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Six Big Tech Trends in Education to Follow

Six Big Tech Trends in Education to Follow

http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2013/06/six-big-trends-in-education-to-follow/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+kqed%2FnHAK+%28MindShift%29

Summary from the NMC K-12 Horizons Report

“TRENDS

The presence of the Internet in students’ lives outside of school, and especially on mobile devices, is allowing for more online and blended learning models in classrooms. That trend is supported by an increasing tolerance and even excitement among teachers for mobile devices as learning tools. As the cost of devices continues to come down, they proliferate in classrooms and can be powerful learning tools.

Print and digital textbooks are getting some serious competition from open-source content, which has captured the imagination of educators who are finding valuable content outside the prescribed realm of textbooks.

CHALLENGES

The big challenges for better using education technology are similar to ones that have long existed. There isn’t enough professional development to help educators feel comfortable using new strategies and it often isn’t part of a school’s culture. Resistance to trying new approaches remains prevalent and the status quo continues to exert a powerful inertia on the system, preventing a broader use of good ideas.

Traditional models of schooling are experiencing more competition than ever before with charter schools, for-profit operators, online learning and MOOCs pushing for change. Similarly, traditional teaching that relies on lectures and tests is being challenged by blended models of instruction.

There’s a large demand for personalized learning, but the technology tools don’t yet support the goals of those who want to use it — a big gap still exists between overall vision and available tools. Meanwhile, even as teachers are shifting to more formative assessments taken continually throughout the school year, assessment policies have not always shifted to match this change. But educators think there’s potential for digital tools to help collect formative assessment data unobtrusively.”

  1. Cloud-based computing.
  2. Mobile learning  and the educational app market for mobile devices
  3. The power and increasing prevalence of learning analytics and the practice of analyzing real time data from digital learning platforms and using that information to shape teaching strategies for individual students. The MOOCs that challenge the higher education paradigm rely heavily on learning analytics to direct, grade, and guide learners.
  4. The rise in high-quality open content available to students around the world.
  5. 3D printing has captured the imagination of people at all ages, especially as movements towards design learning take off in K-12 schools.
  6. Virtual and remote labs to provide students access to scientific experiences even as school districts cut back on physical lab spaces in schools.

Challenges, challenges…

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 18, 2013, 7:25 am Category: Uncategorized

How to Rock Social Media in Thirty Minutes a Day

How to Rock Social Media in Thirty Minutes a Day

Via: http://davidwarlick.com/2cents/?p=4255

How to Rock Social Media in 30 Minutes a Day

http://visual.ly/how-rock-social-media-30-minutes-day

How to Rock Social Media in 30 Minutes a Day

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 18, 2013, 6:53 am Category: Uncategorized

Trends in Consumer Book Buying

Trends in Consumer Book Buying

http://randomnotes.randomhouse.com/trends-in-consumer-book-buying-infographic/?Ref=Email_B2C_agent6/5/2013 

1

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 18, 2013, 6:53 am Category: Uncategorized

24 Mind-Blowing Facts About The Size Of The Internet

24 Mind-Blowing Facts About The Size Of The Internet

http://www.businessinsider.com/24-mind-blowing-facts-about-business-2013-6?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Falleyinsider%2Fsilicon_alley_insider+%28Silicon+Alley+Insider%29

“Mitch Joel, author of the business strategy book, “CTRL-ALT-Delete: Reboot your business. Reboot your life”, has pulled together some mind-blowing facts that show the internet is so much bigger than you think it is.

There’s no question …

You need to understand just how much.

Print is nearly dead

Apple helped lead the way

Amazon is astoundingly diverse

Amazon is also physically very big

Without a single physical retail store …

Things are moving so fast

The Internet has become portable

We use our phones to socialize over the Internet

The mobile Internet has become a crucial part of our lives

Businesses that don’t go mobile will be in trouble

The Internet has created new business and new ways to fund them

Crowdsourced funding is saving the arts

Some businesses are headed for a cliff

Many have already gone over the cliff

Marketing has become a very hard job

The Internet is so big, your business could get lost

More tablets and devices are coming our way …

Photos have become a popular way for people to communicate

Instagram is already the Next Big Thing for business

Mobile phone users want info based on their location

Most of us view the Internet as a trustworthy source for research

The Internet is unbelievably big

And mobile is still just a small part of the Internet

An Internet site can interact with an enormous number of people …

… with a tiny number of employees.

