.
January 21, 2014, Coursera Will Offer Certificates
for Sequences of MOOCs, Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Education http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/coursera-will-offer-certificates-for-sequences-of-moocs/49581
h.
January 16, 2014, Brazil’s Home-Grown MOOC, Holly
Else for the Times Higher Education, Inside HE, available: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/brazils-home-grown-mooc-veduca-has-high-hopes/2010440.article
Week
9 Tidbits:
a.
January 14, 2015, New York City Education Department
to Add or Expand 40 Dual-Language Programs, The New York Times, Elizabeth A.
Harris
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/15/nyregion/new-york-city-education-department-to-add-or-expand-40-dual-language-programs.html?_r=0
b.
May 5, 2014, Technology Provides Foreign-Language
Immersion at a Distance,
Danya Perez-Hernandez, Chronicle of Higher Education, Available:
http://chronicle.com/article/Technology-Provides/146369/?cid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
c.
Luke,
M. (2013, February 13). Formal versus self-education: Which is better? Chief Learning Officer. Retrieved from http://clomedia.com/articles/view/formal-v-self-education-which-is-better
d.
October 13, 2014, Dozen Ways To Promote Informal
Learning, Chief Learning Officer, Saul Carliner, Available: http://www.clomedia.com/articles/a-dozen-ways-to-promote-informal-learning
e.
September 23, 2014, With the Right Technology, Can
Children Teach Themselves? Anya Kamenetz, MindShift, available: http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/09/with-the-right-technology-can-children-teach-themselves/
f.
Bonk,
C. J. (2013, July). Adding some TEC-VARIETY to online courses. Education Magazine, Issue 6, 15-20 (found at: itunes.apple.com: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/educationist-magazine-app/id593725339?ls=1&mt=8 available: http://www.publicationshare.com/Education_Mag_6_TEC-VARIETY.pdf).
g.
Bonk,
C. J. (2013, January 9). Adding Some TEC-VARIETY to
Online Teaching and Learning, Cengage Learning Blog (http://blog.cengage.com/).
Available: http://blog.cengage.com/?top_blog=adding-some-tec-variety-to-online-teaching-and-learning
h.
Mol,
C., & van Dam, N. (2013, August). Turn education into a lifelong education.
Chief Learning Officer, 12(8), 58. Retrieved from http://clomedia.com/articles/view/turn-education-into-a-lifelong-experience
i.
Anne
Eisenberg. “Learning from a Native Speaker, Without Leaving Home,” New York Times (February 17, 2008), http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/17/business/17novel.html
j.
Abdullah,
M. H. (2001, December). Self-directed learning, Eric Digest, EDO-CS-01-10. Retrieved from http://www.education.com/reference/article/Ref_Self_Directed/
Some
Language Learning Sites:
1.
About.com
(from the New York Times)
a.
ESL:
http://esl.about.com/
b.
French:
http://french.about.com/
c.
German:
http://german.about.com/
d.
Italian:
http://italian.about.com/
e.
Japanese:
http://japanese.about.com/
f.
Mandarin:
http://mandarin.about.com/
g.
Spanish:
http://spanish.about.com/
2.
BBC
Languages: http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/
3.
BBC Learning English: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/
4.
Babbel:
http://www.babbel.com/
5.
ChinesePod:
http://chinesepod.com/
6.
Coffee
Break Spanish: http://radiolingua.com/shows/spanish/coffee-break-spanish/
7.
English Central: http://www.englishcentral.com/
8.
EnglishPod:
http://englishpod.com/
9.
FrenchPod:
http://frenchpod.com/
10.
German
Online: http://www.dw-world.de/dw/0,,2547,00.html
11.
ItalianPod:
http://italianpod.com/
12.
iTalkie:
http://www.italki.com/
13.
Japanese
Online http://japanese-online.com/
14.
KanTalk:
http://www.kantalk.com/
15.
Korean
Online http://learn-korean.net/
16.
LanguageLab
(in Second Life): http://www.languagelab.com/
17.
Livemocha:
http://www.livemocha.com/
18.
LoMasTV
(online Spanish immersion TV): http://lomastv.com/
19.
