Neuroscience: implications for education and lifelong learning. Royal Society. UK

Posted by Celia Walter | 1 Mar, 2011

This report highlights advances in neuroscience with potential implications for education and lifelong learning. The report authors, including neuroscientists, cognitive psychologists and education specialists, agree that if applied properly, the impacts of neuroscience could be highly beneficial in schools and beyond.  The report argues that our growing understanding of how we learn should play a much greater role in education policy and should also feature in teacher training. The report also discusses the challenges and limitations of applying neuroscience in the classroom and in learning environments throughout life.

+ Direct link to Full Report with Appendices (PDF; 1.7 MB)

Library Space as Learning Space

Posted by Celia Walter | 22 Dec, 2010

An article by Keith Webster (k.webster@library.uq.edu.au) is University Librarian and Director of Learning Services at the University of Queensland, Australia. EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 45, no. 6 (November/December 2010)

It is fitting that this E-Content column is being published in the EDUCAUSE Review issue immediately following the E-Content column written by David W. Lewis.1 Much of the work I am discussing here had its starting point in a model developed by Lewis—a model that depicted a compelling vision for academic libraries over the next twenty years.2 In seeking to protect the library's role as a vital part of scholarship, Lewis argued that a number of strategies were available to those charged with library funding and administration. Broadly, his thesis recognized that libraries would continue to be heavily used by students, though largely independent of print collections, and that librarians' roles would become much more grounded in teaching and research enterprises, frequently outside the confines of the library building... [More]

Searching For Better Research Habits

Posted by Celia Walter | 30 Sep, 2010

...“Students do not have adequate information literacy skills when they come to college, and this goes for even high-achieving students,” said Asher, the lead research anthropologist at the Enthographic Research in Illinois Academic Libraries (ERIAL) Project, which recently studied the search habits of more than 600 Illinois students spanning a range of institutions and demographic groups.

“And they’re not getting adequate training as they’re going through the curriculum,” he said.

...“Student overuse of simple search leads to problems of having too much information or not enough information … both stemming from a lack of sufficient conceptual understanding of how information is organized,” he said.

...Those libraries that have tried to teach good search principles have failed, he continued, because they have spent “too much time trying to teach tools and not enough time trying to teach concepts.” It would be more useful for librarians to focus training sessions on how to "critically think through how to construct a strategy for finding information about a topic that is unknown to you," Asher said in a follow-up e-mail to Inside Higher Ed.

...[More]

From Inside Higher Ed

Thanks to Ingrid Thomson for this.

 

7 Things You Should Know About Assessing Online Team-Based Learning

Posted by Celia Walter | 23 Aug, 2010
The folks at Educause have put together a new “7 Things” guide, covering 7 Things You Should Know About Assessing Online Team-Based Learning. As usual, the quick reference source answers the following questions:

 

  1. What is it?
  2. How does it work?
  3. Who’s doing it?
  4. Why is it significant?
  5. What are the downsides?
  6. Where is it going?
  7. What are the implications for teaching and learning?

A Framework for Teaching with Twitter By Mark Sample

Posted by Celia Walter | 23 Aug, 2010
Faculty are increasingly experimenting with social media, and it's exciting to find more and more courses incorporating Twitter, a ProfHacker favorite. Just last week on ProfHacker Ryan provided an excellent introduction to Twitter, while earlier in the summer Brian reflected on his use of Twitter in the classroom during Spring 2010. As we gear up for the Fall 2010 semester, I wanted to revisit the idea of teaching with Twitter.

I'll address my own pedagogical use of Twitter in a future ProfHacker post, but for today I want to share a general framework for Twitter adoption in the classroom, originally sketched out in late August 2009 by Rick Reo. Rick is an instructional designer at George Mason University, and he'd been keeping tabs on the different ways instructors were using Twitter in their teaching. Rick sent a draft of this adoption matrix to the university's Teaching with Technology listserv, and I soon began trying to situate my own Twitter use on the chart...[more]

From: Chronicle of Higher Education ProfHacker blog

How Twitter in the Classroom is Boosting Student Engagement

Posted by Celia Walter | 3 Mar, 2010

 

Greg Ferenstein at Mashable discusses How Twitter in the Classroom is Boosting Student Engagement by increasing participation and building a community of learners.

“Professors who wish to engage students during large lectures face an uphill battle. Not only is it a logistical impossibility for 200+ students to actively participate in a 90 minute lecture, but the downward sloping cone-shape of a lecture hall induces a one-to-many conversation. This problem is compounded by the recent budget cuts that have squeezed ever more students into each room.

