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Generate a Random Name - Fake Name Generator
Generate a Random Name - Fake Name Generator
Not only creates a name, but a fake address, phone number, and other identity elements. Intended for authors, generating test data, or generating a fake id for filling out online forms.
·fakenamegenerator.com·
Generate a Random Name - Fake Name Generator
E.gg Timer - simple online countdown timer
E.gg Timer - simple online countdown timer
Type a time and it starts a timer in your browser window. Useful for showing break times in online synchronous training. You can bookmark a specific URL for a time if you regularly use the same length of time.
·e.ggtimer.com·
E.gg Timer - simple online countdown timer
People like virtual instructors that look, act like them
People like virtual instructors that look, act like them
Learners like avatars with the same gender and ethnicity, but they also like those who give feedback the way they want: comparing against others or comparing against their own past scores. However, learning didn't always improve based on liking the avatar better.
Although they may seem horribly fake, past research has suggested that we react to them in the same ways we react to a real person: studies have suggested that we tend to be more comfortable when the virtual personality shares our gender and ethnic background, just as we are when we work with living humans. Now, a new study on virtual training instructors extends that to show that people work best with virtual systems that measure progress the same way that they do.
·arstechnica.com·
People like virtual instructors that look, act like them
Adobe Forums: Creating one LMS Scorm package from...
Adobe Forums: Creating one LMS Scorm package from...
Discussion on how to daisy chain multiple Captivate projects into one big project. Includes a comparison of Aggregator projects versus Multi-SCORM
<p id="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" ondblclick="" onkeydown="" onkeypress="" onkeyup="" onmousemove="" onmouseout="" onmouseover="" onmouseup="" title="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" lang="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}">The Multi-SCO tool is designed more specifically for LMSs in that it allows you to take two or more individual SCORM-compliant modules created in Captivate and package them all together into one big module for your LMS.&nbsp; The tool creates a new imsmanifest.xml file that lists all the component modules in the package so that the LMS can build it's own menu of links in its SCORM player. Users just click these links to launch each lesson module.&nbsp; Each lesson can have its own TOC if desired, but the menu of links in the SCORM player is all you get for a TOC that shows all modules.&nbsp; That's the way SCORM was originally designed to work.</p><p id="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" ondblclick="" onkeydown="" onkeypress="" onkeyup="" onmousemove="" onmouseout="" onmouseover="" onmouseup="" title="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" lang="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}">&nbsp;</p><p id="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" ondblclick="" onkeydown="" onkeypress="" onkeyup="" onmousemove="" onmouseout="" onmouseover="" onmouseup="" title="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}" lang="function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}">The Captivate Aggregator on the other hand was designed to take multiple Captivate published outputs and merge them together in a single large project with a hierarchical merged TOC that listed the contents of all projects.&nbsp; I don't believe the original intention of the Captivate team was for aggregated projects to be used in LMSs but some Captivate developers have managed to get this to work by setting up all the individual projects as SCORMs and then hacking the imsmanifest.xml file to fool the LMS into thinking this was a single large SCO.</p>
·forums.adobe.com·
Adobe Forums: Creating one LMS Scorm package from...
What Does Your e-Learning Yield?
What Does Your e-Learning Yield?
A great analogy to use when someone asks you to create e-learning in an absurdly short time like a week.
<p>This is only possible by concluding that the only time necessary to create e-learning is that which is physically required to manipulate the tools to translate content onto the screen. &nbsp;That thinking applied to my strawberry crop would go something like this: &nbsp;</p> <p>I want us to start having strawberries, and I think we would benefit from producing about six quarts. &nbsp;I see that over at Edwards Berry Patch it takes about 5 minutes to pick a quart of strawberries. &nbsp;So since we need six, you should be able to get them for us in about a half hour. &nbsp;</p> <p>It’s utterly ridiculous; it ignores the fact that it took a year’s worth of effort to make that strawberry production possible. </p>
·info.alleninteractions.com·
What Does Your e-Learning Yield?
Big Dog, Little Dog: Five Years later: A Review of Kirschner, Sweller and Clark's Why Minimal Guidance during Instruction Does Not Work