Mango
Languages: http://www.mangolanguages.com/
20.
The
Mixxer (uses Skype): http://www.language-exchanges.org/
21.
PalTalk:
http://www.paltalk.com/
22.
SpanishPod:
http://spanishpod.com/
23.
Voxopop:
http://www.voxopop.com/
2.
Baiyun Chen and Thomas Bryer (2012, January). Investigating Instructional
Strategies for Using Social Media in Formal and Informal Learning. International Review of Research on Open and
Distance Learning (IRRODL), 13(1).
http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1027/2073
Free
book on Connectivism:
Resources
and Videos:
i.
The
Conflict of Learning Theories with Human Nature: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xTgWt4Uzr54&feature=related
ii.
The
Changing Nature of Knowledge: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMcTHndpzYg&feature=related
iii.
The
Impact of Social Software on Learning: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grI_h88vs3g
iv.
The
Network is the Learning: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpbkdeyFxZw&feature=related
Week
10 Tidbits:
a.
February 3, 2015, 5,000
Games Produced in 48-hour Global Game Jam, Campus Technology, Dian
Schaffhauser
b. January
23-25, 2015, Global Game Jam, http://globalgamejam.org/
c.
January
28, 2015, Live-Tweeting Assignments: To Use or Not to Use?, The Chronicle of
Higher Education, Adeline Koh
http://chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker/live-tweeting-assignments-to-use-or-not-to-use/58949?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
1.
Judy
Dunlap (2011, October 18). Situational Qualities Exhibited by Exceptional
Presenters. EDUCAUSE Research Bulletin. Available: http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERB1115.pdf
2.
Kathleen Moore (2011, July 26). 71 Percent Report Using Video Sharing Sites
Pew Internet and American Life Project, http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2011/Video-sharing-sites/Report.aspx
and http://pewinternet.org/~/media//Files/Reports/2011/Video%20sharing%202011.pdf
3.
Craig
Howard and Rodney Myers (2011). Creating-annotated discussions: An asynchronous
alternative, International Journal of Designs for Learning, 1(1).
Available:
http://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/ijdl/article/view/853/912
4.
Bonk, C. J. (2011). YouTube
anchors and enders: The use of shared online video content as a macrocontext
for learning. Asia-Pacific
Collaborative Education Journal, 7(1). Available: http://www.publicationshare.com/SFX7EED.pdf
5.
Pan,
G., Sen, S., Starett, D., Bonk, C. J., Rodgers, M., Tikoo, M., & Powell, D.
(2012, December). Instructor-made videos as a learner scaffolding tool: A case
study. Journal of Online Learning and
Teaching, 8(4), 298-311.
Available: http://jolt.merlot.org/vol8no4/pan_1212.htm
and http://jolt.merlot.org/vol8no4/pan_1212.pdf
Week
12 Tidbits:
a.
April
21, 2014, Multimedia Assignments: Not
Just for Film Majors Anymore (student and instructor produced videos),
Chronicle of Higher Education, Danny Ledonne
http://chronicle.com/article/Multimedia-Assignments-Not/145939/?cid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
b.
June
2, 2014, Using Video Annotation Tools
to Teach Film Analysis
Chronicle of Higher Education, Chuck Tryon
http://chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker/using-video-annotation-tools-to-teach-film-analysis/57171?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
c.
May 5, 2014, New platform challenges conventional
MOOCs (i.e., Coursmos), Mike Siegel, eCampus News. Available: http://www.ecampusnews.com/top-news/new-platform-challenges-conventional-moocs/print/
Video
Tools:
TED-Ed:
http://education.ted.com/
TubeChop: http://www.tubechop.com/
Vialogues: https://vialogues.com/
Oral
History Tools
1.
Meograph: http://www.meograph.com/
2.
StoryCorps: http://storycorps.org/
Oral
History Resources:
1.
The History Harvest: http://historyharvest.unl.edu/
2.
Slavery and the Making of America: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/slavery/index.html
Week
13. (April 13) Flipping the Classroom
1. Papadapoulos, C., & Roman, A. S. (2010).
Implementing an inverted classroom model in engineering statistics: Initial
results. American Society for Engineering Statistics. Available: http://goo.gl/ZiiTYo
2.