Now check out these mind-blowing facts about the future of the mobile

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 18, 2013, 6:36 am Category: Uncategorized

CILIP East: Leadership and Librarians

I have the great pleasure of speaking at Cambridge University this week – twice!

Here’s the first presentation from tonight for CILIP East.

Stephen

Posted on: June 17, 2013, 9:03 pm Category: Uncategorized

Write Your Paper Like A Pro: Infographic

Via: http://davidwarlick.com/2cents/?p=4256

Simplicity works for students (and adults too)

Write Your Paper Right
http://visual.ly/write-your-paper-right

Stephen

Posted on: June 17, 2013, 6:46 am Category: Uncategorized

Student Debt is the Worst

The biggest drag on the recovery is this . . .

Student Debt is the Worst

http://ilovecharts.tumblr.com/post/52066765463/student-debt-is-the-worst

Student Debt is the Worst

If you want to goose the economic recovery then give some better terms and forgiveness to those students carrying this debt load between the ages of 25ish and 40ish.  They can then stop delaying relationships, marriage, home-buying, decorating, car buying, travel, further education, job mobility, and having kids – whatever else they may want from life in general.  Tax cuts to the richest 2% to store that money overseas and invest offshore surely makes no sense economically in a consumer-driven economy …

Rants never over . . .

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 17, 2013, 6:37 am Category: Uncategorized

Sunday Post: Work-Life “Balance” Isn’t the Point

From the HBR Blog Network:

Work-Life “Balance” Isn’t the Point

http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/06/work-life_balance_isnt_the_poi.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+harvardbusiness+%28HBR.org%29

Snippets:

“Some people appear to manage career success and a positive private life with ease. Here are a few pointers:

1. Strive for work-life effectiveness—not balance. The term work-life balance implies that one dedicates an equal portion of time to work and life. Catalyst, a research firm focused on women in business, uses the phrase work-life effectiveness, and suggests striving for a situation where work fits with other aspects of your life. Researchers Jeffrey Greenhaus and Gary Powell expand on this concept and recommend that work and personal life should be allies and that participation in multiple roles, such as parent, partner, friend, employee, can actually enhance physical and psychological well-being — especially when all of the roles are high quality and managed together.

….

2. Define success in all categories of your life. Every person needs to define success on his or her own terms. Ultimately, for both men and women, the definition of success is deeply personal. At the end of each person’s life, only he or she can look back and say, “I was successful.” It is also important to realize that what constitutes success to one person may not constitute success to another.

… consider sharing your priorities and ideas of success with important stakeholders in your life. By doing so, you will gain valuable perspective and, perhaps, buy-in to your work and life goals.

3. Maintain control. Researchers suggest that people may experience high stress when they feel out of control. So, take control of your career — explore your own history, biases, motivation and preferences. As an example, many people enjoy spending a lot of time at work because they like what they do. Thus, long work hours are not necessarily burdensome to them. Each of us should take the time to find a job that ‘fits’ us. When possible, we should set our own boundaries.

… We should also proactively manage the direction and meaning of our work.

As Anna Quindlen observed, “If your success is not on your own terms, if it looks good to the world but does not feel good in your heart, it is not success at all.”"

I listen to lots of conversations about this in library land.  No one approach is right for everyone but this posting has something to chew on.

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 16, 2013, 7:25 am Category: Uncategorized

How To Get Better at Spotting Opportunities

How To Get Better at Spotting Opportunities

http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/05/how_to_get_better_at_spotting.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+harvardbusiness+%28HBR.org%29

So what’s the secret?  Check it out on HBR Blog.

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 16, 2013, 7:17 am Category: Uncategorized

What’s in a Meme? A History…

What’s in a Meme? A History…

What Exactly Is a Meme?

http://gizmodo.com/what-exactly-is-a-meme-512058258

What Exactly Is a Meme?

Stephen

 

Posted on: June 16, 2013, 6:43 am Category: Uncategorized