Big Dog, Little Dog: Five Years later: A Review of Kirschner, Sweller and Clark's Why Minimal Guidance during Instruction Does Not Work
Review of Kirschner, Sweller, and Clark's paper bashing constructivism, discovery, and problem-based learning, plus some context and research on the other side.
Thus Kirschner, Sweller and Clark's paper is an important reminder for us to not carry Problem Based Learning (PBL) to its extreme. That is, while it has its strengths, learners often need a more direct approach in order to build a solid foundations before being presented with PBL.
With the title blaring, “<em>Why Minimal Guidance during Instruction Does Not Work”</em> rather than, <em>“Why Minimal Guidance during Instruction Does Not Work for Novice Learners,” </em>the authors almost seem to ignore that PBL is a necessity in order to promote deeper levels of understanding.
The paper relies heavily on Cognitive Load Theory, yet we have to realize that it is still a theory rather than a law.
Thus, both the authors and the constructivism movement are guilty of jumping on theories before they are fully understood.
·bdld.blogspot.com·
Big Dog, Little Dog: Five Years later: A Review of Kirschner, Sweller and Clark's Why Minimal Guidance during Instruction Does Not Work
World Time Buddy
World Time Buddy
Easy tool for scheduling meetings across time zones. Set it up with the locations you commonly use and bookmark your specific URL.
·worldtimebuddy.com·
World Time Buddy
Lurking or Legitimate Peripheral Participation | weiterbildungsblog
Lurking or Legitimate Peripheral Participation | weiterbildungsblog
(Auf Deutsch) Comparison of perspectives on lurking: the 90-9-1 rule, an aspect of our own personalities, an individual learning process, a challenge for community managers, or "Lurking als Lernen" (lurking as learning).
Lurking als Lernen: <em>“Lurking is not a problem, as long as lurkers are learning because enough material is created and shared by nonlurkers.”</em> <a href="http://etcjournal.com/2011/04/19/connectivism/" target="_blank">(Claude Almansi)</a>
·weiterbildungsblog.de·
Lurking or Legitimate Peripheral Participation | weiterbildungsblog
Look, I'm lurking - The Knowledge Lens
Look, I'm lurking - The Knowledge Lens
Thoughts on lurking and what lurkers bring to a community
The problem with calling it “lurking” makes everyone think negative thoughts. Like our community is full of Peeping Tom’s or other people with nefarious intent. People who don’t talk <strong>are</strong> still participating and learning – just in some non-obvious ways.
·knowledgelens.msloc.northwestern.edu·
Look, I'm lurking - The Knowledge Lens
ID and Other Reflections: Lurking is Not a Static State
ID and Other Reflections: Lurking is Not a Static State
Perspectives on lurking as an active act in part of the cycle of participation, pulling together quotes from multiple sources
Somehow, the word lurker has become associated with pejorative connotations of people taking from communities without giving back, of not contributing, of being selfish and feeding off the hard work of others. They are the free riders. However, is that truly the case? Would we consider silent participants in a meeting or at presentations lurkers?
A lurker might very well be giving back by performing better at their jobs, by sharing insights with others in the context of their daily work by using the learning gleaned from lurking. This is&nbsp;especially true of communities in enterprises.&nbsp;Since the give back is asymmetric and happens in a different context, this goes unnoticed.
·idreflections.blogspot.com·
ID and Other Reflections: Lurking is Not a Static State
Problems with Bloom's Taxonomy
Problems with Bloom's Taxonomy
Criticism of Bloom's Taxonomy, with two alternatives for classifying objectives
The categories or “levels” of Bloom’s taxonomy (knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation) are not supported by any research on learning. The only distinction that is supported by research is the distinction between declarative/conceptual knowledge (which enables recall, comprehension, or understanding) and procedural knowledge (which enables application or task performance).
·performancexpress.org·
Problems with Bloom's Taxonomy
The impact of instructional elements in computer-based instruction_July2007.pdf
The impact of instructional elements in computer-based instruction_July2007.pdf

Study examining what happens when you remove common elements of instruction. Practice with feedback was critical; information, objectives, examples, and review made little difference.

"This study investigated the effects of several elements of instruction (objectives, information, practice, examples and review) when they were combined in a systematic manner." "Results indicated participants who used one of the four versions of the computer program that included practice performed significantly better on the posttest and had consistently more positive attitudes than those who did not receive practice."

·florencemartin.net·
The impact of instructional elements in computer-based instruction_July2007.pdf