Warter-Perez, N., & Dong, J. (2012). Flipping
the classroom: How to embed inquiry and design projects into a digital
engineering lecture. In Proceedings of the 2012 ASEE PSW Section Conference. Available: http://aseepsw2012.calpoly.edu/site_media/uploads/proceedings/papers/10B_35_ASEE_PSW_2012_Warter-Perez.pdf
3.
Li, Y., Zhang, M.,
Bonk, C. J., Zhang, W., & Guo, Y. (in review). Open Educational Resources
(OER)-based Flipped Classroom Practice in an Undergraduate Course. Computers and Education (se Oncourse).
4.
Chronicle of Higher Education. (2015, January 7). A
Guide to the Flipped Classroom, The Chronicle of Higher Education. Available: http://chronicle.com/article/A-Guide-to-the-Flipped/151039/?cid=flipped-promo; Full report: http://images.results.chronicle.com/Web/TheChronicleofHigherEducation/%7B422bb09a-27eb-42ba-ad69-a455e627572b%7D_AD-CHE-FlippedClassroomBooklet.pdf
5. EDUCAUSE, 7 Things You Should Know About…, Flipped
Classrooms
https://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7081.pdf
Week
13 Tidbits:
a.
Jeffrey R. Young (2015, January 7). When a
Flipped-Classroom Pioneer Hands Off His Video Lectures, This Is What Happens,
The Chronicle of Higher Education. Available:
http://chronicle.com/article/When-a-Flipped-Classroom/151031/ and http://www.learnaccountingforfree.com/
b. Chandrasekaran, A. (2012, October
15). Lacking teachers and textbooks, India’s schools turn to the Khan Academy
to survive. The New York Times Blog.
Retrieved from http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/15/lacking-teachers-and-textbooks-indias-schools-turn-to-khan-academy-to-survive/
c. “MOOCs
Change Lives and Microcredentials Will Catch Faster than Flipping: Excerpts
from an Interview with Curt Bonk,” in report: Exploring the Fringe: Flipping, Microcredentials, and MOOCs, by Jeff
Cobb and Celisa Steel, Tagoras, May 13, 2014.
Available: http://www.tagoras.com/2014/05/13/flipped-learning-microcredentials-moocs/
d. Newt Gingrich, August 1, 2014, Get schools out
of the 1890s, CNN, http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/01/opinion/gingrich-schools-blended-teaching-technology/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
e. One Man, One Computer, 10
Million Students: How Khan Academy Is Reinventing Education, Forbes, November 19, 2013, Michael Noer
http://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelnoer/2012/11/02/one-man-one-computer-10-million-students-how-khan-academy-is-reinventing-education/
f. Adjusting the Prescription: The School of Medicine
overhauls its century-old educational approach. Maura Singleton, February 2011,
University of Virginia
http://uvamagazine.org/articles/adjusting_the_prescription/
g. May
18, 2014, Harvard goes all in for
online courses. The stress is on production values, props, and, yes,
scholarship. The Boston Globe, Marcella Bombardieri
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2014/05/17/behind-harvard-explosion-online-classes-flurry-lights-camera-action/BybPhkyfX59D9a7icmHz5M/story.html
h. April
14, 2014, The New Academic Celebrity. Why a
different kind of scholar—and idea—hits big today, Chronicle of Higher
Education, Christopher Shea, http://chronicle.com/article/The-New-Academic-Celebrity/145845/?cid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
i.
April 21, 2014, Microflipping: a Modest Twist on the 'Flipped' Classroom, Chronicle
of Higher Education, Sam Buemi, http://chronicle.com/article/Microflipping-a-Modest-Twist/145951/
j.
May 21, 2014,
Missouri State U Improves Learning Outcomes With Flipped Course, Leila Meyer, http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2014/05/21/Missouri-State-U-Improves-Learning-Outcomes-with-Flipped-Classroom.aspx?p=1
k. February 12, 2014, DODDS-Europe teachers find
success with 'flipped classroom' approach, Stars and Stripes, Jennifer H. Swan,
KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany
http://www.stripes.com/news/dodds-europe-teachers-find-success-with-flipped-classroom-approach-1.266254
l.
