Search Results For "map"

I have been monitoring innovation in education for the past 20 years and am always looking for new insights so any post, article or story that points to “innovations to watch for” catches my attention. Even before I fully read the article I did a quick look up of the author Steven Mintz to see if he had the credentials or the experience to be offering these types of predictions. He does openly warn he readers he is a

“historian and far better at interpreting the past than forecasting the future.”

In addition to being a Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin, Mintz is also the Executive Director for the Institute for Transformational Learning in the University of Texas System. Finally, he points to over a decades worth of teaching with technology and walks the talk with a personal website http://stevenmintz.com/ that demonstrates his belief and skill in using technology to enhance learning.

Mintz points to following 15 innovations that he suggests will alter the face of higher education over the next 36 months:

1. e-Advising
2. Evidence-based pedagogy
3. The decline of the lone-eagle teaching approach
4. Optimized class time
5. Easier educational transitions
6. Fewer large lecture classes
7. New frontiers for e-learning
8. Personalized adaptive learning
9. Increased competency-based and prior-learning credits
10. Data-driven instruction
11. Aggressive pursuit of new revenue
12. Online and low-residency degrees at flagships
13. More certificates and badges
14. Free and open textbooks
15. Public-private partnerships

Despite not being an acclaimed expert in educational technology Mintz’s predictions fall in line with the literature and research in this area and more importantly he points to changes in learning as the key disruptive innovation in 8 of his 15 predictions. He sees evidence based pedagogy not only informing instructional design but also personalized adaptive learning. He accurately places the emphasis on student-centred, competency based, well designed and collaborative constructed learning experiences as a major catalyst for change. His remaining predictions point to the disruptors of open educational resources (OER), growth of online learning and the loosening of credentialing through certification and badges and the move toward public-private partnerships.

Mintz sums up his piece with a positive challenge to faculty members to work together and:

take the lead in designing an education that will truly serve the needs of our 21st-century students.

Read the full article…

The following infographic represents the right vs left brain usage myth that simply will not go away. Christian Jarrett, the editor of the British Psychological Society’s Research Digest blog suggest that Left-Brain Right-Brain Myth Will Never Die because it has:

become a powerful metaphor for different ways of thinking – logical, focused and analytic versus broad-minded and creative.

He also suggest that the logical left-brain, creative right-brain myth has a seductive simplicity about it people use to characterize themselves or explain away tendencies. In reality we use both sides of or brains and normal brain activity doesn’t map as cleanly as the myth suggests.

Regardless the myth has survived since the 1800s and will continue to thrive because of well constructed inforgraphics like the following from organizations who are using the myth to drive traffic to their website:

left brain right brain

Source: OnlineCollege.org

The Holistic Approach to Technology Enhanced Learning wheel provides a useful visual representation of the variety of learning theories and approaches that populate the educational technology literature. One must take the title “Learning Theory Wheel” with a grain of salt because the wheel combines both key concepts, paradigm and worldviews with learning theorists and scientific disciplines.

View the full graphic…

HathiTrust which includes 80 institutional partners and the digitized collections of some of the largest libraries in the world has partnered with the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) to double the size of its public collection. Over 3.5 million our of its 11 million resources are now freely available through the DPLA. I have always held that “information wants/needs to be free” so this is a move I applaud and will watch develop.

Read the full press release…

Edudemic’s Teacher’s Guides to Technology and Learning offer a really good starting point on the following teaching and learning approaches, technologies, resources and social media tools:

  • Twitter
  • Flipped Classroom
  • Copyright and Fair Use
  • Google Glass
  • Badges in Education
  • Library of Congress
  • Keeping Students Safe Online
  • Choosing the Best Digital Content
  • Digital Scavenger Hunts
  • Pinterest
These guides do have a K-12 focus many of the ideas can be used in higher education. Futhermore, these guides are NOT as comprehenvise as Ann Hart’s Center for Learning and Performance Technologies but they do provide a visually appealing starting point for anyone interested in using technology to enhance the learning environment.