Be Careful Out There…. — from Powerful Learning Practice by Susan Carter Morgan

Or at least think before you click “send.”
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Digital Footprint

Our recent Virtual Academy on Digital Citizenship featured Robin Ellis, Alec Couros, and Clarence Fisher, who presented on variety of topics focused on Digital Citizenship for Classroom Teachers. You can catch the Elluminate conversation here and read more about it on Nancy Caramanico’s post, too.

The virtual sessions are offered regularly to PLP cohorts, and this one produced some great resources we want to share. Check out the one-liners Nancy shared from Robin’s session…

Signals — from Purdue

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Also see:
Purdue’s student achievement technology goes national — from ecampusnews.com
‘Course Signals’ is an educational technology tool designed to boost student retention and success

Using web video to fine-tune student performance — from The Chronicle by Travis Kaya

For three years, faculty and students at Baruch College of the City University of New York have been honing their public-speaking and presentation skills online with the college’s Video Oral Communication Assessment Tool, or VOCAT, which allows instructors to view and give feedback on uploaded student videos.

After finding success with the tool on campus, developers are now actively searching for ways to take VOCAT to the next level, both beyond Baruch and across academic disciplines. They believe video-sharing on VOCAT has potential application in everything from distance learning and foreign-language instruction to performance arts and industrial trades.

“We’re looking ahead to where it might go,” said Mikhail Gershovich, platform designer and director of the Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute at Baruch. “I don’t want this to be just an assessment tool.”

VOCAT allows students to view videos of themselves giving presentations or performances online—all video is taped and uploaded by a college technician—and lets them read and respond to feedback from faculty members. The software also keeps a log of student videos, allowing them to track their progress over the course of a semester…

4 digital alternatives to the traditional resume — from mashable.com by Sharlyn Lauby

1. Video Resumes
2. The VisualCV
3. The Social Resume
4. Your LinkedIn Profile

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Originally from Powerful Learning Practice by Susan Carter Morgan:
Are we preparing our students for this?

A senior’s plea: Take a personal finance class — from USAToday College blog

When it comes to choosing classes during your college years, it seems like an easy task. After all, with your general college requirements, as well as your major/minor requirements, you may find that there are not many “fun” classes you can take. However, if you have the time, I highly recommend every college student take a personal finance class. It will really help in the future, which is (shockingly!) coming soon.

So, why take a personal finance class? After all, it’s so easy to avoid thinking about financial planning. The problem is that by avoiding financial planning, you are actually creating more financial problems for your future. Spending money is very easy, too easy in fact. Saving money, financial planning, and budgeting all takes some thought and effort. Unfortunately, managing your finances isn’t a skill you’re born with, so taking a personal finance course can really help you out in the long run. It is definitely a skill well worth learning, especially in today’s economy.

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10 Free Web Tools for Students — from education-portal.com

White House Summit touches on K-12, college link — from edweek.org by Caralee Adams

Buoyed by White House attention to the importance—and needs—of community colleges, some in the K-12 community are waiting to see if that spotlight will generate momentum for improved college readiness and better alignment of high schools with higher education.

This week’s White House Community College Summit was largely a symbolic event drawing about 150 leaders in education, business, and philanthropy and aimed at focusing attention on what is often labeled an undervalued sector of higher education.

But while the summit produced no big policy recommendations, the issues of high school preparation and college access hovered in the background as participants broke up into working groups after opening remarks by President Barack Obama.

More here…

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From DSC:
Some might look at what I cover in the Learning Ecosystem blog and comment, “What the heck is he doing? He can’t know everything about the teaching and learning worlds within the K-12, college, and the corporate training spaces!”  And they would be right. But I don’t base my work here on myself.  As a regular follower of this blog would know, I look to the expertise of others.  While I will often interject my own thoughts and contributions here, I try to aggregate the valuable experiences and insights of others.

Along these lines, I want to interject that those of us in higher ed need to be very aware of what’s happening in K-12. Students’ expectations are the key items to note here. Graduates from high school will come to our doors (physical and virtual) with a set of expectations and skill sets. To me, these expectations seem to be changing. We must meet them where they are at.

So this item caught my attention. More later…

We use Lynda.com and the feedback has been excellent. Back in 1997, I took a 1-day seminar from Lynda Weinman out at SFSU’s Multimedia Studies Program. I learned more from her in a few hours then I have in many courses. She knows how to make things very understandable…and she’s a great teacher. If she doesn’t know the topic, she selects people who know how to explain that topic in easy-to-understand terms.

So when I saw this item — Connect@NMC: Panel Discussion Led By Laurie Burruss of Lynda.com – Implementing Lynda.com Campus-Wide — I felt that I should pass it along.

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Kiva begins offering education microloans — from wired.co.uk by Duncan Geere

Kiva  begins offering education microloans

Crowdsourced microlending service Kiva has begun offering educational loans to students in three countries around the world, with the objective of expanding its successes with small businesses into encouraging the spread of learning.

How can we generate a love for learning when there’s so much emphasis on points/grades? — from DSC

I look back to my past…and I look to the present systems…and I look to the courses that I’m taking at the graduate level…and I can’t help but wonder what we can do to in order to instill more of a love for learning…?

When we constantly emphasis rubrics, grades, points, bell curves, SATs/ACTS/MEAPs/standardarized tests — man, it’s no wonder that students don’t connect with school! We enforce what we feel is important based up on what we think they will need to be productive…but it may or may not connect or be important to them at all. And it may not be the skills that are really needed when these folks enter the workplace. We taught them based upon what we needed in our work lives.

I can’t help but wonder how bummed out students become as the downward spiral begins…something happens in life to sidetrack them or they don’t have strong support for their educations in the home in the first place. They receive some low scores for a variety of reasons. Being that competition is so stressed in our worlds, they naturally look around to see how other students are doing. They notice the other students did better. They begin to feel discouraged. This happens a few more times and now they are getting really discouraged…school becomes a major source of stress and discouragement in their lives.

In addition to the stress, they aren’t always allowed to pursue their own passions…their own gifts and abilities;  instead, they are told what to learn, when to learn it, how exactly to learn it, etc.

I’m not out to blame anyone; and, in fact, I have an enormous amount of respect for the million agendas being thrown at teachers and professors these days. Can anyone deliver on all of these expectations and asked-for-deliverables?

However, I do hope that we can turn around this drop out situation in the U.S. — 25-30% is waaaaayyyy too high.

What can we do to better address students’ passions? Increase their motivation? How can we better instill a love for learning vs. “how to best compete and win” in the classroom? Funny how the older I get, the more the love of learning sets in…and the competition fades away.

Top 100 education advice blogs

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7 sites to help students choose and apply to colleges — from Free Technology for Teachers

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Portals: How to give prospective students what they want — from CampusTechnology.com by Bridget McCrea

College recruits expect a lot from their prospective schools’ Web sites, but there are two critical pieces of information they demand from a campus portal–information that should be fairly simple to provide. Is yours delivering what your prospective students want? If not, you may be driving them away.

What if one out of every four prospective students quickly crossed your school off their list of potentials just because they had an unfavorable experience on your Web site? That would mean that 25 percent of your recruits would go elsewhere simply because they couldn’t find the right academic information on the site or because your Web presence wasn’t linked into their favorite social networking tool.

If the scenario sounds far-fetched, think again. According to a new survey conducted by the National Research Center for College & University Admissions (NRCCUA), educational consultancy Noel-Levitz, and content management solution provider OmniUpdate, 24 percent of students will overlook a school whose Web sites don’t meet expectations.

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Rethinking Student Motivation

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