February 5,
2014, Lessons Learned from 1,125 Flipped Classrooms, It's been 40 years since
the Army first experimented with competency-based learning, Peter D. Lenn
https://www.edsurge.com/n/2014-02-05-lessons-learned-from-1-125-flipped-classrooms
m. November 19, 2013, One Man, One
Computer, 10 Million Students: How Khan Academy Is Reinventing Education,
Forbes, Michael Noer, Available: http://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelnoer/2012/11/02/one-man-one-computer-10-million-students-how-khan-academy-is-reinventing-education/
n. April 20, 2013, Two Cheers for
Web U!, A. J. Jacobs, New York Times, Available:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/21/opinion/sunday/grading-the-mooc-university.html?pagewanted=1&_r=3&emc=eta1&
o. Digital distraction in the classroom, July 11, 2012
by Stephanie Chasteen, The Active Class, http://theactiveclass.com/category/uncategorized/
p. The Washington Post, Nick Anderson, March 11, 2013, http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/more-classroom-flipping-in-colleges/2013/03/11/0c425758-8a7f-11e2-98d9-3012c1cd8d1e_story.html
q. Flipped learning skepticism: Can students really
learn on their own?, Robert Talbert, Chronicle of Higher Education, April 30,
2014, http://chronicle.com/blognetwork/castingoutnines/2014/04/30/flipped-learning-skepticism-can-students-really-learn-on-their-own/
r.
The Flipped
Learning Network, http://www.flippedlearning.org/definition
Flipped
Classroom Videos:
1.
I Flip, You Flip, We All Flip: Setting Up a Flipped
Classroom (Video: 24:09): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRvmjjeZ9CA
2.
Ohio State Chemistry Flips the Classroom, (Video:
1:10), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FA_hCmfsp8
3.
Flipping The Large Enrollment Psychology Classroom -
NC State (Video: 3:45), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTDQaaVWEzI
4.
February
14, 2014, Freddie Diaz-Batista, Flipped
Learning, E-learning Blog, http://freddiediazbatista.com/main/
5.
July
11, 2012, Digital distraction in the
classroom, by Stephanie Chasteen, The Active Class, http://theactiveclass.com/category/uncategorized/
6.
September 9, 2013, Creating videos for flipped
learning, eSchool News, http://www.eschoolnews.com/2013/09/09/educators-video-flipped-008/2/?ast=123&astc=11015
7.
USING TECHNOLOGY TO IMPROVE STUDENT LEARNING: The
Flipped Classroom – Strategies and Tips, Professor Joe Zisk, June 16-July 7,
2014, California University of Pennsylvania, zisk@calu.edu, http://teacheronline.us/mooc/microcourse-flyer.pdf
To register: www.teacheronline.us/mooc
8.
The Flipped Classroom: Lectures at Home and Homework
in class, (Video: 2:43), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-ZA7eb74-g
9.
Flipping the Class, Penn State (3:23 video), https://sites.google.com/site/flippingclass/
10.
Teaching for Tomorrow: Flipped Learning (2:52); https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4a7NbUIr_iQ
11.
The Flipped Classroom (2:14); https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2H4RkudFzlc
12.
"Flipping", TechSmith's e-learning
trainers series part 5 (Video: 2:54); https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXSBcM0RhB0&feature=relmfu
13.
Life in a Drop of Water (Video 1:19); http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gg6Mw60pwBI&feature=share&list=TLvseCJWHG9ucfbwmxmecnHruIu8VEoyBY
14.
10 must-watch videos for flipped learning, April 21,
2014, eSchool News
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2013/10/24/flipped-videos-learning-190/2/?ast=123&astc=11015
a.
Note: also in
Oncourse: Merry Merryfield, Joe Tin-Yau Lo, Sum Cho Po, & Masataka
Kasai (2008). Worldmindedness: Taking
Off the Blinders. Journal of Curriculum
and Instruction, 2(1). (see also
her homepage: http://people.ehe.osu.edu/mmerryfield/papers-and-publications/)
Note: also in
Oncourse:
For more related to online
videoconferencing, see:
1.
