You are browsing the archive for 2009 March.

by Stephen

New standards to facilitate eLearning.

March 31, 2009 in Education, Tech, Web by Stephen

It’s good to see some standards emerging in this area.

A consortium of educators and technology executives has developed a common set of standards that will allow any kind of digital learning content–such as an electronic text, an online exam, or even a social-networking application–to be used with any type of learning management system (LMS) or student information system (SIS), or web portal.

In theory, implementing this set of free, open standards, called Common Cartridge, would give K-12 and college educators the flexibility to use any combination of materials in a collaborative, content-rich digital learning environment, without worrying about compatibility issues.

Using Common Cartridge standards also would “require less custom integration work to deploy” LMS or SIS software, said Rob Abel, chief executive of the IMS Global Learning Consortium, which oversaw development of the standards.

Common Cartridge aims to solve two problems, according to the IMS web site. The first is to provide a standard way to represent digital course materials for use in online learning systems, so that content can be developed in a single format and used across a wide variety of systems. The second is to enable new publishing models for online course materials and digital books that are modular, interactive, customizable, and distributed online.

If that sounds familiar, it’s because many educators and content providers believed an earlier set of standards, called SCORM, would be able to do the same thing.

Developed by the Department of Defense, SCORM–short for Sharable Content Object Reference Model–also aims to make digital learning materials accessible, interoperable, and reusable in a variety of learning environments.

But SCORM is a much more limited set of standards, IMS says. While it works fine for stand-alone content objects–such as a video clip illustrating how cells divide, or a PowerPoint explication of a sonnet–it cannot be used to define the more collaborative, interactive learning experiences, such as an online assessment or a wiki, that are typical of today’s Web 2.0-enabled course environments.

“SCORM was developed to support [the] portability of self-paced, computer-based training content,” IMS says. “This is a very different set of needs than those of digital course materials that are used to support an online course where there is a cohort of students and an instructor, teacher, or professor.”

Common Cartridge is supported by a host of publishers, vendors, and LMS platforms, including McGraw-Hill, Pearson, Blackboard, and Sakai. Its supporters say it will allow greater flexibility for professors creating online or hybrid courses and could reduce the cost of deploying software solutions.

Read the rest here.

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March 31, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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March 30, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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March 29, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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March 29, 2009 in Current Affairs, Education, Georgia, Tech by Stephen

A lot of hard work has gone into this. Sadly, the Georgia Department of Education does not seem to value the work of the Educational Technology Centers, which are a large part of the reason for this progress.

Georgia is a national leader in the use of educational technology to enhance both teaching and learning, according to a report released today.

Education Week’s annual “Technology Counts” report gave Georgia the highest score when it comes to the use of technology in the classroom and building capacity for the use of technology.

“Georgia realizes that technology is a key component to improving education and preparing our students to be successful,” said State Superintendent of Schools Kathy Cox. “I am proud that Georgia — even in difficult budget times — invests in technology that helps our students and teachers be the best they can.”

“Technology cannot replace the interaction between a highly-qualified teacher and a student,” Superintendent Cox said, “but it can enhance that interaction and make it available to more students.”

This year, the report ranks states on two criteria: use of technology and capacity to use technology. Georgia was able to answer “yes” to every indicator in both of these categories and was one of only two states to get a score of 100 in both areas. (The state report includes a third criteria — access to technology — but those results were from last year’s report. You can see all of Georgia’s grades at http://tinyurl.com/GaTCGrades).

Georgia has many ongoing statewide technology initiatives, including:

  • Georgia Virtual School: The Georgia Virtual School, run by the Georgia Department of Education, offers students all over the state on-line access to rigorous classes, including Advanced Placement, foreign languages and core subjects. The state currently offers 121 on-line courses and this school year alone, nearly 4,000 students have enrolled in Georgia Virtual School classes.
  • Credit Recovery: The Georgia Virtual School is also being used for a credit recovery program that allows students to catch up if they have fallen behind. Just since January 2008, over 40,000 students across the state have used the virtual school resources for credit recovery.
  • Digital Content: Georgia is increasing access to digital content that can be used to help teachers prepare and supplement classroom learning. Much of this content is available or linked on www.georgiastandards.org.
  • Increased Bandwidth: At its March meeting, the State Board of Education approved a contract that doubled the bandwidth available to local school systems, starting July 1.

Link to article

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links for 2009-03-28

March 28, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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Teaching the Teachers

March 28, 2009 in Education by Stephen

Great article that shows how important this truly is.

Johanna Klinsky remembers her teacher training ruefully.

She loved the theory she learned, but her only classroom experience was 10 weeks of student teaching, which did nothing to prepare her for the chaos she would encounter as a teacher in an inner-city Chicago school.

“It was pure hell,” she remembers. “I was wildly unprepared.” In the end, though, she became part of the 55 percent or so of teachers who stick with the profession beyond five years. “But I guarantee you those kids didn’t learn a thing,” Ms. Klinsky says.

