Scheduled Seminar Discussions
Showing 5 of 5 annotations by anyone of work by Scott Leslieanyone with notes matchingtext containing "resources" in forum "Open Educational Resources: January 19 - February 8, 2009"Scheduled Seminar Discussions:
discussion: Using Other People's Work◀ | |||||
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Re: Using Other People's Work by |
This has not totally restored my faith that given access, people *will* remix content, but thought I must point out http://cterfile.ed.uiuc.edu/mahara/view/view.php?id=327, an example of a large number of 'student' remixes (I put that in quotes because it appears as though the students were all themselves instructors as well) that surfaced on Jared Stein's highly recommended blog. | resources | Hilda Anggraeni ◀ | ||
discussion: Week 3 - Making OER Less Content-Centric◀ | |||||
Re: Week 3 - Making OER Less Content-Centric by |
I meant to include a reference to one of the many putting forth this argument - http://learnonline.wordpress.com/2008/11/13/do-we-need-open-educational-resources-oer/ - lest it be seen as simply a 'straw man.' | resources | Hilda Anggraeni ◀ | ||
discussion: Welcome and Introductions◀ | |||||
Re: Welcome and Introductions by |
Probably by far the most popular item I ever posted to my blog was a 'Matrix of Blog Uses in Higher Education' that I developed while facilitating a session quite like this one in 2003. | resources | Hilda Anggraeni ◀ | ||
But the biggest pleasure I took was when someone (who did contact me, after the fact) with skills much greater than my own took the matrix and totally transformed it. Tony Lowe, from a UK-based Academic spin-off called Webducate, wrote me to tell me he had created a Flash-based version of the matrix. You can see by my write up that I was over the moon, that I now had a visually appealing and dynamic version of this static diagram I had originally sketched up in a Word document! For free! | resources | Hilda Anggraeni ◀ | |||
Re: Welcome and Introductions by |
If you are interested in science videos, in addition to all the great stuff you can find in Youtube itself you may be interested in other sites like http://sciencetube.magnify.net/, http://www.science-tube.com/, http://www.teachers.tv/series/20792, and http://sciencehack.com/ that aggregate a lot of the good science content or provide an even better way to search for it. (Edited by Sylvia Currie - original submission Monday, 19 January 2009, 02:28 PM Created hyperlinks for the URLs Scott provided) | resources | Hilda Anggraeni ◀ | Source | Highlighted Text | Margin Note | User |