Social networking gives teachers an opportunity to engage students in questioning and learning outside the composition classroom. This presentation will showcase how we can use social media as an extension of the classroom to teach students research tactics and conventions, ultimately encouraging students to become informed participants in online communities.
lecture presented by Anna Rita L. Alomo at PAARL’s Seminar /Parallel Session-workshop on Library and Web 2011 (Holy Angel University, Angeles City, Pampanga, 19-20 August 2010)
Social networking gives teachers an opportunity to engage students in questioning and learning outside the composition classroom. This presentation will showcase how we can use social media as an extension of the classroom to teach students research tactics and conventions, ultimately encouraging students to become informed participants in online communities.
lecture presented by Anna Rita L. Alomo at PAARL’s Seminar /Parallel Session-workshop on Library and Web 2011 (Holy Angel University, Angeles City, Pampanga, 19-20 August 2010)
Online Learning Objects: Affecting Change through Cross-Disciplinary Practi...Emily Puckett Rodgers
For the past three years, the MELO project has brought together faculty from several gateway courses at U-M. These courses can be huge with hundreds of students per semester in a single class or smaller, more intimate classes. So how can we innovate across these spaces? We can share.
Plenary lecture at 2016 NTU Learning and Teaching Seminar - Students as Partn...Simon Bates
Plenary lecture at 2016 NTU Learning and Teaching Seminar - Students as Partners in Learning and Teaching. In this plenary session, I will present some practical exemplars of how student partnerships in learning and teaching, using a range of course examples from across UBC.
Even if the question of eLearning quality has been intensely discussed in the recent years, with several approaches and models arising, the implementation of concepts into practices remains contested (Elhers & Hilera, 2012 ) . Higher Education Institutions (HEI) are facing an important change:from the single institutional efforts to give answer to a very changing society and labour market to the transnational debates and pressure for HEI modernization, like the case of Bologna Process.In this context, eLearning is given different importance with regard to organizational innovation and the general HEI culture of quality (Ehlers & Schneckenberg, 2010). While it has been envisaged as the panacea to promote improvements in such different dimensions as cost-benefit ratio, access and inclusiveness, or the introduction of learner centered pedagogical approaches, very often the values and motivations entrenched in these dimensions clash and enter in more or less evident contradictions. As a result, the implementation of quality eLearning in HEI could be slowed down or blocked (Conole, Smith, & White, A critique of the impact of policy and funding, 2007).
In this article the authors introduce the results of an initial exploratory phase undertaken as part of a participatory action research funded by the Italian Ministry of Education PRIN (Research Project of National Interest, “Progetto di Ricerca d’Interesse Nazionale”) namely, “Evaluation for the improvement of educational contexts. A research involving University and local communities in the participatory development of innovative assessment models”.
On the basis of a qualitative epistemological approach (Creswell, 2007) (Denzin & Lincoln, 2011), several stakeholders from one University were interviewed, attempting to capture the several discourses on quality in HE and the embedded idea of quality eLearning . The results obtained were later conceptualized attempting to define quality as a complex object that requires mediation for the negotiation of the several perspectives.
“The aim of this session is to enhance your reflection in preparation for the assignment by sharing your evaluations and responding to others. You will present your three extended, reflective lesson evaluations, focusing on your pedagogical issue or question and making explicit links to theory and research. You should draw on a wide range of reading that will reflect your knowledge and understanding of the curriculum area, of teaching and learning issues and of reflective practice.”
Online Learning Objects: Affecting Change through Cross-Disciplinary Practi...Emily Puckett Rodgers
For the past three years, the MELO project has brought together faculty from several gateway courses at U-M. These courses can be huge with hundreds of students per semester in a single class or smaller, more intimate classes. So how can we innovate across these spaces? We can share.
Plenary lecture at 2016 NTU Learning and Teaching Seminar - Students as Partn...Simon Bates
Plenary lecture at 2016 NTU Learning and Teaching Seminar - Students as Partners in Learning and Teaching. In this plenary session, I will present some practical exemplars of how student partnerships in learning and teaching, using a range of course examples from across UBC.