These days, she works as a coach in a Chicago teacher-preparation program far different from the one she went through: Aspiring teachers are paired with mentor teachers for a full year in urban classrooms before becoming teachers themselves. It’s one model gaining attention right now as educators and policymakers debate how best to train teachers — particularly for the high-needs urban classrooms that need good teachers the most and are often saddled with those who are least-prepared.

There’s now wide agreement that good teaching is the most crucial factor in raising student achievement. But when it comes to how to train those teachers — and how to make sure they are ready to hit the ground running and are likely to stick around — there’s a deep ideological divide. Some policymakers say the focus needs to be on improving traditional education schools, which produce 4 out of 5 teachers in the United States. Others are strong advocates of so-called alternative models designed to streamline entry into teaching for exceptionally talented students or mid-career professionals.

“The vast majority of both traditional teacher-education programs and alternative certification programs are not meeting the needs of kids,” says Barnett Berry, president of the Center for Teaching Quality in Hillsborough, N.C. The debate between the two is “a false dichotomy,” he argues, since there is often far more variation in quality and design within the two camps than between them.

Read the rest here.

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links for 2009-03-27

March 27, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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Six technologies soon to affect education.

March 26, 2009 in Education, Tech by Stephen

I already see some of these affecting education.

  • Collaborative environments
  • Online communication tools
  • Mobile devices
  • Cloud computing (My personal favorite!)
  • Smart objects
  • The personal web

Read the entire article here.

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March 25, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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Robert Marzano and Interactive Whiteboards

March 24, 2009 in Education, Tech, research by Stephen

It’s good to see some real data that shows actual improvement.

  • Of those classrooms employing these boards and using the voting technology, there was an immediate 17-percentile gain in scores.
  • He also found that if a teacher were using the board for 20-30 months, there was, on average, a 20 percentile gain. Thus, proving that with time and practice, a teacher can hone his/her skills to encourage even more student success.
  • The “Sweet Spot” he says, the perfect storm of student achievement according to his findings, was when the technology was used by an experienced teacher, having had it for 2 years, using it 75% of the time in class, who has had training. That teacher shows a whopping 29% gain in scores.

Read the rest here.

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March 24, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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MIT makes research available on the web.

March 24, 2009 in Education, research by Stephen

I hope this has the effect they are hoping for. I can’t wait to find out!

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) faculty voted unanimously March 18 to make the school’s scholarly research available for free on the internet, joining other noted universities that hope to encourage more scholarship and expand researchers’ audiences.

MIT’s approval of open access was driven partly by the rising cost of scholarly journals. In recent years, even the richest American universities have cut back on journal subscriptions that can cost as much as $20,000 annually, open-access experts said.

The open-access movement aims to put peer-reviewed research and literature on the internet for free and remove most copyright restrictions. Advocates believe this will invigorate more research across academia.

MIT joins about 30 universities and colleges–including Harvard, Stanford, and Boston universities–that have approved some form of open-access model, said Peter Suber, an open-access advocate and national expert. MIT will institute open access university-wide, joining Boston University as the only schools to take that approach. Other campuses have implemented open access one department at a time.

The open-access mandate is not the first time MIT has grabbed attention with academic openness. MIT’s OpenCourseWare project has made classroom lectures, syllabi, and assignments available for free on the internet–a move lauded by many in higher education.

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March 23, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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March 22, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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Nice Day at Berry

March 22, 2009 in Georgia, Nature, Photography by Stephen

I took a little trip up to Berry College with some friends on Sunday and got some pretty good photos.

Click each one for a larger version.

See the complete set here.

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links for 2009-03-21

March 21, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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Wi-Fi in your car?

March 20, 2009 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

It’s about to happen for Cadillac owners.

GM this week announced plans to equip the Cadillac CTS Sports Sedan with Wi-Fi Internet access from Autonet Mobile, branded as Cadillac WiFi by Autonet Mobile (apparently, they’re unable to spell Wi-Fi correctly). The new offering will be on display next month at the New York International Auto Show.

Autonet Mobile already has an agreement with Chrysler — but, as Engadget’s Darren Murph notes, “The agreement is a first for Caddy, and also the first luxury brand that Autonet Mobile has managed to invade.”

“Consumer demand is growing for new features that will enhance a digital lifestyle while on the go,” says Mark McNabb, Cadillac’s North America Vice President. “Today, they are frequently searching for Wi-Fi access wherever they may be.”

“There is some concern that within a few years this technology will be useless, once 3G and 4G cell phone networks and devices are more readily available, cheaper and more reliable,” warns SlashGear’s Brenda Stokes. “But for now, it’s still pretty cool.”

Read the rest here.

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March 20, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen

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March 19, 2009 in Delicious by Stephen