[Portfolio] Reminder > Today's Teaching and Learning Sakai Call

View: New views
2 Messages — Rating Filter:   Alert me  

[Portfolio] Reminder > Today's Teaching and Learning Sakai Call

by Josh Baron :: Rate this Message:

Reply to Author | View Threaded | Show Only this Message


Folks,

Just a reminder that we will be holding our weekly call today (Wednesday) at 12 Noon EDT.  Dial in information is below.

I've posted minutes from last week's meeting to Confluence as well as some updates on the Instructional Visioning proposal page.

I've had some thoughts on a potential new direction to take with some of this work and would like to get people's reaction to it on the call.

Josh

Calls are currently taking place every Wednesday at 12:00 Noon ET (New York, USA).  To participate:
  • Dial 1-888-447-7153 (International callers: 1-719-387-1138)
  • Enter in passcode: 917798 (the hit #)
  • Listen to music until "moderator" starts the call
  • Need help? Call tech support at 1-877-807-0970

-----------------------------
Joshua Baron
Director, Academic Technology and eLearning
Marist College
Poughkeepsie, New York  12601
(845) 575-3623 (work)
Twitter: JoshBaron

_______________________________________________
portfolio mailing list
portfolio@...
http://collab.sakaiproject.org/mailman/listinfo/portfolio

TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send email to portfolio-unsubscribe@... with a subject of "unsubscribe"

[Portfolio] Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology

by David Goodrum-2 :: Rate this Message:

Reply to Author | View Threaded | Show Only this Message

Some parts of this message have been removed. Learn more about Nabble's security policy.
Hi everyone,

For those on today's teaching and learning Sakai call who were intrigued by the discussion around looking towards future trends (but also hoping we wouldn't get distracted by not focusing on core T&L needs), you might be interested in a very recent book I just heard about this afternoon (how timely!) by a couple of well respected folks in the field of cognitive science:

Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology: The Digital Revolution and Schooling in America by Allan Collins and Richard Halverson

Allan Collins, who's coming to give a talk at Indiana University (that's how I got wind of this), has colaborated with John Seely Brown in the past and is a professor of education and social policy at Northwestern University. He is a member of the National Academy of Education and the American Educational Research Association, a fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, and served as a founding editor of the journal Cognitive Science and as first chair of the Cognitive Science Society. He currently serves on the editorial boards for Cognition and Instruction and the Journal of the Learning Sciences. He is best known in psychology for his work on semantic memory and mental models; in artificial intelligence for his work on plausible reasoning and intelligent tutoring systems; and in education for his work on inquiry teaching, cognitive apprenticeship, situated learning, epistemic games and systemic validity in educational testing. From 1991 to 1994 he was co-director of the US Department of Education's Center for Technology in Education centered at Bank Street College of Education.

The Amazon blurb (the paperback version is about $16) says:

The digital revolution has hit education, with more and more classrooms plugged into the whole wired world. But are schools making the most of new technologies? Are they tapping into the learning potential of today s Firefox/Facebook/cell phone generation? Have schools fallen through the crack of the digital divide? In Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology, Allan Collins and Richard Halverson argue that the knowledge revolution has transformed our jobs, our homes, our lives, and therefore must also transform our schools. Much like after the school-reform movement of the industrial revolution, our society is again poised at the edge of radical change. To keep pace with a globalized technological culture, we must rethink how we educate the next generation or America will be left behind. This groundbreaking book offers a vision for the future of American education that goes well beyond the walls of the classroom to include online social networks, distance learning with anytime, anywhere access, digital home schooling models, video-game learning environments, and more. 

Regards - David

David Goodrum
Indiana University


_______________________________________________
portfolio mailing list
portfolio@...
http://collab.sakaiproject.org/mailman/listinfo/portfolio

TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send email to portfolio-unsubscribe@... with a subject of "unsubscribe"