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Thursday, September 1, 2011

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International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning


About IJ-SoTL



International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning is an open, peer-reviewed, international electronic journal published twice a year by the Center for Teaching, Learning & Scholarship at Georgia Southern University to be an international vehicle for articles, essays, and discussions about the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) and its applications in higher/tertiary education today. All submissions undergo a double-blind peer-review process.


SoTL is a key way to improve teaching effectiveness, student learning outcomes, and the continuous transformation of academic cultures and communities. Through research questions and methodologies applied to teaching and learning, the making public of that research and its results so that it can be analyzed and critiqued, and through the constructing of an available, growing body of knowledge, understanding, and wisdom about the teaching and learning processes and outcomes, college and university teaching is seen as a serious intellectual activity that can be evidence and outcome based.


SoTL is an international momentum or movement. IJ-SoTL seeks to be a virtual SoTL Commons for research articles, invited essays, and reflections about the value, implementation, and development of SoTL in various academic contexts and cultures. The Editorial Review Board of IJ-SoTL is profoundly strong and international in scope, and the goal is for submissions, published papers, and the readership to be truly international. Through email, published responses to articles, and a listserv, IJ-SoTL encourages your participation, questions and comments in order to foster international conversations about SoTL, as well as international collaboration in SoTL.


The bamboo plant is the symbol for IJ-SoTL. It grows around of the world, it grows rapidly, its sections are as steps in the process of growth and awareness, and it always has green shoots and leaves as signs of its vitality. Bamboo has been a symbol for longevity, strength and grace. It bends without breaking while having a tensile strength similar to steel. It has had a great reputation in both ancient and modern civilizations for its effective uses and for taking root in all sorts of climates. Such is SoTL and such is the goal for IJ-SoTL.
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Echo360: The Student View of Blended Learning


Looking to enhance your blended learning strategy with lecture capture technology? Before making the investment, consider what students say. Download the whitepaper and get the facts around the student perspective of blended learning and lecture capture.


This whitepaper offers:
•Perceptions of blending learning and lecture capture from undergraduate and graduate students at 17 U.S. and U.K. institutions during the 2010 academic year.
•Compelling evidence of the value of blended learning and lecture capture at virtually any institution.
•Valuable findings, such as the overwhelming majority of students who rank lecture capture as the most important blended learning course resource.


Who should read the whitepaper:
Academic Presidents, Deans, Provosts, Faculty and Instructors, Technologists with all levels of blended learning and lecture capture knowledge.
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How to Generate Leads Using LinkedIn


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Dillard University Undergraduate Research Faculty Meeting



Wednesday, September 7, 2011
4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
PSB 131




The agenda will include a brief discussion of purpose, responsibilities, and make-up of the 2011-2012 Undergraduate Research Advisory Group.


Undergraduate research (UR) at Dillard promotes and advances equity and access by including students from all disciplines who can benefit from this type of educational experience. Studies indicate that students’ active participation in research is one of the most effective methods of attracting and retaining them in their academic fields. We are beginning to see a broader pool of students showing interest in UR programs and activities. Your involvement is needed to assure introduction of faculty-student UR models in all disciplines and levels.


I look forward to seeing you next week.




Lynn Strong, CIM
Director, Undergraduate Research
Administrator, Institutional Review Board (IRB)
Dillard University
Professional Schools Bldg., Rm. 250
2601 Gentilly Blvd.
New Orleans, LA 70122
Tel: 504-816-4446
Fax: 504-816-4313
lstrong@dillard.edu


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Tomorrows-Professor Digest, Vol 57, Issue 1: Timeslicing in the Classroom




Rick Reis reis@stanford.edu

The classroom is going through a time of extreme change and transformation. It is interesting to observe the habits of the students during lectures. Many, particularly returning or older students, still take notes with pencil and paper. Others have preprinted PowerPoint slides downloaded from virtual learning environments and are highlighting those in class. Still others are using their laptops or, as in some of my classrooms, the university-owned desktop computers to annotate the slides during the lecture. Then there are the truly digitally inclined students. Several of them type notes directly into their email, instant messenger or Facebook account. One student even told me he was Twittering my lecture on a mobile device so he and his friends could review the notes later. I've asked my students who Facebook, Twitter, or IM the lectures about their habits. Some say they send the material to classmates they know. Others say they post the material to websites or social network ing walls that have been created for the class. One student uses a virtual flashcard software package to take that day's lecture material and transform it into a study aid. He makes it available to anyone who wants to see it and says students from other universities using the same textbook have worked with him to create decks of flashcards and other study material of their own initiative.

