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http://tinyurl.com/blended-design . Download Me!. Cloud-Based, Mobile, and Classroom Technology for Learning and Engagement …… Pre -conference Workshop. Alisa Cooper & Stevie Rocco. Agenda. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Activity (10 min) Horizon Report: Mobiles and eBooks (30 min)
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http://tinyurl.com/blended-design Download Me!
Cloud-Based, Mobile, and Classroom Technology for Learning and Engagement……Pre-conference Workshop Alisa Cooper & Stevie Rocco
Agenda • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Activity (10 min) • Horizon Report: Mobiles and eBooks (30 min) • Selecting the appropriate tool for classroom (30 min) • Selecting the appropriate tool for online and mobile (30 min) • BREAK (15 min) • Enhancing the LMS with Cloud Based technologies (25 min) • Categories & Examples (30 min) • The Top Five Tools! (10 min)
http://tinyurl.com/keyissuesUse this Google form to suggest any particularly challenging issues involving blended courses or to pose a question. We will address your questions and concerns in the final session on Wednesday.
Can you find them? • My MOST favorite tool? • My LEAST favorite tool? • Most CHALLENGING tool? • One minute rounds • 10 people • Go!
ELI 2010 Online Spring Focus SessionMobile Learning 2.0: The Next Phase of Innovation in Mobility
Rapid growth in mobile applications and their interoperability with other tools
http://horizon.wiki.nmc.org/2011+Mobileshttp://www.delicious.com/tag/hz11+mobileshttp://horizon.wiki.nmc.org/2011+Mobileshttp://www.delicious.com/tag/hz11+mobiles
The book works really well • The book is the ultimate “reader” • Inexpensive – You get free reader hardware with each physical book purchased • No batteries needed • Very durable • So simple a 2-year old could use it • No other user interacts with the physical content more than students • Highlighting • Note taking • Bookmarking • Flipping • Multiple books a once
S Reading on the go. Light studying Heavy duty studying Home/Library Sync through a common cloud (locker) Digital Content Ecosystem (cloud hosted digital locker)
The Reading/Studying Ecosystem Reader Platform Reader Textbooks Note Taking • Ecosystem • Commerce • Sharing • Messaging • Annotation Class/Study Notes Internet/Other Content Common Interface, Format Content Management Instructor Supplied Study Ad-ins Trade Books Periodicals Study Aids/Other Books
Reasons for Purchasing eBooks • Price is the primary factor • Only way to obtain the textbook [out of stock, preference by the professor, custom PDF type eBook that the professor created for sale]. • 18% of students who purchased an eBook did so because they enjoy the features • 10% of students who purchased an eBook did so because they had never used one and were curious
Improved Performance or Efficiency • Being able to search for a particular word or phrase in the textbook has improved my efficiency in studying. • I use my laptop extensively and take notes on it, so having a copy of the book on my laptop at all times helped me work on my class work whenever I want without having to worry about whether or not I have the book with me. • No 10-lb book to carry around = epic win. Top 5 Current Features, as rated by students: • Reading Controls (paging, zoom…) • Finding terms in a book • Creating Highlights and Annotations • Reviewing previously created Highlight and Annotations • Managing your Digital Library
Features Students Want • Search within and across content • Annotation/highlight and sharing of notes • Downloaded texts over online access - Flexibility of where and when they can access their books. • Integrationwith other course content including lecture notes, professor guidance…
University of Notre Dame: Business Source: http://www.nd.edu/~cangst/NotreDame_iPad_Report_01-06-11.pdf
Students said… • Like size, lighter than laptop • Like speed, fast than laptop—instantly on • More convenient than iPhone—read/write email • Highly mobile • Like having everything in one place • Opens attachments well
Overall Research Conclusions • Given the opportunity, students are willing to experiment with reading and studying digitally. • When students do read and study digitally, results indicate that they find it as effective or more effective than studying with the physical book. • When students do read and study digitally, their responses to usability of features shows that their expectations are high. • Expect basic features to be as good as print experience (e.g., notes and annotations.) • Also, expect that there are compelling features that go beyond what is feasible in the physical book experience (e.g., tags across notes, organizational capabilities.)
Conclusions • E-Reading in higher education is more about e-studying than e-reading. • Evaluate solutions on the entire ecosystem • Hardware , e-Reading/Study Software • Available Content • Tablets and portable devices are currently satellites to a PC/Mac base; this will change over time. • Constantly poll your students and faculty. • Don’t over commit--this is going to be a longer transition than other digital media.
Future Trends • As portable and tablet capabilities improve, so will their ability to support e-textbook content/platforms. • Content trends • Increase in smaller and specialized content • Increase in multimedia content • New distribution models including subscriptions, open source content, and institutionally-developed. • There will be a blurring of lines between e-readers, LMS, and internet resources.
ECAR Data (students and IT) • Participate in the survey, get the raw data, and compare • Adapt study of UG students and IT to meet the information needs of your institution • Learn about • Technology ownership (laptops, handhelds, etc.) • Technology use in courses • Technology (T&L) use preferences • Student information literacy • Student technology skills and needs
Review mobile technologies and ask… • What would be the ramifications and opportunities for learning if this technology were adopted? • What kinds of teaching and learning engagements might this technology: make better or enable? • If we decide to do a pilot, what kind of evaluation methodology can we overlay on the project to assess outcomes? • What kind of additional research needs to be done concerning this technology?
Take-Aways • Be aware of the emerging technologies, select carefully • Collect technology-related data on students and faculty on an annual basis • Make learning technology implementation decisions with data and with your students • Be purposeful about selection and infusion of technology into the blended course (what will it do better?)
Alisa Cooper Selecting the appropriate tool
What is Cloud Computing? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_applications.jpg
Cloud-Based Technologies • Offline access • Online Collaboration • Online Resources • Outsource Processes • Online Storage • Online Office • Shared Calendars
New Literacies • Speaking • Blending report and story • Technological and digital literacy • Writing • Reading • Listening and watching • Creating NWT Literacy Council (2011). Using Technology in the Classroom: A Great Way to Engage and Inspire Learners. Retrieved June 20, 2011, from http://www.nald.ca/library/learning/nwtlc/using_tech_classroom/using_tech_classroom.pdf