Searching for "teach"

train firing in VR

Your Boss Might Be Practicing Firing You In VR

https://screenrant.com/vr-boss-firing-simulator-talespin-software/

Talespin, a workplace training company specializing in VR, released a bizarre workplace simulator wherein you are tasked with firing virtual workers in order to teach you leadership skills and emotional intelligence.

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more on immersive in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=immersive

Edtech going global

The Next Wave of Edtech Will Be Very, Very Big — and Global

https://www-edsurge-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.edsurge.com/amp/news/2021-07-30-the-next-wave-of-edtech-will-be-very-very-big-and-global

India’s Byju’s

Few companies have tackled the full range of learners since the days when Pearson was touted as the world’s largest learning company. Those that do, however, are increasingly huge (like PowerSchool, which had an IPO this week) and work across international borders.

Chinese education giants, including TAL and New Oriental.

The meteoric rise of Chinese edtech companies has dimmed recently as the Chinese government shifted regulations around online tutoring, in an effort to “protect students’ right to rest, improve the quality of school education and reduce the burden on parents.”

Acquisitions and partnerships are a cornerstone of Byju’s early learning programs: It bought Palo Alto-based Osmo in 2019, which combines digital learning with manipulatives, an approach the companies call “phygital.” For instance: Using a tablet’s camera and Osmo’s artificial intelligence software, the system tracks what a child is doing on a (physical) worksheet and responds accordingly to right and wrong answers. “It’s almost like having a teacher looking over you,
My note: this can be come disastrous when combined with the China’s “social credit” system.

By contrast, Byju’s FutureSchool (launched in the U.S. this past spring) aims to offer one-to-one tutoring sessions starting with coding (based in part on WhiteHat Jr., which it acquired in August 2020) and eventually including music, fine arts and English to students in the U.S., Brazil, the U.K., Indonesia and others. The company has recruited 11,000 teachers in India to staff the sessions

In mid-July, Byju’s bought California-based reading platform Epic for $500 million. That product opens up a path for Byju’s to schools. Epic offers a digital library of more than 40,000 books for students ages 12 and under. Consumers pay about $80 a year for the library. It’s free to schools. Epic says that more than 1 million teachers in 90 percent of U.S. elementary schools have signed up for accounts.

That raises provocative questions for U.S. educators. Among them:

  • How will products originally developed for the consumer market fit the needs of schools, particularly those that serve disadvantaged students?
  • Will there be more development dollars poured into products that appeal to consumers—and less into products that consumers typically skip (say, middle school civics or history curriculum?)
  • How much of an investment will giants such as Byju’s put into researching the effectiveness of its products? In the past most consumers have been less concerned than professional educators about the “research” behind the learning products they buy. Currently Gokulnath says the company most closely tracks metrics such as “engagement” (how much time students spend on the product) and “renewals” (how many customers reup after a year’s use of the product.)
  • How will products designed for home users influence parents considering whether to continue to school at home in the wake of viral pandemics?

Best Tech Tools K12

10 Teacher Picks for Best Tech Tools

Teachers and administrators from pre-K through 12th grade named these tools their top picks for this year and beyond.

https://www.edutopia.org/article/10-teacher-picks-best-tech-tools

the responses of 1,461 virtual learning academy participants—pre-K to 12 teachers and administrators—to survey questions on impactful tools that I conducted from May to December 2020, and over 70 webinars and virtual learning sessions, these are the top teacher-tested tech tools I have identified.

TOP TECH TOOLS FOR EDUCATORS

10. Parlay, https://parlayideas.com/
9. Flipgrid
8. Edpuzzle
7. Pear Deck
6. Prezi
5. Screencastify,
https://www.screencastify.com/
4. Mural, https://www.mural.co/
3. Gimkit, https://www.gimkit.com/
2. Mentimeter and Slido. https://www.sli.do/, https://www.mentimeter.com/
1. Learning management system: Canvas and Schoology, Google Classroom

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more on ID in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=instructional+design

NSF AI Institute for Adult Learning and Online Education (ALOE)

NSF investing $20 million in Georgia-led effort to transform online education for adults

Project centers on artificial intelligence; new National Institute in AI to be headquartered at Georgia Tech

https://gra.org/blog/209

“The goal of ALOE is to develop new artificial intelligence theories and techniques to make online education for adults at least as effective as in-person education in STEM fields,” says Co-PI Ashok Goel, Professor of Computer Science and Human-Centered Computing and the Chief Scientist with the Center for 21stCentury Universities at Georgia Tech

Research and development at ALOE aims to blend online educational resources and courses to make education more widely available, as well as use virtual assistants to make it more affordable and achievable. According to Goel, ALOE will make fundamental advances in personalization at scale, machine teaching, mutual theory of mind and responsible AI.

The ALOE Institute represents a powerful consortium of several universities (Arizona State, Drexel, Georgia Tech, Georgia State, Harvard, UNC-Greensboro); technical colleges in TCSG; major industrial partners (Boeing, IBM and Wiley); and non-profit organizations (GRA and IMS).