Fortunately, educators (including myself) have found that Twitter is an effective way to broaden participation in lecture. Additionally, the ubiquity of laptops and smartphones have made the integration of Twitter a virtually bureaucracy-free endeavor. This post describes the two main benefits professors find when using Twitter in lecture.”

 

From iLibrarian blog

Journal of applied research in higher education

Posted by Celia Walter | 25 Feb, 2010

The Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education is an online peer-reviewed journal, the central aim of which is to promote improved practice by encouraging informed debate into pedagogic and related matters in higher education. Each issue comprises of an editorial, papers from all disciplines and subject areas covering higher education policy and management, and learning and teaching (including technology-enhanced learning); and developments, news and reviews. Individual papers are available as PDF downloads. http://jarhe.research.glam.ac.uk/

From Intute.ac.uk

Beyond Social Networking...Toward Learning Communities.

Posted by Celia Walter | 27 Jul, 2009

Ruth Reynard, Dean of Faculty Services for Career Education Corp, writes for Campus Technology about creating effective learning communities using social networking websites in Beyond Social Networking: Building Toward Learning Communities.

“Much has been written recently about the impact of social networking tools in teaching and learning and how educators can build on the skills of their students in using these tools. My discussion here does not negate that good work but introduces the idea that social networking is only the beginning of a longer and more complex process of socially constructed learning and ultimately collaboration and knowledge building. That is, if educators only integrate the ability of students to connect and socialize, deeper points of learning will be missed. While good teaching and learning rests on effective relationships (Cummins, 2000), in an active learning community, those relationships should evolve into actual idea exchange and knowledge construction.”

From iLibrarian blog

Teaching Generation M - A Handbook for Librarians and Educators

Posted by Celia Walter | 5 Jul, 2009

Teaching Generation M - A Handbook for Librarians and Educators"Working with and devising quality educational resources for Generation M - today's group of teens and young adults born in the early 1980s through the mid 1990s - can be a challenge for librarians and instructors who may not relate well to their multitasking, technophile students. Here, editors Cvetkovic ( named of one of the '2005 Library Movers and Shakers' by Library Journal) and Lackie (the 2006 recipient of the ALA Kenneth Haycock Award for Promoting Librarianship) answer the core questions you'll need to facilitate new and powerful learning opportunities for your Gen M audience"

From Peter Scott's Library blog

Effective Practice in a Digital Age

Posted by Celia Walter | 1 Jul, 2009

JISC Podcast/Press Release: Effective Practice in a Digital Age

"In a world where we are surrounded by technology, where boundaries between our personal and professional lives merge, JISC's e-Learning team have been looking at how to support teachers, researchers and academics with best practice advice and guidance for working in a 'digital age'. In this podcast with Rebecca O'Brien, Sarah Knight, a JISC e-Learning programme manager, shares the success of the team's Effective Best Practice guide series and launches a new publication 'Effective Practice in a Digital Age'. This new guide puts the teacher and learning at its centre and takes those new and experienced in using Web 2.0 technologies on a journey to enhance their practices and illustrates through case studies how practitioners are opening up their practice and enhancing the learner experience as well as their own"

From Peter Scott's Library blog

Students' "Hunt-fetch-and-finish drill": that's library research

Posted by Celia Walter | 12 Jun, 2009

When professors assign a library project to undergraduates, just what do they expect students to learn from the research part of the experience? What do professors think students are doing to come up with the sources in their papers? If there is a discrepancy between pedagogical intent and actual student research behavior, how do faculty members address it? Or do they care, especially since they may not spot a student’s research problem until the end of a course and may well not see that student again? Does the end of a well-written, well-supported argument justify whatever means a student uses to acquire sources?

These are issues I often fret about, both in private and aloud when I compare notes with other academic librarians. My concern arises not from a general suspicion that students are engaging in what I call WIGWAM research (Wikipedia – Internet – Google – Without Anything More), but from what students themselves have been telling me for decades. It is clear from e-mail, reference encounters, research consultations in my office, and questions that arise in library instruction sessions, that most students simply do not retain the concepts and logic involved in discovering information sources — never mind the principles for evaluating the sources they do turn up. Even students whom I’ve counseled extensively in the past, and whose projects turned out well, seem clueless the very next semester when they face a research assignment in a different course.

Here are the most persistent and troubling confessions I’ve heard from students over the years, with my speculation on their cause and cure. Some of these statements have been blurted out, others are responses to a question I’ve asked.