Even if the question of eLearning quality has been intensely discussed in the recent years, with several approaches and models arising, the implementation of concepts into practices remains contested (Elhers & Hilera, 2012 ) . Higher Education Institutions (HEI) are facing an important change:from the single institutional efforts to give answer to a very changing society and labour market to the transnational debates and pressure for HEI modernization, like the case of Bologna Process.In this context, eLearning is given different importance with regard to organizational innovation and the general HEI culture of quality (Ehlers & Schneckenberg, 2010). While it has been envisaged as the panacea to promote improvements in such different dimensions as cost-benefit ratio, access and inclusiveness, or the introduction of learner centered pedagogical approaches, very often the values and motivations entrenched in these dimensions clash and enter in more or less evident contradictions. As a result, the implementation of quality eLearning in HEI could be slowed down or blocked (Conole, Smith, & White, A critique of the impact of policy and funding, 2007).
In this article the authors introduce the results of an initial exploratory phase undertaken as part of a participatory action research funded by the Italian Ministry of Education PRIN (Research Project of National Interest, “Progetto di Ricerca d’Interesse Nazionale”) namely, “Evaluation for the improvement of educational contexts. A research involving University and local communities in the participatory development of innovative assessment models”.
On the basis of a qualitative epistemological approach (Creswell, 2007) (Denzin & Lincoln, 2011), several stakeholders from one University were interviewed, attempting to capture the several discourses on quality in HE and the embedded idea of quality eLearning . The results obtained were later conceptualized attempting to define quality as a complex object that requires mediation for the negotiation of the several perspectives.
“The aim of this session is to enhance your reflection in preparation for the assignment by sharing your evaluations and responding to others. You will present your three extended, reflective lesson evaluations, focusing on your pedagogical issue or question and making explicit links to theory and research. You should draw on a wide range of reading that will reflect your knowledge and understanding of the curriculum area, of teaching and learning issues and of reflective practice.”
Similar to Huisman - Project based learning: faculty and librarian partners in pedagogy (poster) (20)
Plagiarism and AI tools: an example of linking information- and digital liter...
Huisman - Project based learning: faculty and librarian partners in pedagogy (poster)
1. Project-Based Learning: Rhonda Huisman,
Education Librarian
rhuisman@iupui.edu
Faculty and Librarian Partners in Pedagogy Indiana University-Purdue
University Indianapolis, IN USA
What is Project-Based Learning?
• PBL is an instructional approach that presents students
Driving
with complex, authentic problems or challenges, through Question
group collaboration, extensive periods of investigation,
and reflection on new ideas and opinions.
Rubric & Mini-
Reflect Lessons
Problem-Based vs. Project-Based
• Projects: single answer, thematic, curricular add-on,
teacher driven, summative, school-based.
ENTRY
• PBL: open-ended, driving question/challenge, curricular Document
focus, student driven, ongoing, real-world
Authentic
Audience& Need-to-
Critical Know
Friends
Standards and Alignment
• Learning activities help students develop 21st century Group
skills—visual, information, financial, and media/digital Norms/
literacy. Reading, Writing, and Arithmetic are “merged” Roles
with the 4 C’s : Communication, Collaboration, Creativity,
and Critical Thinking.
• Information literacy & research skills are at the heart of PBL!
Curricular Example
Entry Doc:
Letter
presenting
the potential
problem
Critical Friends:
Building
relationships &
utilizing
Group knowledge
Organization:
Committee
investigates
problem &
creates
presentation Mini-
Lessons:
Searching
resources,
Authentic citations, &
Issue: tech tools
Relevant &
creative
choices
Rubric:
Align w/
learning
outcomes
& standards
How can YOU Primary sources, websites, books, articles, tech tools, digital collections,
media, info lit standards, learning outcomes, open access,
support PBL? workshops/training, people, & community resources.
Register for the PBL
PBL Resources: • Buck Institute for Education: www.bie.org
• Edutopia: http://www.edutopia.org/project-based-learning
Institute in Indianapolis:
http://pblinstitute.com/
• Kenney, B. F. (2007). Revitalizing the one-shot instruction session using problem-based
learning. Reference and User Services Quarterly, 47 (4), 386-391.
• Bell, S.(2010). Project-based learning for the 21st century: Skills for the future. The
Clearing House, 83, 39-43.