Rubric to evaluate the challenge of Unit 4 "Design a digital safety, citizenship and learning resource for parents" from "The Goal-Minded Teacher" MOOC #EduGoalsMooc
The Road to EIT Accessibility at Four Colleges: A Centralized Approach3Play Media
In 2015, the Five College consortium in Western Massachusetts created a new shared position to better address the growing challenges associated with campus-wide Electronic and Information Technology (EIT) accessibility at four private colleges.
As the new EIT Accessibility Coordinator for Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges, Rob Eveleigh has worked with the schools to develop and implement parallel and collaborative campus-wide EIT accessibility solutions.
In this webinar, Rob will share the successes, challenges, and lessons learned in the concurrent development of four EIT Accessibility programs across the colleges he coordinates.
Topics will include:
Developing individual and centralized goals for EIT accessibility across four colleges
Parallel and collaborative solutions for multi-campus college EIT accessibility programs
Strategies for getting administrative buy-in for accessibility
EIT Accessibility rubrics and guidelines
Lessons learned in the first year of a shared EIT Accessibility Coordinator position
Campus-Wide Response to Captioning: Moving Towards Full CompliancePatrick Loftus
When it comes to video captioning in higher ed, one of the biggest questions on campus is, "Who’s going to own this?"
Is it the Disability Resource Center, the department creating or hosting the media, or the institution?
At the University of Arizona (UA), the answer is: All the above. UA is moving towards a fully captioned campus through a prioritization approach.
During this webinar, you'll learn how UA approaches captioning and the criteria used to determine allocation of funds for video captioning. Additionally, discover how successfully building trust and working closely with key personnel across campus units increases access to captioned media. Options for developing processes to ensure media are created accessibly across your campus will also be discussed.
Topics this session will cover include:
How UA approaches captioning and the criteria used to determine allocation of funds for captioning
How successfully building trust and working closely with key personnel across campus increases access
Options for developing processes to ensure media is created accessibly across campus
Implementing Universal and Inclusive Design for Online Learning Accessibility3Play Media
Accessibility is a critical component of any online learning content. With legal requirements stronger than ever, colleges and universities must find tangible ways to improve their web accessibility. This webinar will discuss how the principles of universal and inclusive design can be applied to the online learning environment, with a particular focus on the accessibility of course content and materials.
Howard Kramer, an Access Specialist at University of Colorado at Boulder, and Sheryl Burgstahler, the Director of Accessible Technology Services at the University of Washington, will explain what universal design is, the importance of incorporating universal design principles into online courses, and strategies for doing so.
This webinar will cover:
What is universal and inclusive design?
Strategies for implementing universal design
Best practices for the presentation of information and resources
Incorporating inclusiveness into a syllabus
Creating accessible documents and media
Providing information through multiple mediums
Resources and tools for incorporating inclusive design into the online environment
10 Tips for Creating Accessible Online Course Content3Play Media
In our media-centric society, the desire and need for online learning is at an all-time high. However, as more academic content goes online, the industry is running into a stumbling block as they struggle to make their online courses accessible. With recent lawsuits in higher education and updates to Section 508 on the horizon, it is more important than ever that online learning content be made accessible to students with disabilities.
In this webinar, Janet Sylvia, Web Accessibility Group Leader and Web Accessibility Trainer, will provide you with 10 tips for making your online course material accessible.
Janet will cover:
The challenges of making online course content accessible
The legal landscape for online learning and accessibility
Challenges and solutions for instructors and administrators
Developing an accessibility statement and accessibility policies
10 tips for creating accessible course content
The Road to EIT Accessibility at Four Colleges: A Centralized Approach3Play Media
In 2015, the Five College consortium in Western Massachusetts created a new shared position to better address the growing challenges associated with campus-wide Electronic and Information Technology (EIT) accessibility at four private colleges.
As the new EIT Accessibility Coordinator for Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges, Rob Eveleigh has worked with the schools to develop and implement parallel and collaborative campus-wide EIT accessibility solutions.
In this webinar, Rob will share the successes, challenges, and lessons learned in the concurrent development of four EIT Accessibility programs across the colleges he coordinates.