The tech-savvy millennials have begun to bring their "toys" to the classroom as tools. Currently, I experiment with permitting cell phones and smart devices in my classes. I ask students not to talk/social network on personal matters but to use the technology as a data input device for notes or recording class information. Some students take photos of images projected on the screen in class. My goal is to instill appropriate mobile-technology behaviors because they will be using these devices in their professional careers. As a teacher, should I be alarmed about their desire to stay connected? Quite the opposite, I believe. Information used to be my own private asset. That is no longer true. I knew the material, where to get it, and how to parcel it out to enable a fair and equitable exam that would motivate students to read, study, and hopefully learn. Now, instead, information is available to anyone that cares to use it. This is a good thing. No?a great thing! It will ultim ately free everyone to make better use of their time and progress more rapidly. In addition to the methods of taking notes I've already mentioned, I've also observed the following in my classroom:


Video Recording: Students use cell phone cameras, digital cameras, webcams on their laptops, and even small video recorders to capture the lecture and post it on the Web or email it to a classmate who is not in class. Some students ask permission, and others just turn on their video-recording device and do it. This practice makes a professor want to be sure the lecture is accurate and articulate. That recording could be around for a long time. Some professors have posted policies about video recording to describe what is appropriate and what is not. Although none of my lectures (to my knowledge) have been posted to YouTube or another video-sharing site, I have heard from colleagues that this is happening.


Audio Recordings and Podcasts: It is much easier to create an audio track of a lecture than a video. Although this may not be too effective in some courses, in others it works fine. The idea of audio recording has been around for a long time. I remember in my undergraduate years receiving a tiny tape recorder from my parents as a gift and then using it to record complicated lectures for which note-taking was difficult. I would listen to certain parts of the lecture a couple of times until it made more sense. That same technique is being used today with one major difference: Once a digital recording is made it can be copied, emailed, posted, distributed, podcasted, and so forth. I am not so vain as to believe that's what happens to my lectures, but once in existence, the digital artifact takes on an existence of its own completely out of the professor's control.


A variety of Web 2.0 tools are being used by students for note taking and classroom enhancement. Details of these technologies and ideas for formalizing their use in teaching will be covered in chapters 4 and 5. Brief examples of studant-initiated uses follow.


Wikis: I have noticed two types of student-initiated wikis emerging recently. One is a space made available by teachers. Students are invited to contribute their notes as shared content in productive ways. Generally, these wikis are "reset" at the end of a semester so the next group of students can enjoy the same learning benefits as the previous one. A few wikis using this model are more persistent, and subsequent classes start with the existing material and continue upgrading and improving it. Students add to the wiki during or after class using laptops, mobile devices, or other computing platforms.


The second type of wiki is fully student created. It usually persists beyond the semester. These wikis are often oriented toward important information for exams and may provide answers for chapter end questions. Wikis such as these often are maintained by student organizations (e.g., sororities or fraternities). In my opinion, these wikis will eventually become larger and more interconnected. Students from all around the world can add material based on class subject, textbook, or other attribute to engage in global learning and information-exchange experiences.


Blogs: Several students blog their classroom notes, but this lacks the power of community development The students who blog report they use it as a tool of convenience and to avoid losing notes if their computer crashes or they misplace their USB drive.


Twitter (Microblogging): When smart mobile devices are permitted in class, Twitter and microblogging becomes a viable tool. Students can text small messages about class content, important concepts, reminders, and other material to themselves. Twitter can also permit students to organize and interact with classmates who share their tweets with one another. A historical record of their tweets becomes available on the Web and can be used as a basis for studying or creating a more detailed set of notes later. Several of my students tell me that Twittering during class has improved their ability to recall important concepts and gives them a huge advantage when it comes to studying.


