Exploring Identity, Fostering Agency, Discovering How Students Benefit.pdfBonner Foundation
Join this session to learn and share best practices and emerging models for transformative education involving civic learning and democratic engagement. In a conversational format, presenters will share knowledge and personal experience about the ways in which colleges and universities, as well as faculty and staff, can design the spaces and intentional experiences that support students to develop civic identity. We’ll highlight innovations and point to supporting research and scholarship, while inviting you to do so. Presented by Marina Barnett (Widener University); Samantha Ha DiMuzio (Boston College); Ariane Hoy (Bonner Foundation); and Paul Schadewald (Bringing Theory to Practice) for the Feb 6-7, 2023 CLDE Forum: Bridging the Divides: Including All Students: Diversity, Equity, and High-Impact Civic Learning Pathways
Dr. Julie Plaut presented to the "Engage Your Teaching" workshop at the University of St. Thomas on May 26, 2015 on standard "best practices" when engaging in the community.
Education is a journey that extends far beyond the walls of a classroom. While formal lessons impart academic knowledge, the true essence of learning lies in the holistic development of students.
The Greenlining Institute was founded as a response to institutional redlining of communities of color from economic opportunities. Twenty-two years later, the organization has grown in both scale and impact, including incorporating a strong commitment to the leadership development of emerging leaders of color. With its successes and challenges, Greenlining has learned many lessons on the road to positive social change. This webinar will focus on how the organization has evolved and created a renowned leadership development program for social justice leaders, while always maintaining its roots in racial equity and advocacy. In using the organization’s journey as a case study, participants will receive a perspective and best practices for incorporating a leadership development program from foundation to evaluation.
ePortfolios and Digital Badges to Motivate and Engage Service LearningKyle Lantz
This presentation was for the regional AAEEBL conference hosted at the University of Notre Dame in May 2016. This short presentation was meant to highlight a process by which eportfolios and digital badges were used in a service learning course and consider opportunities and potential areas of growth moving forward.
Badges at the formal/informal interface: badge use, functioning and learners ...Simon Cross
This presentation delivered on 17 December 2013 at the Open University E-Learning Community Event reported on the learners use of and attitudes towards badges in two ‘massive’ open online courses delivered by the Open University in 2013; one as part of JISC funded research project and the other as part of a taught postgraduate course. It will review the range of functions that badges can serve including consideration of psychological, sociological, cultural and reputational functions and using this to make a distinction between possible formative and summative roles. Data from end of courses surveys and user posts on the course site and social media will be used to examine what value participants ascribed to badges. Whilst the majority of respondents felt the opportunity to earn badges contributed positively to the course, some remained sceptical or concerned about their role and impact.
Lead presenter: http://iet.open.ac.uk/people/s.j.cross
Cross-Institutional Partnerships for City Scale Learning Ecologies - Digital ...Rafi Santo
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Expanded Learning Opportunities are reshaping when, where, and how student learning occurs. A well-designed and well-implemented ELO program can complement in-school learning and support academic growth by combining various ways for students to engage in learning. How do organizations, including schools, districts, and partners, build “expanded learning ecologies” for youth that support connected learning? The goal of this panel is to inform participants about building expanded learning ecologies to scale and across boundaries showcasing successes and challenges by presenting recent examples from Chicago, New York, and Providence, RI. To address the topic of scale, we will share examples of efforts that aim to reach many youth across many programs, beyond a single intervention or setting. To illustrate crossed boundaries, we will explain efforts to connect various nodes in a youths’ learning ecology (e.g., in-school, out-of-school, individual passion, etc.).
Chicago: The first Chicago Summer of Learning was a citywide mayoral initiative designed to expand learning opportunities for youth during the summer of 2013. More than 100 organizations took part in this effort to recognize learning in out-of-school spaces through digital badges. More than 200,000 youth participated in CSOL programs, and more than 100,000 badges were earned by youth of all ages. Chicago took a first, critical step in enacting core principles of connected learning and laying the foundation for a vibrant ecosystem of learning opportunities. As ELOs begin to signify experiences that link to content- and career-specific pathways, we expect to see even greater potential to transform youths’ lives.
New York: The NYC Department of Education’s Digital Ready program is designed to help participating NYC public high schools use technology and student-centered learning to improve their students’ readiness for college and careers. With Digital Ready’s explicit focus on student-centered learning, expanded learning opportunities play an important role in preparing students to explore, engage, and practice their interests. The Digital Ready and Hive Learning Network teams have worked to coordinate a collaborative effort between 10 innovative high schools and 13 groundbreaking Hive NYC organizations to provide students with a range of opportunities that blend in-school and out-of-school learning with experiences that are production-centered and creativity-focused.
