collaborative culture and top performance
According to Science
Far from being a productivity panacea, a collaborative culture will drive your top performers away.
Digital Literacy for St. Cloud State University
Far from being a productivity panacea, a collaborative culture will drive your top performers away.
https://plus.google.com/+Educatorstechnology/posts/c896498jn3z
most of the apps are paid
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more on history in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=history
Categories
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Apps
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Android Apps for Learners with Autism
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Android Apps for Learners with Dyslexia
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Android Apps for Vision Impaired
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Categories
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Apps
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Apps for Dyslexic Learners
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Apps for Autistic Learners
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Apps for The Visually Impaired
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Apps for Learners with Writing Difficulties
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more on special ed in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=special+education
Guardian uncovers 42% rise in cheating cases involving gadgets such as mobile phones and hidden earpieces since 2012
Sarah Marsh Monday 10 April 2017 https://www.theguardian.com/education/2017/apr/10/more-university-students-are-using-tech-to-in-exams
students were caught cheating with smart watches over the period examined, and cases of students using hidden earpieces or miniature cameras were reported at multiple universities.
The Guardian found multiple websites that openly targeted students with devices that could be used for cheating.
prevent cheating could be to write better exams.
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more on cheating in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=cheat
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more on effective presentations in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=effective+presentations
Instructor Kay Worner
A discussion with Kay’s class of school administrators about the use of digital storytelling as a tool for community relations.
discussion based on LIB 490/590
http://web.stcloudstate.edu/pmiltenoff/lib490/
What is Storytelling? How does it differ from Digital Storytelling?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_storytelling
Rossiter & Garcia (2010) consider “digital stories are short vignettes that combine the art of telling stories with multimedia objects including images, audio, and video” (p. 37)
Is Digital Storytelling more then just storytelling on technology steroids?
What is Digital Storytelling (DS) for school leadership? A bibliographic research reveals a plenitude of research on DS in the classroom, for educators, but not much for educational leaders.
Guajardo, Oliver, Rodrigez, Valcez, Cantu, & Guajardo (2011) view digital storytelling for emerging educational leaders as “as a process for data creation, analysis, and synthesis.”
There is information for corporate leaders or community leaders and DS, but not much for ed leaders.
Let’s create our own understanding of digital storytelling for educational leaders.
Basic definitions, concepts and processes.
Multimodal Literacy refers to meaning-making that occurs through the reading, viewing, understanding, responding to and producing and interacting with multimedia and digital texts. It may include oral and gestural modes of talking, listening and dramatising as well as writing, designing and producing such texts. The processing of modes, such as image, words, sound and movement within texts can occur simultaneously and is often cohesive and synchronous. Sometimes specific modes may dominate.
http://guides.library.stonybrook.edu/digital-storytelling
When you hear the term, Digital Storytelling, do you immediately consider Social Media?
IT’S A MINDSET – NOT A SKILL
http://turndog.co/2015/06/16/how-to-use-social-media-in-your-digital-storytelling/
Share Your Brand’s (School?) Story
https://www.postplanner.com/digital-storytelling-techniques-secret-sauce-social-media/
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literature:
Rossiter, M., & Garcia, P. A. (2010). Digital storytelling: A new player on the narrative field.
New Directions For Adult & Continuing Education, 2010(126), 37-48.
http://login.libproxy.stcloudstate.edu/login?qurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ebscohost.
com%2flogin.aspx%3fdirect%3dtrue%26db%3daph%26AN%3d51532202%26
site%3dehost-live%26scope%3dsite
Guajardo, M., Oliver, J. A., Rodriguez, G., Valadez, M. M., Cantu, Y., & Guajardo, F. (2011). Reframing the Praxis of School Leadership Preparation through Digital Storytelling. Journal Of Research On Leadership Education, 6(5), 145-161.
http://login.libproxy.stcloudstate.edu/login?qurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ebscohost.com%2flogin.aspx%3fdirect%3dtrue%26db%3deric%26AN%3dEJ958883%26site%3dehost-live%26scope%3dsite
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more on digital storytelling in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=digital+storytelling
Qualitative
Document Analysis
Document analysis is a form of qualitative research in which documents are interpreted by the researcher to give voice and meaning around an assessment topic. Analyzing documents incorporates coding content into themes similar to how focus group or interview transcripts are analyzed. A rubric can also be used to grade or score a document. There are three primary types of documents:
• Public Records: The official, ongoing records of an organization’s activities. Examples include student transcripts, mission statements, annual reports, policy manuals, student handbooks, strategic plans, and syllabi.