Topics will include:
Developing individual and centralized goals for EIT accessibility across four colleges
Parallel and collaborative solutions for multi-campus college EIT accessibility programs
Strategies for getting administrative buy-in for accessibility
EIT Accessibility rubrics and guidelines
Lessons learned in the first year of a shared EIT Accessibility Coordinator position
Campus-Wide Response to Captioning: Moving Towards Full CompliancePatrick Loftus
When it comes to video captioning in higher ed, one of the biggest questions on campus is, "Who’s going to own this?"
Is it the Disability Resource Center, the department creating or hosting the media, or the institution?
At the University of Arizona (UA), the answer is: All the above. UA is moving towards a fully captioned campus through a prioritization approach.
During this webinar, you'll learn how UA approaches captioning and the criteria used to determine allocation of funds for video captioning. Additionally, discover how successfully building trust and working closely with key personnel across campus units increases access to captioned media. Options for developing processes to ensure media are created accessibly across your campus will also be discussed.
Topics this session will cover include:
How UA approaches captioning and the criteria used to determine allocation of funds for captioning
How successfully building trust and working closely with key personnel across campus increases access
Options for developing processes to ensure media is created accessibly across campus
Implementing Universal and Inclusive Design for Online Learning Accessibility3Play Media
Accessibility is a critical component of any online learning content. With legal requirements stronger than ever, colleges and universities must find tangible ways to improve their web accessibility. This webinar will discuss how the principles of universal and inclusive design can be applied to the online learning environment, with a particular focus on the accessibility of course content and materials.
Howard Kramer, an Access Specialist at University of Colorado at Boulder, and Sheryl Burgstahler, the Director of Accessible Technology Services at the University of Washington, will explain what universal design is, the importance of incorporating universal design principles into online courses, and strategies for doing so.
This webinar will cover:
What is universal and inclusive design?
Strategies for implementing universal design
Best practices for the presentation of information and resources
Incorporating inclusiveness into a syllabus
Creating accessible documents and media
Providing information through multiple mediums
Resources and tools for incorporating inclusive design into the online environment
10 Tips for Creating Accessible Online Course Content3Play Media
In our media-centric society, the desire and need for online learning is at an all-time high. However, as more academic content goes online, the industry is running into a stumbling block as they struggle to make their online courses accessible. With recent lawsuits in higher education and updates to Section 508 on the horizon, it is more important than ever that online learning content be made accessible to students with disabilities.
In this webinar, Janet Sylvia, Web Accessibility Group Leader and Web Accessibility Trainer, will provide you with 10 tips for making your online course material accessible.
Janet will cover:
The challenges of making online course content accessible
The legal landscape for online learning and accessibility
Challenges and solutions for instructors and administrators
Developing an accessibility statement and accessibility policies
10 tips for creating accessible course content
Web 2.0 infomral online learning professional development program conducted as a trial at TNQIT - this presentation nwas made to the Ve-Mentoring netywork of TAFE Qld Australia
Individual Work (75 points)Click here to refer to the i.docxJeniceStuckeyoo
Individual Work (75 points):
Click
here
to refer to the instructions for the Unit 4 Lab tasks.
Please refer to the following for information about accessing and using LabSim
Getting Started with LabSim
This guide provides step-by-step instructions on the setup and usage of LabSim. In order to view this guide, click on the link entitled, ‘Getting Started - Student Accounts Not Activated by Teachers’. The link will open in the browser window.
LabSim Navigation
This guide will help you to learn about the navigation for LabSim. In order to view this guide, click on the link entitled, ‘Navigation’. This link will open in the browser window.
As you analyze any modern corporate setup, you will see that companies want to ensure that all users are aware of their own individual responsibility to help protect the enterprise. Social engineering (SE) is becoming a more prevalent threat at all levels of business. To combat it, you first need to understand it. Therefore, you must complete the following:
Describe what social engineering is and explain its existence and prevalence.
Explain why SE is an important part of an information technology security course.
Discuss employee and management responsibilities with regards to Information Security and combatting SE. Make sure your work clarifies your opinion as to who carries more responsibility for preventing SE, the employees or management? Provide examples to back up your statements.
Prepare a 1-page Word document that covers the above areas.
Group Work (135 points)
Your group is working for a global organization that handles highly classified intellectual property. In many situations and scenarios, the implementation and operations teams have been creating and setting up environments that violate your vision for security. After discussing the situation with various parties, they all admit they do not fully know or understand what is expected from them as they set up and configure the environment. To solve this situation, your group has been asked to create a network security policy for the organization.