Soliya:
http://www.soliya.net/
i.
Georgetown Learning Initiatives, Soliya Connect:
http://gli.georgetown.edu/#soliya
ii.
Connect
from Soliya: http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=38328511
http://www.ncolr.org/issues/jiol/v6/n3/synchronous-learning-experiences-distance-and-residential-learners-perspectives-in-a-blended-graduate-course;
Full PDF: http://www.ncolr.org/jiol/issues/pdf/6.3.6.pdf
Week
14 Tidbits:
a.
October 24, 2014, Facebook launches Rooms app for
anonymous sharing of interests, USA Today, Jessica Guynn, Available: http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2014/10/23/facebook-rooms-josh-miller-branch-mobile-app-creative-labs/17769167/
b.
February 22, 2013, Inside Look: Learning Spaces,
Meeting classroom teaching and collaboration expectations, University Business,
http://www.universitybusiness.com/article/inside-look-learning-spaces
c.
May 8,
2012, Design for Students, with Students, “Hub Central”, the $42 million University
of Adelaide learning hub opened in October 2011, Mike Roberts
http://designbuildsource.com.au/design-for-students-with-students
Week
11 Tidbits Part 2: Classroom Space Articles:
1.
It's
all about the space at Stanford's design school, Stanford University, Robin
Wander, January 11, 2012, http://news.stanford.edu/news/2012/january/design-school-space-011812.html
2.
Baker
College of Muskegon aiming to make classrooms more interactive, Michigan mLive
(December 23, 2011); http://www.mlive.com/news/muskegon/index.ssf/2011/12/baker_college_of_muskegon_aimi.html
3.
Jennifer
Demski (2011, June). Next-Gen Classrooms: Aces of Spaces, Campus Technology,
http://campustechnology.com/articles/2011/06/01/next-gen-classrooms-aces-of-space.aspx,
Printable: http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2011/06/01/Next-Gen-Classrooms-Aces-of-Space.aspx?Page=5&p=1
4.
Les Watson (2010, August 11). Learning
Landscapes in Higher Education. Online Newsletter of the Association for the
Advancement of Learning Technologies (ALT), Issue 20, UK. http://archive.alt.ac.uk/newsletter.alt.ac.uk/newsletter.alt.ac.uk/x6pu6u1jrtk.html
5.
Learning
Landscapes in Higher Education: http://learninglandscapes.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/
Case Studies: http://learninglandscapes.lincoln.ac.uk/case_studies/
6.
Bridget McCrea (2010, August 5). “Remaking the College Campus.” Campus
Technology. Available: http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2010/08/05/Remaking-the-College-Campus.aspx?Page=1
(3 pages) or full version printable at: http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2010/08/05/Remaking-the-College-Campus.aspx?Page=3&p=1
7.
Matt
Villano (2010, June). “7 Tips for Building Collaborative Learning Spaces.” Campus
Technology. http://campustechnology.com/articles/2010/06/01/7-tips-for-building-collaborative-learning-spaces.aspx;
printable: http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2010/06/01/7-Tips-for-Building-Collaborative-Learning-Spaces.aspx?p=1
Videos
and Resources of New or Remodeled Academic Buildings for Collaboration:
1. Active Learning
Classrooms from the University of Minnesota, Student-Centered Active Learning
Environment with Upside-down Pedagogies (2009): http://www.classroom.umn.edu/projects/alc.html
(scroll down)
2. Grand Valley
State University. Virtual Tour of New GVSU Library. (2009, November 11).
YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbuDPopJxg0
and report at: http://www.uic.edu/depts/accc/lets/content/learnlab_intro.pdf
3. JISC - Designing Spaces: A campus for
the 21st century: City Campus University of Wolverhampton. (2008,
December 8). YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lp3sWu_5rb0&feature=related
4. Ohio State’s New
Library: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ak7FEQjxqBY
5. Saltire Centre
at Glasgow Caledonian (Scotland): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBsGeDa44ic&feature=related
6. Sydney Centre
for Innovation in Learning. http://www.scil.nsw.edu.au/
7. tlc@bedford library -
Royal Holloway, University of London, UK http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=klouRhl_VpA
8. Union Street
Residence Center Learn Lab, Indiana University. http://uitsnews.iu.edu/2010/12/07/new-experimental-learning-spaces/
9. Yonsei Library,
Seoul, Korea: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLbVIZZ5OoI
10. Steelcase
LearnLab - Learning Outside the Box (2009, July 28). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnU58hbYN1M
i.
Collaborative
Spaces—Design Story from Steelcase (5:53; March 10, 2009), http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sU-jrv3UXi0&feature=related
ii.
Stanford
d.school—case study, Steelcase (3:33; December 6, 2010): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSjezj7_6mc&feature=related
11. IZZY 3-2-1
spaces (interactive): http://izzyplus.com/3-2-1-spaces/learn.aspx
i.
Izzy
Plus and Baker College 21st Century Learning, April 26, 2012 (4:12); http://vimeo.com/39202414
Examples
of Interactive Online Timeline Tools:
1.
Archaeology’s Interactive Dig: http://www.archaeology.org/interactive/
2.
Historic Jamestown: http://historicjamestowne.org/learn/interactive_exercises.php
3.
Path to Protest; Arab spring: an interactive timeline of Middle East protests, The
Guardian): http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/interactive/2011/mar/22/middle-east-protest-interactive-timeline
4.
Prehistoric Time Line (Nat’l
Geographic): http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/prehistoric-world/prehistoric-time-line.html
Collaborative
Projects:
1.
Asia Society:http://asiasociety.org/education;
2.
Center for the Study of
Global Change: http://www.indiana.edu/~global/staff/profile.php?id=8
3.
Choices Program (Brown
University): http://www.choices.edu/
4.
ePals: http://www.epals.com/
(now is part of Cricket Media: www.CricketMedia.com)
5.
Flat Connections Project: http://www.flatconnections.com/
6.
Global Education Benchmarking GroupGlobal Education Benchmarking
Group: Global Education Benchmarking Group: http://gebg.org/
7.
Global Nomads Group: http://gng.org/
8.
iEARN: http://www.iearn.org/
9.
Infinite Family: http://www.infinitefamily.org/
10.
Mentor.net
(for engineering, science, and mathematics): http://www.mentornet.net/
11.
The
News Literacy Project: http://www.thenewsliteracyproject.org/
(mentoring young people into journalism)
12.
Omnium Outreach Projects: http://www.omnium.net.au/oop/
13.
Penguin science: http://www.penguinscience.com/education/postcards.php
14.
Soliya:
http://www.soliya.net/
15.
TakingITGlobal:
https://www.tigweb.org/
16.
Teach
the World Online (TWOL): http://www.teachtheworldonline.org/
17.
Tutor/Mentor
Institute (Daniel Bassell): http://www.tutormentorexchange.net/
18.
World
Leadership School: http://www.worldleadershipschool.com/
19.
World
Savvy: http://www.worldsavvy.org/
20.
World
Vision Canada: http://www.worldvision.ca/Pages/welcome.aspx
Tools for
Collaboration:
1.
Adobe
Connect Pro: http://www.adobe.com/products/adobeconnect.html
2.
AnyMeeting:
http://www.anymeeting.com/
3.
Collanos:
http://www.collanos.com/
4.
ConceptShare:
http://www.conceptshare.com/
5.
Google
Groups: http://groups.google.com;
6.
Google Docs: http://docs.google.com
7.
Diigo: http://www.diigo.com/
8.
Elluminate: http://www.elluminate.com/
9.
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/
10. FreeConferenceCall: https://www.freeconferencecall.com/
11. Google Hangouts:
http://www.google.com/
12. GoToMeeting: https://www3.gotomeeting.com/
13. GroupTweet: http://www.grouptweet.com/
14. MeetingWords:http://meetingwords.com/
15.
Ning:
http://www.ning.com/
16.
OpenStudy:
http://openstudy.com/
17.
