This blog focuses on my scholarship in my five research projects: learning assistance and equity programs, student peer study group programs, learning technologies, Universal Design for Learning, and history simulations. And occasional observations about life.
Revising the Pedagogy of Developmental-Level Courses
Remediating Remediation
The article does a good job demonstrating how remedial or developmental-level courses are being revised and repackaged to increase their effectiveness for students. Sixty percent of community college students need to enroll in those courses. Public statements to simply eliminate the courses cannot occur if the U.S. is really committed to access and success for all students, especially those from historically underrepresented populations. Following is selected text from the article:
"Once students arrive on campus, their developmental education programs can be part of the problem. Too often, developmental courses involve worksheets and drills that are “deadly dull,” said Tom Brock, the director of Young Adults and Postsecondary Education for the MDRC, a policy-research organization in Oakland, Calif. Remedial courses don’t earn credit toward a degree, and the low expectations, inadequate tracking, and lack of support can leave students feeling demoralized. If the course content doesn’t bear relation to why they came to college, students can lose interest. Some colleges are addressing the dullness factor by developing fast-track programs in which students who need the least help can move along more quickly. Computer software can differentiate the instruction to each student’s needs, accelerating his or her learning.
At Zane State, President Paul Brown recognizes the importance of supporting students in that first year. Sustaining the college’s 15 percent growth rate is contingent on retaining students and working with the 75 percent who enter in need of developmental education, he said. If students can make it through the first year—often with additional supports—Zane State has found that 87 percent will graduate. To keep freshmen engaged, the college implemented an early-intervention system that identifies students who are repeating courses and provides support before they drop out. The college is also using technology and individualized instruction to tailor developmental education courses to students’ needs, Mr. Brown said.
Valencia Community College developed a Learning in Communities program for its developmental education students in which courses are paired, keeping a cohort of students together, and trained student learning leaders help organize study groups outside the classroom. Next fall, the college is planning to group 125 freshmen into a learning community working closely with four faculty members. They will move through developmental education together in the first term and co-enroll in college-credit courses in the second term, explained Nicholas Bekas, the project director of the Developmental Education Initiative on the campus. The graduation rate at Valencia rose from 35 percent to 43 percent between 2006 and 2010 for first-time, degree-seeking students. Among those with a developmental education mandate, the numbers are up from 16 percent to 21 percent in the same time frame.
The Gates Foundation is investing in effective models because too many students get lost in developmental education, and getting a college degree is what can transform lives, said Mark Milliron, the foundation’s deputy director for postsecondary improvement. “What [colleges] are doing now is painfully unsuccessful,” Mr. Milliron said. “The whole idea is to get in there early.” Several promising approaches are being developed, including working with high schools, providing deeper diagnosis to find academic areas of weakness, and designing modular, technology-assisted instruction to get students through developmental education faster, he said."
RELATED BLOG
Web Links for Converting File Types
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Tech Learning TL Advisor Blog and Ed Tech Ticker Blogs from TL Blog Staff – TechLearning.com Good, basic article on how to evaluate the accuracy, usefulness, and trustworthiness of blogs. Excellent for sharing with students who may access blogs for classroom assignments. (tags: blogs social_media instructional_technology)
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Zamzar - Free online file conversion Convert files into various document, image, music, e-book, and other formats (tags: file_conversion e-book_conversion)
Harnesing Social Media for Promote Ideas
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10 Ways to Leverage LinkedIn to Generate Business | Social Media Today Not only can the strategies be used to build business, but also could be used to increase influence within education, nonprofit organizations, and public causes. (tags: LinkedIn social_media)
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Top 19 Free Photo Sites For Bloggers | Social Media Today Blog postings are more inviting and interesting with thoughtful use of photographs that relate to the posting. This list of nearly 20 web sites of copyright-free photographs and images is a perfect resource. (tags: social_media blogs copy-right_free_images)
Mobile Computing Opportunities
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A New Research Agenda for Mobile Learning-Transform, Univ. of Minnesota "No longer are the hallmarks of an academically engaged student or scholar a hefty backpack overflowing with books, a desk littered with journal articles, or a remote research carrel hidden in the darkened recesses of the stacks. Instead, the visible markers of the learner are manifest in increasingly smaller portable devices that have the capacity to store, retrieve, send, search, download, compose, edit, capture, and publish whatever materials may be necessary to accomplish a given learning goal. The very portability of learning content coupled with the communicative power of these mobile devices should make us rethink the transformative power behind all those tiny little speakers in our students' ears." (tags mobile_web_access ipad instructional_technology)
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Monterey College of Law Pilots iPad Programs for Students and Faculty -- Campus Technology Reason for the experiment: "Many of our law students work the equivalent of three jobs. Between law school, work, and family, it is a constant challenge for them to set aside enough time during the week to study," said Wendy LaRiviere, dean of admissions, in a written statement issued today. "...[T]he iPad will provide time-challenged students an easy way to add 30 to 45 minutes of studying each day ... during a lunch break, waiting in the car-pool line, or even getting their oil changed. The result will be an additional three to five hours per week of valuable study time. If our students use this 'found' time to do additional reading and incorporate a more extensive use of their class notes, study guides, and practice exams, we expect to see a positive result in law school performance and continued improvement in the bar pass rates of our graduates." (tags: ipad instructional_technology mobile_web_access apps)