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more on AI in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=artificial+intelligence

https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=online+education

 

Disruptive Transformation in Higher Education

https://www.illuminatehighereducation.com/episodes/37

“campuses have low digital literacy”

“earning [degree] model” must be replaced with teaching people “how to learn.”

automation

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more on disruption on higher ed in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=disrupt+higher+education

VR and soft skills

Virtual Reality helps students build skills for the modern workplace

https://www.thevrara.com/blog2/2021/7/6/virtual-reality-helps-students-build-skills-for-the-modern-workplace-bodyswapsvr-ufitrust-southessexcoll-harlowcollege-writtleofficial-sandwellcollege-bridgendcollege

Career Mindset Development is a 15-minute interactive learning simulation designed as part of a Ufi VocTech Trust initiative in collaboration with teachers and careers counsellors from Harlow CollegeWrittle University CollegeSouth Essex CollegeBridgend College, and Sandwell College to give young people guidance and feedback on:

  • Building self-awareness

  • Taking the initiative when talking to people you don’t know

  • Making a positive impact at work

  • Communicating ideas clearly and with confidence.

The simulation was piloted by the colleges between 1 March and 30 April 2021. Highlights of the results can be seen in this infographic.

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more on soft skills in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=soft+skills

Liberal Arts

An Unconvincing Argument for the Liberal Arts

We say we prepare students for undefined futures. Are they better for it?

https://www.chronicle.com/article/an-unconvincing-argument-for-the-liberal-arts

The medieval European understanding of liberal arts, based partially on a reinterpretation of classical ideas, suggested that elites needed an open-ended education based on the trivium and quadrivium (grammar, logic, rhetoric, arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy) because, as rulers, they would face complex and unexpected problems, whereas others only needed an introduction to “practical arts” relevant to specific repeated labor.

either everyone needs liberal arts or no one does. If liberal arts and preparation for uncertainty are synonymous, it can’t possibly make sense to limit that training to future leaders or a small elite.

Liberal-arts faculty can be surprisingly incurious about how teaching actually happens in educational settings different from their own

Helga Nowotny calls “the cunning of uncertainty” and accept her argument that everyone — rich and poor, college educated in a liberal-arts curriculum, or high-school educated in a trade — can and should live with and even embrace that cunning. By “cunning,” Nowotny means that uncertainty is an irreducible part of human life and the physical universe, and that we should follow where it leads us.

John Kay has called obliquity: that in a very concrete and empirical sense, many of our most cherished goals and values are achievable only if we do not try to achieve them directly.

Maybe a liberal education is, or could be, about embracing uncertainty where it is generative, necessary, and useful.

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more on liberal arts in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=Liberal+Arts

ICERI2021

https://iated.org/iceri/

ICERI2021, the 14th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation will be held in Seville (Spain) on the 8th, 9th and 10th of November, 2021.

ICERI is one of the largest international education conferences for lecturers, researchers, technologists and professionals from the educational sector. After 14 years, it has become a reference event where more than 800 experts from 80 countries will get together to present their projects and share their knowledge on teaching and learning methodologies and educational innovations. The 2021 edition of ICERI is sure to be among the most successful education conferences in Europe.

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More on conferences in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=conferences

Dealing with Digital Fatigue

8 Tips for Educators Dealing with Digital Fatigue

https://edtechmagazine.com/higher/article/2021/06/8-tips-educators-dealing-digital-fatigue

Feeling mentally exhausted from videoconferencing? Take these steps to stay sharp.

Tip #1: Create a Dedicated Space for Online Teaching

Tip #2: Be Selective When Trying Online Learning Tools

Tip #3: Calendar Block and Automate to Save Time

Tip #4: Delegate Tasks to Teaching Assistants or Students

Tip #5: To Prevent Burnout, Resist the Urge to Multitask

Tip #6: Turn Off Your Camera From Time to Time

Tip #7: Schedule Time for Self-Care in Education

Tip #8: Cut Yourself Some Slack During Online Teaching

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more on burnout in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=burnout

student engagement in higher ed

Improved Student Engagement in Higher Education’s Next Normal

https://er.educause.edu/articles/2021/3/improved-student-engagement-in-higher-educations-next-normal

We define student engagement as a constructivist approach to teaching and learning: less “sage on the stage” and more learning by doing.

Digital collaborative technologies embrace three important student engagement objectives: connecting students with the content, with the instructor, and with one another, within and across groups. Formulating, sharing, and getting feedback on responses benefits all students by increasing the exchange of ideas and approaches to the given prompt, helping students develop critical thinking skills through thoughtful peer review and analysis, and engaging them with timely feedback from expert instructors. Retaining these “blended learning” practices and additional affordances post-pandemic is worthwhile as we move to the next normal.

The five teaching enhancements/adaptations discussed above—collaborative technologies for sense-making, student experts in learning and technology, back channels, digital breakout rooms, and supplemental recording.

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more on student engagement in this IMS blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=student+engagement

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