Social Networking: It almost goes without saying that today's tech-savvy millennial uses social networking as an education enhancement tool. I have students Facebooking in class every day. Once during my lecture, I used my laptop to send messages to a couple of students I knew were on Facebook. I watched their expressions change and sheepish smiles creep across their feces. Did they stop Facebooking? Of course not. They were using it to jointly take notes and create a record of the class lecture. At the same time they were chatting. In the true timeslicing sense of a tech-savvy millennial, they were also posting comments, humorous in their minds I'm sure, and browsing through a couple of websites, reading up on the upcoming K-State football game.


I frequently see my daughter doing homework while communicating with her friends who are logged in to Facebook. Is this bad? Something we should stop? Of course not. They are learning in teams in a cooperative way. This is what we've been trying to teach, but without such a useful tool. Leave it to them to learn on their own, especially because networking has become truly useful, beneficial, and fun.


Cell Phones and Smart Mobile Devices: In the survey I hand out to tech-savvy millennials during my high school talks, one finding remains constant: the universal love of cell phones and smart mobile devices. One question asks which technology they would be unable to survive without. In my youth, it was television. Then, over time, video games (like Nintendo 64) gained favor, giving way to computers with Internet access. Now, overwhelmingly, 90 + percent of student respondents cite smart mobile devices as the technology that makes their lives worth living! They are the ultimate timeslicer's tool. Many tech-savvy millennials consider text messaging, Internet, music, digital imaging, voice, and video all as integral and natural parts of their mobile devices.


After giving the survey, I often ask the students why they can't live without smart mobile devices but can live without the Internet. One student in the back yelled out: "My phone is the Internet so I don't need it separately." The others murmured in agreement. It wasn't the point I was trying to make, but it illuminated the topic. The tech-savvy millennial doesn't necessarily see a dividing point between their mobile phone, digital networks, and themselves. The student feels part of the system, a node on the network. So for a timeslicer, a mobile device provides the ability to walk, talk, listen to music, snap photos, and text a friend at nearly the same time. This tool, which I still fumble with, has become the symbol of a generation, and anytime a teacher takes them "offline" and makes them shut off their mobile devices, these students feel stressed. Mobile devices are data-entry tools for the tech-savvy millennial and are the key interface point that makes them a node on the Web.


Instant Messaging and Texting: A quick and dirty, less persistent social networking application, students often use IM as a computer-mediated communication technique that enables classroom note taking. IM uses laptops and computers as a platform. Texting is the same thing done with mobile devices. You can imagine all the possibilities this technology enables. On the simplest level, answers to in-class problems can be exchanged. This, of course, is not how a teacher hopes students will use their capabilities. Taking it one step further, if homework or in-class assignments are being completed, students may compare their results and explore why certain answers differ. In a sense, this helps them understand where they went wrong and how to fix their errors. Along these same lines, I have seen students photograph solutions to math problems and then share the documents using IM software. In an ideal world, students would work together to take lecture notes and then cooperatively so lve in-class problems to understand concepts.


Live Streaming: One period, I had an international student in class position a small Webcam on her desk and point it toward me as I lectured. Afterward, I approached her, assuming she had digitally recorded the lecture for later use. There was no recording, she said. Instead the entire lecture had been streamed out through a website called Stickam.com. A friend of hers was traveling and unable to attend class that day but had watched it remotely through Stickam's live broadcasting capabilities.


Tablet Devices: The release of Apple's iPad tablet device impacted the classroom almost immediately. It makes functions performed on smart mobile devices easier with a larger screen and smoother interface. Wikis, blogs, IM, and social networking all become more manageable. Students use tablets to view class material posted in VLEs or on websites. Electronic textbooks can be accessed and annotated during class on these devices. Podcasts can be obtained easily from iTunes University. Students are able to take better notes and store, email, or microblog these out to themselves and their friends. In many ways, this class of devices may become the unifying educational platform for our students.