Recent Social Media Web Bookmarks
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Why Do You Retweet? | Social Media Today Practical reasons for retweeting other people's Twitter messages. Social media is about interaction, conversation, and synergy. When retweeting, add a short comment to add value to the retweet and establish your own expertise with the topic.(tags: Twitter social_media)
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57 Social Media Policy Examples and Resources | Social Media Today Wonderful collection of how social media is managed and used at nearly 60 organizations. Their experiences provides a roadmap of things to do and not do with a new organization strategy for use of social media. (tags: social_media social_media_policies)
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5 Lecturecasting Tools That I Can't Live Without (and Why) - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education I use ScreenFlow to record my class lectures through my laptop. It does a wonderful job of capturing the PowerPoint slides, video clips, and my voice. I use an inexpensive Radio Shack wireless microphone (about $50) and then post the Quicktime movie to the course management system. it requires student password to enter and view the video. Students report average to high satisfaction with the process. One student even commented that they liked it better than listening to me since they felt comfortable in stopping the lecture any time they want, rewinding, and watching again. Now that is what you call "remote control" over the lecture. :-) (tags: screen_capture lecture_capturing instructional_technology)
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Teaching with Omeka - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education A sophisticated online software program for creating digital projects by individuals or groups. (tags: Omeka digital_storytelling collaboration_tools)
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News: Web Re(design) - Inside Higher Ed The basic issue is making web pages friendly for the consumers and not only for the web page designers and those at the institution that give direction to the designers. Reminds me of need for focus groups of potential users to guide the web page design. (tags: web_pages web_page_design)
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Mass Video Courses May Free Up Professors for Personalized Teaching - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education I have often thought about separating out the sections of my class sessions that are lecture-focused and placing them online, while reserving the class time for more intense interaction among students and with me. Good ideas in this article. (tags: instructional_technology video_courses personalized_teaching)
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Ask a question on society.me A new service that can be used to establish credibility of a person with a specific content area. It is a form of social networking (a la LinkedIn) that brings together people with questions and those with answers. (tags: Society, Ask_me_anything social_media)
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Using Data to Inform College Access Programming in the 21st Century High School (Using DICAP) | data.ed.gov This is the I3 grant funded for the Council on Opportunity in Education. It focuses on use of data to improve programs and decision making leading to higher college stuccess rates. (tags: I3 COE data_driven_decision-making grants)
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University of Minnesota Mail - Announcing ChimeIn Created by Colin McFadden and team at the University of Minnestoa, Chimeln is a clicker system that uses mobile devices (smartphones, iPads) as a class response system. Check out the video tutorial (tags: Chimeln classroom_clickers student_response_system)
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Simple, Powerful Uses for Google Books - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education Great suggestions for using Google Books both for personal research as well as replacement or supplement of free books for students in classes. (tags: Google_books Google)
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Managing Twitter Favorites - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education Very practical suggestions for identifying and sharing favorite Tweets. I create a "badge" through Twitter and then embed into a web page where I display my favorited Tweets. Nice way to share with others as well as save for my future use. (tags: Twitter social_media)
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Top 10 Sites for Creating Surveys Great free sites for creating surveys. Some of the sites provide enhanced services for a monthly fee. SurveyMonkey is one of the ten. (tags: online_surveys apps)
Apps for the iPad to Improve Student Learning
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I have been using an iPad since they first came out last spring. I find it to be an amazing device, partically due to my need for an enhanced text reader and also for the endless number of free or inexpensive apps that can be downloaded and used on it. Following is an article from the Chronicle that illustrates five of the author's favorites. With more than 250,000 currently available through the Apple iTunes store, it must have been a difficult choice. 5 iPad Applications I Can't Live Without (and Why) - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education (tags: ipad instructional_technology apps)
Teaching with Twitter
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I plan to use Twitter within my introductory world history class this fall. My plan is to make it an optional enrichment channel for students. I will use it initially for sharing links to interesting, relevant articles on the web related to the current history topic in class. Later in the term I may use it as an informal feedback loop for class activities. Following is an interesting article from the Chronicle on using Twitter. A Framework for Teaching with Twitter - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education Excellent conceptual article on the possibioities for teaching with Twitter. Especially helpful is the matrix box that explores the levels of interactivity by students and the depth of the content. Highly recommended. (tags: Twitter instructional_technology teaching_and_learning backchannel_communication)