1. "I have no idea [about the dates or details of my topic]."

...

2. I’m wondering why I can’t I find this periodical article in the library’s catalog.

...

3. This magazine isn’t digitized, so I guess we don’t have it and I can’t get it.

...

4. I need to change my topic because there’s not enough stuff [sic] about it.

...

5. I’m not clear about what makes an article scholarly or a book a monograph.

...

6. I can’t find books about [an event that occurred last month].

...

7. I’m confused about the difference between a primary and a secondary source.

...

8. I’m afraid I’ll be cheating if I take references from someone else’s bibliography.

...

Interestingly, these revelations have not changed significantly in the past few decades, except that students now have how-to questions about technology as well. What worries me most today is the absence of undergraduate concern about evaluating sources as their research proceeds: They almost always want to gather sources first and then assess them, going back to the well for more if, and only if, their professor says they need additional support for one of their points. In other words, they do not see library research as a dynamic, iterative process, but as a hunt-fetch-and-finish drill. Further, students arrive in college believing that if a source exists and seems relevant, then it must be good and sufficient for their project.

Their savvy about what’s possible in a “free” Web world is at odds with their understanding — which is almost nil — of how knowledge of various sorts is created, packaged, transmitted, delivered, and paid for. These are serious misunderstandings with profound consequences, but if faculty and librarians share their perceptions and find ways to coordinate their messages, then student admissions of the future should, at the least, be different.

Mary W. George is senior reference librarian at Princeton University Library. She is author of the new book The Elements of Library Research: What Every Student Needs to Know(Princeton University Press).

From : Inside Higher Ed. Admissions of Another Sort

 

Yale Courses: YouTube

Posted by Celia Walter | 29 Mar, 2009
Yale Courses: YouTube
This YouTube Channel is maintained by Yale University. It provides free acess to an online collection of film clips and videos of lectures and courses courses taught by staff at Yale University. These cover a range of subject areas including literature, philosophy, politics, psychology and religious studies. Most courses are at an introductory undergraduate level. The video materials are in many cases linked to online course available via the Open Yale OpenCourseWare website, a link to which is provided. Users should consult the latter for information on the course objectives, plus transcripts and reading lists. Copyright and technical information is displayed. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.youtube.com/yalecourses

More on AcademicEarth: Academic Earth Aggregates Video Lectures

Posted by Celia Walter | 6 Mar, 2009

A new online portal called Academic Earth has aggregated the video lectures available from universities such as MIT, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, and Berkeley. According to The Bivings Report they plan to roll out many social features for users over the next couple of months. Another good place to look for open courseware and lecture materials is the Open Courseware Consortium where you can browse or Google across the collections of the 200 international universities who provide OCW.

From iLibrarian blog

The Changing Learner Experience, UK

Posted by Celia Walter | 11 Feb, 2009
Committee of Inquiry into the Changing Learner Experience
The Committee of Inquiry into the Changing Learner Experience is a group of high level educational policy makers looking at the policy and strategic challenges of the dramatic growth in the availability of a wide range of affordable, high quality personal communication tools and technologies. Essentially they are examining how the students expect technology to be part of their learning experience in universities, especially with regard to the use of Web 2.0 technologies. Specific areas of enquiry include learner behaviour, attitudes and expectations, drivers of the use of technology and access to resources. Their emerging findings are available, with a final report due out early in 2009. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.clex.org.uk/

Global Issues in Context, an e-resource. Free access till 9th Frebruary 2009

Posted by Celia Walter | 27 Jan, 2009

GALE/Cengage Learning has just released Global Issues in Context, an e-resource with a non-U.S.-centric view that examines global issues and events and attempts to help students “… develop the framework to better understand 21st-century issues, helping them think critically about global connections and the interdependence of all nations.” The site includes: “background information and explanations of the impact of issues and events, expert perspectives analyzing issues from cultural, religious, political, social, economic, scientific and health standpoints, full-text international magazines, academic journals and news sources, primary sources (such as legislation and court proceedings), statistics (including interactive graphs, tables and charts)…,

250 media-rich issue pages, 200 country pages, 400 international newspapers and magazines,

and a multimedia library.”

 

GALE/Cengage Learning is making this new file available for free to e-Views readers until February 9, 2009, via this link: Global Issues in Context.

 

Some of the topics:

AIDS Orphans

 

Global Economic Crisis

Global Warming

Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Restrictions on Women
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