The calm before the storm
xkcd comic from xkcd.com Being in my last few days of summer vacation for this summer, I've started thinking about all the things I have to do, and want to do, in my professional and school life. August is drawing nearer, and I have to buy some plane tickets to Edmonton, and also book a hotel room for my stay during the orientation week for my EdD program. I am excited, yet a bit "freaked out"; not
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The failure of teaching and learning centers.
Last week I caught something on inside higher education on the closure of Teaching and Learning Centers (CTL hereafter) in colleges and universities around th country, at a time, where seemingly, there ought to be more demand to keep them open, engage, and train faculty, and be a catalyst for a better college experience for everyone involved. This is what I remember from the article that I read when
MOOC on vacation: what does "completing a MOOC" mean?
Fri, Jun 6 2014 03:28
| #altcred, certification, cMOOC, completion, coursera, engagement, LearnerAnalysis, MOOC, rhizo14, xMOOC
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View from Itea, Greece Some people bring a book on vacation (which I have) and others immerse themselves in the local culture (which I am also doing to some extent), but since I find myself lucky enough to be vacationing somewhere with fast wifi access I decided to continue to MOOC while I am on vacation from the day job. I honestly don't know how well the experiment will go, but I decided to follow
An initial review of Udemy, from a student's perspective
Sat, May 17 2014 19:39
| #moocfail, discussion, eLearning, mLearning, MOOC, motivation, onlineLearning, selfpaced
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Udemy is one of those platforms that frequently gets lumped into the "MOOC provider" category. Perhaps, these days, with the term being anything you want it to be, Udemy fits into this category. Over the past few weeks I've been experimenting with their courses to see what Udemy is all about. originally (a year or so ago), when I first went to Udemy I experienced sticker-shock. The
Teaching at a distance...or not?
Wed, May 14 2014 15:10
| administration, appliedLinguistics, MA, work
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You are using it wrong...A little while back I was reading Rebecca's post titled When teaching online doesn’t mean ‘at a distance’. Quite a few things came to mind, but they were too many for one blog post, so I thought I would do two separate ones. One from my experiences as a program coordinator (and unofficial instructional designer) for the Applied Linguistics department where I work,
Two Future Learn courses down - some initial thoughts on the design and the platform
Thu, May 1 2014 19:00
| cMOOC, corpusLinguistics, futurelearn, linguistics, LMS, MOOC, psychology, xMOOC
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This spring semester seemed to be the spring semester for experimentation (then again, there is almost no bad time for experimentation). I decided, among other things, to really give FutureLearn a try. FutureLearn is still in Beta, so I guess I haven't missed a lot yet, but one of the things that I think is really important when evaluating a course design, or even a platform, is picking
Four weeks, Five MOOCs, One Open2Study experience
Thu, Apr 24 2014 10:57
| #rhizo14, computerScience, games, gamification, HR, MBA, MOOC, Open2Study, programming, xMOOC
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Last year when I put out the call for the Great Big MOOC Book, one of the submissions came from a colleague in Australia who is going to write a bit about MOOC experiments that they ran on the Australian Open2Study platform, which is sponsored by the Open University of Australia. I had heard of the platform before, but I never really tried it out since I was testing out other platforms at
You are being watched, every minute of every day... (research ethics)
Thu, Apr 17 2014 09:45
| #edcmooc, #et4online, #rhizo14, ethics, lurker, methodology, open, research, SloanC
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Last week I was somewhere between work, teaching, the NERCOMP symposium I co-facilitated and the annual Sloan Consortium Emerging Tech for Online conference. It was nice to see some familiar MOOC faces on both twitter and on the live stream presentations.I think it was in Jen Ross's presentation (of EDCMOOC fame) that a Rhizo14 participant was quoted anonymously. I really didn't think much
Confessions of a MOOC connoisseur
Mon, Apr 7 2014 07:23
| #oldsmooc, #OpenBadgesMOOC, #rhizo14, CCK11, cMOOC, coursera, EdTech, eduMOOC11, edx, LAK11, methodology, mobiMOOC, MOOC, pMOOC, research, udacity, xMOOC
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Well, it's the end of the week (or the beginning if you are following Western conventions with the odd behavior of calling "Sunday" the beginning of the week), grading for my course, for this week, is done, and it's time to see what I missed on Rhizo14 while I was tending to other things. One of the things that we are putting together (in addition to the long autoethnography for #rhizo14) is this
No Walled Gardens badge
Wed, Apr 2 2014 11:05
| #altcred, #rhizo14, Badges, engagement, INSDSG619, instructionalDesign, motivation, PLE, teaching
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Well, we are in Week 9 (or 13) in the course I am teaching this semester, and the badges experiment is continuing! This weekend, as I was reading assignment submissions, I saw that some students, in their design documents, have started incorporating Web 2.0 tools (should we just call them "web tools" now?) that encourage the use, formation, or exploration of personal learning environments