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You are here: Home / Archives for Academics & Academia / Pedagogy

Pedagogy

The "Pedagogy" category covers the craft and science of teaching, particularly with technology.

 


 

The Intended Consequences of California’s Online Education Initiative

By Phil Hill. Posted on January 8, 2017

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If online courses or programs breaks down the barriers of campus walls and enables anytime, anywhere education, then why not explore how collaboration can open up access and improve quality. While we tend to not write e-Literate about our consulting work through MindWires, in this case we have heard a general interest from other systems to learn more about what the California Online Education Initiative (OEI) at the community college system is doing.

Chan/Zuckerberg: The “Tech” is not the Hard Part in “Ed Tech”

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on January 5, 2017

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Phil and I were recently interviewed by KQED’s Sarah Tan for a story about the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative’s Summit platform. As often happens when our comments are just one bit of a larger story—particularly when we are asked to provide a more critical external perspective as a check on the enthusiastic reports of a project’s participants—some interesting parts of the interview conversation inevitably ended up on the cutting room floor. Ms. Tan was kind enough to grant us permission to repurpose some of the source material from the interview for this blog post.

Pearson Releases a Significant Learning Design Aid

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on December 18, 2016

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In my view, the work itself is a significant contribution. It also is a positive indicator about Pearson’s future direction as a participant in and influencer of that community, although how strong an indicator is a much harder question to evaluate. And it gives us another clue about the co-evolution of educational institutions and ed tech vendors that we are likely to see over the next years and decades. In this post, I’m going to evaluate each of these aspects in turn.

Explainer Videos on Course Exchanges and the Shared Infrastructure Behind Them

By Phil Hill. Posted on December 14, 2016

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Two months ago O’Neal Spicer and I wrote an op-ed for the Community College Daily describing our observations on the California Online Education Initiative (OEI). We don’t often write about clients of ours, but in this case we felt it would be useful to share our thoughts outside of the consulting context, and the OEI staff […]

UT Austin and SMOCs: What do we know about whether they work?

By Phil Hill. Posted on December 11, 2016

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In episode 1, we looked at an effort by the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Texas at Austin to develop SMOCs – Synchronous Massive Online Courses – where the core of the redesign centers on the synchronous online experience for large lecture courses (1000+ students in some cases) courses.1 In episode 2, we took a […]

UT Austin and SMOCs: What these synchronous courses look like and cost

By Phil Hill. Posted on December 5, 2016

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Last month we shared a video describing how the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Texas at Austin is taking a different approach than some of the courseware-based or other course redesign efforts.1 In many of these other redesigns, there is an emphasis on the asynchronous elements of lab section and lecture preparation and even fully […]

Vendor Roles in Fostering Educational Literacies

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on November 23, 2016

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In my last post, I talked about the need for educators in general and faculty in particular to develop literacy around data and analytics. But it’s really broader than that. Back when college was intended for a relatively small percentage of the population, the idea of “weeding out” students who couldn’t make it without help was not obviously out of alignment with its mission.
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The views expressed here are solely my own and may or may not reflect those of my employer.