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ScienceDaily: Monkeys Learn In The Same Way As Humans, Psychologists Report
ScienceDaily: Monkeys Learn In The Same Way As Humans, Psychologists Report
"Many people," Kornell noted, "have had the experience of listening to a computer instructor open a menu and go through a series of steps. Then you try to do it, and you don't even know which menu or what the first step is. If you are passively following along, you won't remember it as well as if you're forced to do it yourself. Active learning is much harder, but if you can do it successfully, you will remember it much better in the long run.
·sciencedaily.com·
ScienceDaily: Monkeys Learn In The Same Way As Humans, Psychologists Report
Blasting the Myth of the Fold - Boxes and Arrows: The design behind the design
Blasting the Myth of the Fold - Boxes and Arrows: The design behind the design
Screen performance data and new research indicate that users will scroll to find information and items below the fold.
<p>The most basic rule of thumb is that for every site the user should be able to understand what your site is about by the information presented to them above the fold. If they have to scroll to even discover what the site is, its success is unlikely.</p> <p>Functionality that is essential to business strategy should remain (or at least begin) above the fold.</p>
·boxesandarrows.com·
Blasting the Myth of the Fold - Boxes and Arrows: The design behind the design
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
Only 4% of the students said they'd ever had an online conversation that made them uncomfortable, and only 2% said an online stranger tried to meet them in person. In fact, after surveying 1,277 students, the researchers found exactly one who reported they'd actually met a person from the internet without their parents' permission — and described this as "0.08 percent of all students."
In fact, 76% of parents expect social networking will improve their children's reading and writing skills, or help them express themselves more clearly, according to the study, and parents and communities "expect schools to take advantage of potentially powerful educational tools, including new technology."
·tech.blorge.com·
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
ASCD Blog: My Back Pages: Aesthetic Literacy
ASCD Blog: My Back Pages: Aesthetic Literacy
Arguing for the development of aesthetic literacy, Sykes states, "What is at stake is not just another course in the curriculum but the recognition that the qualitative dimension of life, the sense of who we are as human beings, has a place in general education."
·ascd.typepad.com·
ASCD Blog: My Back Pages: Aesthetic Literacy
eSchool News online - Florida leads growth in virtual schooling
eSchool News online - Florida leads growth in virtual schooling
Virtual schools are growing fast, though, at an annual rate of about 25 percent. Estimates of elementary and secondary students taking virtual classes range from 500,000 to 1 million nationally, compared with total public school enrollment of about 50 million.
·eschoolnews.com·
eSchool News online - Florida leads growth in virtual schooling
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
The Scholar360 Network Learning Environment integrates the best features of a learning management system with the best features of a social network. Instructors can teach online courses, dialog with students via discussion boards and blogs, manage automated tests, lessons and grading. Students can share files, build an eportfolio, blog, build a peer and mentor network.
·scholar360.com·
Scholar360 - Learner Management System and Integrated Peer Network
The Internet's new Dr. Spock? | Tech News on ZDNet
The Internet's new Dr. Spock? | Tech News on ZDNet
The research suggests that kids who live online understand the process by which knowledge is produced and shared in an online environment, whereas those kids who come in within 10 minutes, they're trying to get the answer and get off. So they're not as critical of a corporate Web site, for example. That's just one example of some fundamental inequalities in access to social skills and culture competencies between the information-haves and have-nots.
Really this becomes the basis for the new hidden curriculum. We now must say those kids who are raised in an environment where they have regular access to the online worldï¿??have a different way of learning that prepares them for school--to do better in school and in life--than those kids who were being left out.
·news.zdnet.com·
The Internet's new Dr. Spock? | Tech News on ZDNet
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
I was touched by her comment of near resignation when she says "<em>Besides, I know that realistically our organization is not going to stop using a traditional LMS, so this is a thought exercise for me."</em> Christy, the hope of friendlier, more useful and adaptive tools is thankfully a 'thought exercise' for most of us. Those ideas will spawn the tools that will swallow your LMS.
·storyboardmind.blogspot.com·
StoryBoard Mind: The Use Of Tools... and Friction
Cognitive Daily: Does racial diversity help students learn?
Cognitive Daily: Does racial diversity help students learn?
By far the researchers' most significant finding was one that simply matched previous research: students who had a more racially diverse group of friends and classmates <em>outside</em> of the study tended to write essays with higher ICs. Again, however, this finding is only a correlation, and cannot on its own show that racial diversity improves learning.
·scienceblogs.com·
Cognitive Daily: Does racial diversity help students learn?