Teaching and Learning, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE, and Instructional Technologies

Spotlight On Identity Management: The Evolving Definition of "Student": Identity Management at Duke University

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Title:Spotlight On Identity Management: The Evolving Definition of "Student": Identity Management at Duke University (ID: SPTIDM084)
Author(s):Klara Jelinkova (Duke University) and Lynne M. O'Brien (Duke University)
Origin:EDUCAUSE Live! Spotlight, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (04/18/2008)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

The meaning of "student" is evolving at Duke University in response to many institutional and faculty outreach efforts. This trend is mirrored at many of Duke’s peer institutions. We see the concept of "learners" expanding beyond traditionally enrolled college students to include community participants, youth enrolled in talent programs, and continuing education students. At the same time, the realm of academic services faculty use for teaching has grown beyond traditional institutionally provided services such as Blackboard to encompass Flickr, blogs, Twitter, and any new technology available to faculty for free. How can we address the expansion in student population and in resources? How do you extend your institution’s computing resources to people outside your campus? How do you extend your local service concepts and policies to the end-user commodity-driven applications that are within any faculty’s reach? Lynne O'Brien and Klara Jelinkova will discuss the issues, concepts, and solutions surrounding identity management proposed and implemented at Duke University.

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Teaching and Learning with Web 2.0

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Title:Teaching and Learning with Web 2.0 (ID: ELIWEB081)
Author(s):W. Gardner Campbell (University of Mary Washington)
Origin:ELI Web Seminars, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (01/14/2008)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Since the 1990s, we’ve been putting our Web courses in boxes, mastering enterprise course management systems, and striving for single sign-on seamless integration between all Web-enabled business and academic environments in each of our colleges and universities. Sometime around the turn of the century, however, explosive innovation on the open Web began to turn a “read only” environment into a “read/write” environment. With the development of RSS as a syndication platform, the read/write environment began to support and foster a very powerful, loosely coupled information architecture across the World Wide Web. In 2004, a group led by Tim O’Reilly gave this phenomenon a name: Web 2.0.

In this seminar, Campbell will explore the concepts behind Web 2.0, some of the individual tools and services (Flickr, Facebook, Second Life, del.icio.us) that are commonly listed under this rubric, and the implications of this phenomenon for teaching and learning, particularly in higher education. He will also present several ways in which he and his colleagues have used Web 2.0 tools and services, both as teachers and in their own learning, and comment on the good, the bad, and the ugly results. If time permits, he will also speak to the relationship between Web 2.0 and the open source software movement. Finally, he’ll offer some thoughts on what Web 3.0 might look like, and why educators should care.

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Top-Ten Challenges of the Academic Technology Community

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Top-Ten Challenges of the Academic Technology Community (ID: LIVE0710)
Author(s):John P. Campbell (Purdue University) and Dennis A. Trinkle (Valparaiso University)
Origin:EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

In the past couple of years, teaching and learning has fallen from the CIO's top-ten list. This session will examine today's top-ten most pressing challenges within teaching and learning, drawing on insights provided by the members of the EDUCAUSE Advisory Committee, and will offer a look into possible future efforts.

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Assessing What Students Learn in Technology-Based Learning Environments

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Title:Assessing What Students Learn in Technology-Based Learning Environments (ID: ELIWEB069)
Author(s):Peggy Maki
Origin:ELI Web Seminars, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (2006)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Virtual simulations, role-playing in games, discussion boards, and shared spaces are among the growing kinds of options educators are using to foster student learning. Aside from the efficiency of delivery and students' generally positive response to technology-based instruction, how can we learn about the efficacy of teaching and learning through technology?

This Web seminar offers principles of assessing technology-based student learning grounded in questions we ask about pedagogy, curricular design, instructional design, and other educational practices. It begins with a focus on assessment as a process of inquiry into the efficacy of your educational practices through the wide range of technology-based "texts" (for example, actions, decisions, dialogue, collaborative projects, visual representations) that students produce—direct evidence of how they construct meaning. Overall, a well-anchored approach to assessing student learning provides robust results that enable us to identify patterns of student strength and weakness through the various texts they produce. These patterns prompt us to examine and self-reflect on the efficacy of technology-based teaching and learning.

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