Each group member will choose an element of the policy to design and the group will collaborate on what the overall design and outline should look like and include components from end user behavior and training plan, file and folder access, social engineering safeguards, bring your own device policies, use of external drives on company assets, security hardware, penetration testing, and affiliation of the information security department with law enforcement agencies. Students may either interview someone in the local FBI field office or research the FBI and DHS Web sites related to information sharing programs that the government offers, as this could be advantageous to the organization’s information security program.
To keep the scope narrow, your group should first describe what should be included and what should not be included in the policy (remember that a policy should clearly s.
Web 2.0 infomral online learning professional development program conducted as a trial at TNQIT - this presentation nwas made to the Ve-Mentoring netywork of TAFE Qld Australia
Individual Work (75 points)Click here to refer to the i.docxJeniceStuckeyoo
Individual Work (75 points):
Click
here
to refer to the instructions for the Unit 4 Lab tasks.
Please refer to the following for information about accessing and using LabSim
Getting Started with LabSim
This guide provides step-by-step instructions on the setup and usage of LabSim. In order to view this guide, click on the link entitled, ‘Getting Started - Student Accounts Not Activated by Teachers’. The link will open in the browser window.
LabSim Navigation
This guide will help you to learn about the navigation for LabSim. In order to view this guide, click on the link entitled, ‘Navigation’. This link will open in the browser window.
As you analyze any modern corporate setup, you will see that companies want to ensure that all users are aware of their own individual responsibility to help protect the enterprise. Social engineering (SE) is becoming a more prevalent threat at all levels of business. To combat it, you first need to understand it. Therefore, you must complete the following:
Describe what social engineering is and explain its existence and prevalence.
Explain why SE is an important part of an information technology security course.
Discuss employee and management responsibilities with regards to Information Security and combatting SE. Make sure your work clarifies your opinion as to who carries more responsibility for preventing SE, the employees or management? Provide examples to back up your statements.
Prepare a 1-page Word document that covers the above areas.
Group Work (135 points)
Your group is working for a global organization that handles highly classified intellectual property. In many situations and scenarios, the implementation and operations teams have been creating and setting up environments that violate your vision for security. After discussing the situation with various parties, they all admit they do not fully know or understand what is expected from them as they set up and configure the environment. To solve this situation, your group has been asked to create a network security policy for the organization.
Each group member will choose an element of the policy to design and the group will collaborate on what the overall design and outline should look like and include components from end user behavior and training plan, file and folder access, social engineering safeguards, bring your own device policies, use of external drives on company assets, security hardware, penetration testing, and affiliation of the information security department with law enforcement agencies. Students may either interview someone in the local FBI field office or research the FBI and DHS Web sites related to information sharing programs that the government offers, as this could be advantageous to the organization’s information security program.
To keep the scope narrow, your group should first describe what should be included and what should not be included in the policy (remember that a policy should clearly s.
Comparativa de Iniciativas en Materia de Competecencia Digital del Alumnado e...INTEF
Esta publicación es un informe sobre las distintas iniciativas en materia de Competencia Digital del Alumnado en España, realizado por el Ministerio de Educación y
Formación Profesional del Gobierno de España, a través del Área de Formación en Línea y Competencia Digital Educativa del Instituto Nacional de Tecnologías Educativas y Formación del Profesorado (INTEF), en colaboración con la Ponencia de Competencia Digital Educativa, coordinada por dicha Área, y formada por responsables de 15 CCAA, 15 Universidades españolas, docentes de todos los niveles educativos, expertos y consultores externos.
Junio 2018.
Esta rúbrica te servirá de guía a la hora de realizar la evaluación de tus pares y autoevaluación del producto elaborado para el MOOC "Realidad Virtual en Educación" del INTEF (Instituto Nacional de Tecnologías Educativas y Formación del Profesorado).
Esta rúbrica te servirá de guía a la hora de realizar la evaluación de tus pares y autoevaluación del producto elaborado para el MOOC "Realidad Virtual en Educación" del INTEF (Instituto Nacional de Tecnologías Educativas y Formación del Profesorado).
Esta rúbrica te servirá de guía a la hora de realizar la evaluación de tus pares y autoevaluación del producto elaborado para el MOOC "Realidad Virtual en Educación" del INTEF (Instituto Nacional de Tecnologías Educativas y Formación del Profesorado).
