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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 Rise of Antisocial Deconstructivism

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on October 17, 2015

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Phil and I gave our first ever joint keynote at the OLC conference this week. We didn’t want to just do dueling PowerPoints, so instead we tried a format that I have been calling a social constructivist keynote. Each of us would present on a topic for a few minutes, and then the two of […]

Response to Robert Talbert: Pedagogical change is difficult, many need support

By Phil Hill. Posted on October 7, 2015

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On Monday Robert Talbert, associate professor at Grand Valley State University and author of the Casting Out Nines blog, wrote a provocative and important post titled “Active learning as an ethical issue”. Robert noted: The recent Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study stands out among these recent studies. It is a meta-study of 225 prior studies […]

Release of Analysis Episode for e-Literate TV Series on Personalized Learning

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 10, 2015

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Today we are thrilled to release the the final episode in our new e-Literate TV series on “personalized learning”. In this series, we examine how that term, which is heavily marketed but poorly defined, is implemented on the ground at a variety of colleges and universities. While today’s episode is the final one released due to its analysis of what […]

In Defense of the Lecture

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on September 6, 2015

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Following the IHE piece on Essex County College’s struggles to get good outcomes from their personalized learning program in developmental math, and following my blog post on the topic, Phil and I had an interesting exchange about the topic in email with ECC’s Vice President for Planning, Research, and Assessment Doug Walercz. With his permission, […]

Personalized Learning is Hard

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on August 29, 2015

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As Phil and I have been saying all along—most recently in my last post, which mentioned ECC’s use of adaptive learning—the software is, at best, an enabler. It’s the work that the students and teachers do around the software that makes the difference. Or not. In ECC’s case, they are trying to implement a pretty radical change in pedagogy with an at-risk population. It’s worth digging into the details.

The Fraught Interaction Design of Personalized Learning Products

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on August 26, 2015

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David Wiley has a really interesting post up about Lumen Learning’s new personalized learning platform. Here’s an excerpt: A typical high-level approach to personalization might include: building up an internal model of what a student knows and can do, algorithmically interrogating that model, and providing the learner with a unique set of learning experiences based […]

Challenge Of Student Transition Between Active And Passive Learning Models

By Phil Hill. Posted on August 20, 2015

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Last week the Hechinger Report profiled an innovative charter school in San Diego called High Tech High (insert surfer jokes here) that follows an active, project based learning (PBL) model. The school doesn’t use textbooks, and they don’t base the curriculum on testing. The question they ask is whether this approach prepares students for college. […]
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