PBworks:
http://pbworks.com/
18.
Piratepad:
http://piratepad.net/front-page/
19.
PrimaryPad:
http://primarypad.com/ (recommended by
“TypeWithMe”)
20. SlideRocket: http://www.sliderocket.com/
21.
Skillshare: http://www.skillshare.com/learn
22. Skype: http://www.skype.com/
23.
StartWright
(virtual teams): http://www.startwright.com/virtual.htm
24.
TodaysMeet: https://todaysmeet.com/
25.
TwitterGroups:
http://twittgroups.com/index.php
26.
Twibes
(Twitter Groups): http://www.twibes.com/
27.
Twiddla:
http://www.twiddla.com/
28.
Twitter:
http://twitter.com/
29. Ustream: http://www.ustream.tv/
30.
WebEx:
http://www.webex.com/
31.
Wikispaces:
http://www.wikispaces.com/
32.
Windows
Live Groups: http://groups.live.com/
33.
Writeboard:
http://writeboard.com/
34.
Yahoo!
Groups: http://groups.yahoo.com;
35.
Zoho Writer: http://writer.zoho.com/home?serviceurl=%2Findex.do
(Note: More from same issue:
http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/issue/view/29)
a.
John
Traxler: http://wlv.academia.edu/JohnTraxler).
i.
Learning
in a Mobile Age, International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning, 1(1),
1-12, January-March 2009. Available: https://www.academia.edu/171500/Learning_in_a_Mobile_Age,
More
from Paul Kim
Pocket School
and other projects (e.g., Seeds of Empowerment:
http://seedsofempowerment.org/index.html.
Note: See Oncourse for many articles on mobile learning from Paul Kim at
Stanford. He was the class guest in the fall of 2010.)
i.
Paul
Kim’s Publications and Presentations: http://www.stanford.edu/~phkim/publications/index.html
ii.
Paul
Kim’s Homepage: http://www.stanford.edu/~phkim/
Seeds
of Empowerment videos (Paul Kim, Stanford):
Week
15 Tidbits:
a.
September
10, 2014, Is the Apple Watch a game
changer?, Doug Gross, CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/10/tech/mobile/apple-watch-game-changer/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
b.
September
9, 2014, Apple unveils new iPhones,
watch, CNN Tech, Available: http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/09/tech/gallery/apple-unveils/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
c.
September 9, 2014, The iPhone 6 Goes Big, as Apple
Aims Small With a Smartwatch, Brian X. Chen, The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/10/technology/apple-aims-for-the-wrist-with-a-smartwatch-while-making-the-iphone-6-larger.html?_r=0
d.
May 5, 2014, Mobile MOOCs: New platform challenges
conventional MOOCs
eCampus News (https://coursmos.com/);
http://www.ecampusnews.com/top-news/new-platform-challenges-conventional-moocs/print/
e.
April 9, 2013, Computer fashions face social test:
Can wearable computers fit in? Scott Martin, USA Today, available: http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2013/04/06/google-apple-iwatch-glass-jawbone-iphone-nike-microsoft-samsung/1979419/
1.
Adrian Perry, Clive Shepherd, Dick
Moore, & Seb Schmoller (2012, May 23). Scaling
up: Achieving a breakthrough in adult learning with technology. Ufi Charitable Trust. http://goo.gl/6dJhd and http://www.ufi.co.uk/sites/default/files/Scaling%20up_21_5_V3.pdf
2. Anthony P. Carnevale, Stephen J. Rose, & Andrew R. Hanson (2012,
June). Certificates: Gateway to Gainful
Employment and College Degrees. Georgetown University Center on Education and
the Workforce. Information: http://cew.georgetown.edu/certificates/ and Full Doc https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/559297/Certificates.FullReport.061812.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
5.
The
Horizon Reports (i.e., technology on the horizon): http://www.nmc.org/nmc-horizon/
Week
16+ Tidbits:
a.
David Lamond (2012, October 17). The university
campus of the future: what will it look like?, The Conversation, Australia. Available: http://theconversation.edu.au/the-university-campus-of-the-future-what-will-it-look-like-9769