REFERENCES
Hamilton, J. (2008, October 2). Think you're multitasking? Think again. Retrieved September 18, 2010, from NPR.org:  http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=95256794  


Laxmisan, A., Hakimzada, F., & Sayan, O. R. (2007). The multitasking clinician: Decision-making and cognitive demand during and after team handoffs in emergency care. International Journal of Medical Informatics 76(11), 801-811.


Wikipedia. (2010b). Computer multitasking. Retrieved September 2010, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_multitasking  


Ophir, E., Nass, C., & Wagner, A. D. (2010). Cognitive control in media multi-taskers. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America [PDF] (pp. 15583-15587). Retrieved from  http://www.pnas.org/content/106/37/15583.full.pdf+html


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Boise State U: New Doctoral Program Builds on Educational Technology Success

Posted By Mike Journee
Aug 15th, 2011 - 10:42 am
Posted In: Featured



Boise State will offer a new online doctorate in educational technology, building on the College of Education’s successful thesis-based and professional online master’s programs.



With the approval of the Idaho State Board of Education (SBOE) last week, the new program will examine the use of current and emerging technologies for effective and efficient teaching and learning in a dynamic, global society.


“Recent legislation in Idaho and other states affirms the need for leaders in educational technology who will not only develop more effective uses of such technology but assess their impact on student learning,” said Martin Schimpf, provost and vice president for academic affairs at Boise State. “Boise State’s nationally recognized success with research and practice in this field makes it a natural area of expansion for us, and this program will allow Boise State scholars to continue driving innovations in a rapidly evolving field at the center of our national discussion on education.”


Areas of particular focus will include online teaching and learning, technology integration, academic technology leadership, innovative teaching in K-12 and higher education, educational web software or mobile applications development, and educational games and simulations. The first full cohort of doctoral candidates is expected to start their studies in fall 2012.


“Because technology changes so often and so quickly, programs should not focus on mastering today’s instructional tools. If they did, graduates’ skills would be outdated within a few years,” said Kerry Rice, chair of Boise State’s Department of Educational Technology (EdTech). “Instead, this degree program will focus on the attributes of effective instructional tools in the context of emerging technologies, and on the impact of changing technologies in the classroom.”


EdTech’s development of new classroom technology systems, like the quest-based learning experience “3D GameLab,” which has generated thousands of dollars of revenue in the past year, will likely receive a boost from the research of doctoral candidates. Also, the program’s online format not only provides an intuitive medium for the subject matter, but also gives in-service educators more flexibility in pursing a terminal degree despite busy schedules and provides the university with a national pool of prospective students from which to draw.


“The use of instructional technologies for improved teaching and learning has become extremely important in classrooms from the elementary school to the university campus,” said Diane Boothe, dean of Boise State’s College of Education. “We’re certain that this new offering will draw the attention of those forward-thinking educators from around the nation who recognize the dynamic shifts happening in education all across the country.”


Tags: Diane Boothe, Doctorate, Educational Technology, Kerry Rice, Martin Schimpf, Online program, State Board of Education
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University Business: Venting About College Textbook Costs (Opinion)



A verbatim text last night from my daughter, a sophomore at Michigan State University: "My books were $450 .... I hate my life."



Kalamazoo Gazette
A verbatim text last night from my daughter, a sophomore at Michigan State University: "My books were $450 .... I hate my life."


She called today to elaborate. The bill was actually $500 for five classes, and there were multiple levels to her frustration. All of her books were paperbacks; despite the hefty bill, there's not a hardcover book in the bunch. Most of her books were used or rented. In other words, she used all the conventional cost-saving strategies and still spent $450.


The single most outrageous price: A $100 rental fee for a 300-page paperback textbook for political science. It was used, incidentally. Her other option was purchasing it new for $150.


There are many infuriating aspects of college costs. The tuition increases. The mysterious fees tacked onto the tuition bill. Cramped dorm rooms priced as they were Manhattan apartments.  MORE


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