Providence: Since its creation in 2004, the Providence After School Alliance has built two citywide expanded learning models in collaboration with the City of Providence, the Providence Public Schools and the local community: the AfterZone for middle school, and The Hub for high school. These models offer Providence youth a coordinated schedule of in-school, after-school summer learning programs for high school credit.
Social Strategies for Successful Student EngagementSalesforce.org
Engage in a discussion about how leading institutions are applying social technologies to attract new students, engage and retain their existing student population, and inspire and re-connect with alumni.
Sponsored by SJSU's ECampus, Katherine D. Harris (Professor, English) presents a workshop for all faculty to dive into or upgrade their use of digital methods, skills, and tools in their courses. For definitions within this slide deck, please cite:
Frost Davis, Gold, Harris, DRAFT - Introduction, *Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities,* MLA (forthcoming 2019). Accessed April 9, 2019.
MADLaT 2016 Open Badges - Making Learning Visible Don Presant
Open Badges are gaining acceptance as eCredentials by educators, professional bodies and employers around the world because they enable better ways to map, recognize and share learning, including informal learning. Quality Open Badges are trustable tokens of skills and achievements that can be shared in e-portfolios, talent pipelines and social media. Open Badges are modular and “stackable”: they can be linked together into flexible development pathways and can support Competency Based Education and learning transfer.
This fast-paced presentation lores global practices in Open Badge systems using living examples and case studies, inside and outside formal education.
Uma curta apresentação sobre o impacto das tecnologias de Inteligência Artificial no contexto do ensino, baseanda numa analogia com o universo do Dune.
The slides have little text and it is complicated to understand the narrative. I'll give you an idea of the context of the subjects I'll be teaching and which are referred to in the slides:
BDTSS - databases and server-side technologies is an undergraduate course
Web Project is a discipline taught at the end of the first year of a master's degree
Mentoria entre pares de estudantes para estudantesCarlos Santos
Que transformações poderão acontecer quando os estudantes mentores têm a liberdade e responsabilidade de conceptualizar, preparar e realizar as sessões de mentoria para outros estudantes?
O ponto de partida para esta conversa é desafiar a refletir sobre estratégias de mentoria entre pares, que procurem explorar o potencial criativo e de inovação que existe em cada estudante. No entanto, para que esse potencial se possa revelar é indispensável que o professor tenha a capacidade de se colocar em segundo plano, apoiando e validando, mas dando espaço e liberdade para que os estudantes mentores assumam a liderança e responsabilidade pelo processo.
Nesta sessão vamos começar por partilhar uma iniciativa baseada nesta abordagem, no contexto do ensino superior (AVILA Crew), apresentando as estratégias e conteúdos utilizados em sessões de mentoria já realizadas. Partindo da inspiração do modelo anterior, vamos partilhar a sua adaptação para o modelo adotado no projeto “Aprender Mentorando”, implementado em 3 agrupamentos de escolas nacionais, procurando demonstrar a viabilidade da sua adoção em todos os ciclos de estudo.
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Join this session to learn and share best practices and emerging models for transformative education involving civic learning and democratic engagement. In a conversational format, presenters will share knowledge and personal experience about the ways in which colleges and universities, as well as faculty and staff, can design the spaces and intentional experiences that support students to develop civic identity. We’ll highlight innovations and point to supporting research and scholarship, while inviting you to do so. Presented by Marina Barnett (Widener University); Samantha Ha DiMuzio (Boston College); Ariane Hoy (Bonner Foundation); and Paul Schadewald (Bringing Theory to Practice) for the Feb 6-7, 2023 CLDE Forum: Bridging the Divides: Including All Students: Diversity, Equity, and High-Impact Civic Learning Pathways
Dr. Julie Plaut presented to the "Engage Your Teaching" workshop at the University of St. Thomas on May 26, 2015 on standard "best practices" when engaging in the community.
Education is a journey that extends far beyond the walls of a classroom. While formal lessons impart academic knowledge, the true essence of learning lies in the holistic development of students.