• Personal Documents: First-person accounts of an individual’s actions, experiences, and beliefs. Examples include calendars, e-mails, scrapbooks, blogs, Facebook posts, duty logs, incident reports, reflections/journals, and newspapers.
• Physical Evidence: Physical objects found within the study setting (often called artifacts). Examples include flyers, posters, agendas, handbooks, and training materials.
How do I analyse “Document analysis”
http://www.methodspace.com/forums/topic/how-do-i-analyse-document-analysis/
As with all research, how you collect and analyse the data should depend on what you want to find out. Since you haven’t told us that, it is difficult to give you any precise advice. However, one really important matter in using documents as sources, whatever the overall aim of your research, is that data from documents are very different from data from speech events such as interviews, or overheard conversations.So the first analytic question you need to ask with regard to documents is ‘how are these data shaped by documentary production ?’ Something which differentiates nearly all data from documents from speech data is that those who compose documents know what comes at the end while still able to alter the beginning; which gives far more opportunity for consideration of how the recepient of the utterances will view the provider; ie for more artful self-presentation. Apart from this however, analysing the way documentary practice shapes your data will depend on what these documents are: for example your question might turn out to be ‘How are news stories produced ?’ – if you are using news reports, or ‘What does this bureaucracy consider relevant information (and what not relevant and what unmentionable) ? if you are using completed proformas or internal reports from some organisation.
An analysis technique is just like a hardware tool. It depends where and with what you are working to choose the right one. For a nail you should use a hammer, and there are lots of types of hammers to choose, depending on the type of nail.
So, in order to tell you the bettet technique, it is important to know the objectives you intend to reach and the theoretical framework you are using. Perhaps, after that, We could tell you if you should use content analysis, discourse or grounded theory (which type of it as, like the hammer, there are several types of GTs).
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY IN EDUCATION
AN INTRODUCTION TO DOCUMENT ANALYSIS
written after Bowen (2009), but well chewed and digested.
The Use of Qualitative Content Analysis in Case Study Research
Florian Kohlbacher http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/75/153
1. Introduction: Qualitative vs. Quantitative Research?
excellent guide to the structure of a qualitative research
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more on qualitative research in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=qualitative+research
http://web.stcloudstate.edu/pmiltenoff/lib490/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/SCSUDigitalStorytelling/
(request admission, please)
Jennifer Rafferty, Director, OLC Institute for Professional Development,
a variety of available platforms, and many creative ways that faculty are integrating social media into their teaching practice.
Include details about the activity in your syllabus & course description.
Use contracts.
Link to institutional policies.
Use aliases for social media accounts.
Teach your students to use digital media responsibly.
Know where to provide assignment feedback.
Don’t use personal accounts for university business.
Understand the Terms of Service.
Sources
Classification of Social Media Platforms, DelValle Institute Knowledge Base, Office of Public Health Preparedness. Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from https://delvalle.bphc.org/mod/wiki/view.php?pageid=65
Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. 2005. Using Digital Content. Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from http://www.copyright.com/Services/copyrightoncampus/basics/teach.html
Educause, Is Your Use of Social Media FERPA Compliant? Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/your-use-social-media-ferpa-compliant
Kind, T., Genrich G. and Chretien, K.(2010) Social Media Policies at US Medical Schools. Medical Education Online. Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2941429/
Meyer, L., (2015). Six Alternative Social Media Tools for Teaching and Learning, Campus Technology. Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from https://campustechnology.com/Articles/2015/01/07/6-Alternative-Social-Media-Tools-for-Teaching-and-Learning.aspx?Page=4
Orlando, J., 2011. FERPA and Social Media, Faculty Focus. Retrieved on March 24, 2017 from http://www.facultyfocus.com/articles/teaching-with-technology-articles/ferpa-and-social-media/
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more on social media for teaching practices in this IMS blog