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How has ICT access changed across the world between 2005 and 2010?

Clayton Wright sent me a link to The Little Data Book on ICT 2012 [~250 pages, 1MB PDF], which, he writes, "was jointly developed by the World Bank and the International Telecommunication Union to show progress made in 216 economies (countries) from 2005 to 2010".

The Data Book is worth browsing for the sense it gives of:

  • the pace of change;
  • the extent of "catch up" that there has been between middle income countries and the rich world;
  • the huge income-contingent differences in access to the Internet that persist.

Posted on 28/08/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Important for policy-makers: understanding low and discontinued Internet use amongst young people in Britain

On the Periphery? Understanding Low and Discontinued Internet Use Amongst Young People in Britain [PDF, 46 pages] is a new report by Rebecca Eynon and Anne Geniets from the Oxford Internet Institute, funded by the Nominet Trust. Here are the report's conclusions in full:

Continue reading "Important for policy-makers: understanding low and discontinued Internet use amongst young people in Britain" »

Posted on 22/08/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Online learning - helping learners create learning

Links to Koller and Horowitz talks added 21 August.

At the foot of this post is an 18 minute talk by Peter Norvig at the Google 2012 Faculty Summit on 26 July. In it Norvig reflects on what he learned from developing and running last year's "Stanford" online AI course (in which I participated), making links as he goes with the widely applicable "Theory and Research-based Principles of Learning", from Carnegie Mellon University's Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence.

Two othe things stood out for me from the talk.

The first is the reference Norvig makes to the challenges posed for course design and operation by the "dynamic range" of an online openly enrolled course, by which he means the wider range of capabilities and experience than would be found on a course where there are strict admission requirements.  Norvig is not claiming that this idea is new, but it is good that it is getting attention.

The second is this very striking quote from the polymath Herb Simon:

Learning results from what the student does and thinks and only from what the student does and thinks. The teacher can advance learning only by influencing what the student does to learn.

which squares strongly with something that Dylan Wiliam said at the 2007 ALT conference (where Peter also spoke):

Learning power is a concept that Guy Claxton has put forward. The key concept here—the big trap—is that teachers do not create learning. That’s true—teachers do not create learning, and yet most teachers behave as if they do. Learners create learning. Teachers create the conditions under which learning can take place.

(The full transcript of Dylan's talk is available for download [PDF]. Other talks from the Google 2012 Faculty Summit are also available: Daphne Koller; Bradley Horowitz - hat tip to R Seiter. Horowitz's talk about Google +, for which he is responsible at Google, is particularly interesting.)

Posted on 20/08/2012 in Moocs, Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Very enlightening study for the BBC about media literacy

Thanks to Nick Shackleton-Jones for publicising the Media Literacy: Understanding Digital Capabilities [archived version of big PDF] about UK citizens' media literacy. There is plenty of meat in it, including clear evidence that upping Internet users' appreciation of and good habits in internet security is a high priority, and striking data about different categories of users' relative willingness to learn. Worth reading in conjunction with the OII's 2011 Internet in Britain report, by William Dutton and Greg Blank [big PDF].

Willingnesstolearn
Source

Posted on 15/08/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Daphne Koller's London talk “The Online Revolution: Education for Everyone”

I made some small amendments to this post on 14 August.

Here is Daphne Koller's 2 July 2012 University of London talk “The Online Revolution: Education for Everyone”, the focus of which, according to the organisers, was particularly on "the pedagogy/platform that sits behind Coursera".

See also:

  1. the comment below from Laura Czerniewicz from Cape Town University on what Daphne Koller says in her talk about South Africa;
  2. this link to MOOC pedagogy: the challenges of developing for Coursera.

As an aside, it is a pity that the recording's dovetailing of Daphne speaking with her powerpoint presentation and its video-clips is a bit patchy. As a partial remedy for this, you may find it helpful to have on screen the slides used by Daphne's collaborator Andrew Ng during a similar presentation he made in Toronto around the same time, though these do not contain the video clips.

Posted on 13/08/2012 in Moocs, News and comment, Resources | Permalink | Comments (4)

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MOOC pedagogy: the challenges of developing for Coursera

ALT has just published a timely and informative "from-the-sharp-end" article by Jeremy Knox, Sian Bayne, Hamish MacLeod, Jen Ross and Christine Sinclair from Edinburgh University's MSC in E-learning Team about their experiences of and reflections on developing the E-learning and Digital Cultures Coursera course. Related to this from the ALT Open Access Repository, you can access a presentation PDF by Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller of Stanford University and Coursera. "The Online Revolution: Education at Scale" was used by Andrew Ng for his 23 July 2012 Invited Talk "Teaching Machine Learning to 100,000 Students" at the 2012 conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. Note that a June 2012 TED talk by Daphne Koller and a July 2012 talk at the University of London cover similar ground.

[Disclosure: I have a minor paid relationship with ALT.]

Posted on 08/08/2012 in Moocs, Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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An interview in Sheffield with Eric Mazur

EricMazurBySebSchmoller20120718_small

On 18 July, with help from Graham McElearney, I interviewed Eric Mazur when Eric was in Sheffield. The interview concentrates on: Eric's research into peer-based instruction; large group teaching; closing the gender gap in STEM; and "learning analytics". It ends with some observations for people running institutions. Some of the questions I used were provided by members of ALT.

Here is the transcript of the interview [14 pages, 100 kB PDF]. You can also download the interview as an MP3 file [1 hour, 20 MB MP3]. Eventually both will be published on the ALT web site, with the transcript appearing as an article in ALT News Online.

Eric Mazur will be a keynote speaker at the 2012 ALT conference in Manchester, UK, in September.

Posted on 03/08/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (3)

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Snippets from 14 July to 3 August

Clear critique by Simon Davies (a public school head) of Seldon's Spectator piece backing the scrapping of the QTS requirement. - http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeeh...
++
If it makes use of (say) stuff by @donaldclark and on the @A_L_T wiki, "What Every Techie Should Know About Education" should get traction. http://goo.gl/uwu7K http://goo.gl/6CcPm - http://third-bit.com/educate...
++
How much Energy do I consume? Find out with Christian Gebbe's handy web-based estimator, recommended by "Sustainable Energy Without the Hot Air" David Mackay. - http://energy.m21.cc/energye...
++

Continue reading "Snippets from 14 July to 3 August" »

Posted on 03/08/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Innovating Pedagogy 2012

William_Ford_Gibson
Photo of William Gibson by Frederic Poirot; original source; file licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

Mike Sharples sent me a link to this pre-release version [PDF] of Innovating Pedagogy 2012, which he has written for the Open University with Patrick McAndrew, Martin Weller, Rachel Ferguson, Elizabeth FitzGerald, Tony Hirst, Yishay Mor, Mark Gaven, and Denise Whitelock.

The report gives an accessible overview of ten new forms of teaching, learning and assessment, and it has been written for non-academics. It looks to have been inspired by the EDUCAUSE Horizon Reports, but with a focus on learning and teaching.

Three things struck me about the report:

Continue reading "Innovating Pedagogy 2012" »

Posted on 23/07/2012 in News and comment, Resources | Permalink | Comments (2)

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Just how little students learn - Mark Guzdial

Nearly two years old, but still fresh, this post by Mark Guzdial in his Computing Education Blog, is worth reading. As an aside, it has an interesting description of how/why "ordinary" users fail when they try to edit Wikipedia. Mark's  Education is already Gamified (from which I came across "Just how little students learn") sheds interesting light on the current enthusiasm for badges, and why the "badge fad" needs treating with some care.

Posted on 06/07/2012 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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