The Greenlining Institute was founded as a response to institutional redlining of communities of color from economic opportunities. Twenty-two years later, the organization has grown in both scale and impact, including incorporating a strong commitment to the leadership development of emerging leaders of color. With its successes and challenges, Greenlining has learned many lessons on the road to positive social change. This webinar will focus on how the organization has evolved and created a renowned leadership development program for social justice leaders, while always maintaining its roots in racial equity and advocacy. In using the organization’s journey as a case study, participants will receive a perspective and best practices for incorporating a leadership development program from foundation to evaluation.
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This presentation was for the regional AAEEBL conference hosted at the University of Notre Dame in May 2016. This short presentation was meant to highlight a process by which eportfolios and digital badges were used in a service learning course and consider opportunities and potential areas of growth moving forward.
Badges at the formal/informal interface: badge use, functioning and learners ...Simon Cross
This presentation delivered on 17 December 2013 at the Open University E-Learning Community Event reported on the learners use of and attitudes towards badges in two ‘massive’ open online courses delivered by the Open University in 2013; one as part of JISC funded research project and the other as part of a taught postgraduate course. It will review the range of functions that badges can serve including consideration of psychological, sociological, cultural and reputational functions and using this to make a distinction between possible formative and summative roles. Data from end of courses surveys and user posts on the course site and social media will be used to examine what value participants ascribed to badges. Whilst the majority of respondents felt the opportunity to earn badges contributed positively to the course, some remained sceptical or concerned about their role and impact.
Lead presenter: http://iet.open.ac.uk/people/s.j.cross
Cross-Institutional Partnerships for City Scale Learning Ecologies - Digital ...Rafi Santo
Rob DiRenzo, Alex Molina, Sybil Madison-Boyd, Rafi Santo, Clare Bertrand
Expanded Learning Opportunities are reshaping when, where, and how student learning occurs. A well-designed and well-implemented ELO program can complement in-school learning and support academic growth by combining various ways for students to engage in learning. How do organizations, including schools, districts, and partners, build “expanded learning ecologies” for youth that support connected learning? The goal of this panel is to inform participants about building expanded learning ecologies to scale and across boundaries showcasing successes and challenges by presenting recent examples from Chicago, New York, and Providence, RI. To address the topic of scale, we will share examples of efforts that aim to reach many youth across many programs, beyond a single intervention or setting. To illustrate crossed boundaries, we will explain efforts to connect various nodes in a youths’ learning ecology (e.g., in-school, out-of-school, individual passion, etc.).
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New York: The NYC Department of Education’s Digital Ready program is designed to help participating NYC public high schools use technology and student-centered learning to improve their students’ readiness for college and careers. With Digital Ready’s explicit focus on student-centered learning, expanded learning opportunities play an important role in preparing students to explore, engage, and practice their interests. The Digital Ready and Hive Learning Network teams have worked to coordinate a collaborative effort between 10 innovative high schools and 13 groundbreaking Hive NYC organizations to provide students with a range of opportunities that blend in-school and out-of-school learning with experiences that are production-centered and creativity-focused.
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MADLaT 2016 Open Badges - Making Learning Visible Don Presant
Open Badges are gaining acceptance as eCredentials by educators, professional bodies and employers around the world because they enable better ways to map, recognize and share learning, including informal learning. Quality Open Badges are trustable tokens of skills and achievements that can be shared in e-portfolios, talent pipelines and social media. Open Badges are modular and “stackable”: they can be linked together into flexible development pathways and can support Competency Based Education and learning transfer.
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Decentralized badges in educational contexts: the integration of OpenBadges in SAPO Campus
1. Decentralized badges in educational
contexts: the integration of OpenBadges
in SAPO Campus
The PLE Conference, Berlin, 11 july 2013
Carlos Santos, Luís Pedro, Sara Almeida and Mónica Aresta
University of Aveiro, Portugal
2. The potential of badges
in educational contexts
• Immediate feedback
• Collaboration
• Control and ownership
• Game-content
3. The potential of badges
in educational contexts
• Democratize learning and promote lifelong
skills
• Promote alternative ways of assessment
• Improve users’ engagement and motivation
8. Peer-support for badges attribution
concept
issuer
learner
+
issuer
+
recommender
backpack
decision making support
no need to follow everything
informal content
community engagement
10. Create, attribute and support badges
on SAPO Campus
Create Attribute Support
Where
Institutions and
groups
Institutions and
groups
Institutions and
groups
Who
School by group
administrators
School by group
administrators
Any user
How
By using the
integrated Badge
Constructor Tool
• The user profile
• The page of the
badge
• Any public activity
item
• The user profile
• The page of the
badge
• Any public activity
item