Experiencia en la implementación de la asignatura informática en el aula virt...INTEF
'Experiencia en la implementación de la asignatura informática en el aula virtual de la Universidad Virtual de Salud' Colectivo de profesores de Informática Médica de la Facultad de Medicina Manuel Fajardo de la Universidad de Ciencias Médicas de La Habana (Cuba). IV Maratón #AprendeINTEF 'Experimentación educativa digital'
Los Objetivos De Sostenibilidad en Educación: Trabajando por proyectos.INTEF
'Los Objetivos De Sostenibilidad en Educación: Trabajando por proyectos.' Angels Soriano Sánchez. IV Maratón #AprendeINTEF 'Experimentación educativa digital'.
Marketing Digital y Emocional Cogestionado por La Mancha CuentaminándonosINTEF
'Marketing Digital y Emocional Cogestionado por La Mancha Cuentaminándonos' Ángel Francisco Delgado Muñoz. IV Maratón #AprendeINTEF 'Experimentación educativa digital'
Programa del IV Maratón #AprendeINTEF 'Experimentación educativa digital'INTEF
Cuarto maratón web de fin de semana para docentes conectados interesados en el uso y puesta en práctica de proyectos transformadores en centros educativos. Se trata de un evento conectado en directo para docentes que quieran aprender de y con otros docentes que presenten sus experiencias y buenas prácticas de aula en primera persona a través de una conexión web abierta.
La temática a desarrollar se vincula con la experimentación educativa en materia de competencia digital.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp Network
Unit 4 - Design a digital safety, citizenship and learning resource for parents Rubric #EduGoalsMooc
1. “The Goal-Minded Teacher” MOOC #EduGoalsMooc
Module 4 – Peer Assessment Activity (p2p): Design a digital safety, citizenship and learning resource for parents
The rubric contains guidelines for the evaluation of your own work, as well as the work of the other participants in the peer to peer evaluation
process.
The rubric is a guide to help you reflect on your learning process, discuss with other participants or your community and improve as both
reflection on your own work and reviewing your colleagues' will allow you to learn and improve.
This rubric contains 4 criteria, each ranked on a scale of 0 to 4 as follows:
(0) Link issues
(1) Missing/not applicable
(2) Keep working
(3) On the right track
(4) Great work
2. “The Goal-Minded Teacher” MOOC #EduGoalsMooc
(0) Link issues (1) Missing/not
applicable
(2) Keep working (3) On the right track (4) Great work
Content
The link is not
provided or it is not
accessible.
Most of the content is
confusing, inaccurate,
or lacks useful tips
and resources about
digital safety and
citizenship.
The content needs to be
engaging for parents and
provide more information,
tips, and resources about
digital safety and citizenship.
Most of the content is engaging
and easy to understand and
provides valuable information,
tips, and resources about
digital safety and citizenship.
The resource provides
valuable information, tips,
and resources about digital
safety and citizenship. The
resources are engaging for
parents and easy to
understand.
Layout and Design The link is not
provided or it is not
accessible.
The layout and design
is unorganized. The
fonts, animations or
background are
distracting.
The layout and design is
confusing in some areas or
some of the fonts and
background are difficult to
read.
The layout is well-organized
and designed with a few
exceptions.
The layout is well-organized
with easy to read font and a
great contrast between the
background and text. The
design is engaging and
appropriate for parents.
Incorporation of
Visuals and
Multimedia
The link is not
provided or it is not
accessible.
Most of the visuals
and multimedia have
major issues which
make them difficult
to access.
Some of the multimedia and
visuals aren’t aligned, are
difficult to hear, or not
engaging for parents.
Most of the multimedia and
visuals are engaging and
appropriate for parents, easy
to listen to or see, and focus on
digital safety and citizenship.
All multimedia and visuals are
engaging and appropriate for
parents, easy to listen to or
see, and focus on digital
safety and citizenship.
Navigation The link is not
provided or it is not
accessible.
The navigation is not
user-friendly and
many of the links
don’t work or are
missing.
The navigation is somewhat
confusing, some links don’t
work, and/or no translation
help or tutorials are provided.
The navigation is user-friendly
and translation help or tutorials
are provided; however, a few
of the links are broken or there
are issues with the translation
help.
The navigation is user-friendly
for parents and all the links
work. Translation help or
tutorials are provided to help
parents who struggle with
their English.