Bloom's Sixth
Hat Day (with a lesson) and a lightboard (for creating a lesson)
By Doug Ward
A young woman with a flower headdress caught my attention as I walked through Budig Hall earlier this week. I stopped and asked her what the occasion was.
“It’s Hat Day in Accounting 200,” she said.
I wanted to know more, and Paul Mason, who teaches the 8 a.m. section of the class, and Rachel Green, who teaches the 9:30 section, graciously invited me in.
Hat Day, they said, is a tradition that goes back 20 years. It takes place one day toward the beginning of each semester and works like this: Students get a bonus point if they wear a hat to class. Teaching assistants…
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by Doug Ward
A new tool for creating online learning material
Three students in an upper-level physics class designed and built a tabletop lightboard for their final project this semester.
Lightboards are used in creating online videos for classes. They allow instructors to write on a glass pane as they would a whiteboard. A camera is positioned facing the instructor, capturing the writing on the glass as the instructor speaks. The image must then be flipped so that the writing can be read in the video. The approach is especially popular among STEM instructors.
John Rinnert of KU IT inspects the lightboard created by Conner Brown and other students…
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by Doug Ward
Education technology needs a better understanding of education
The ASU GSV Summit bills itself as a gathering of entrepreneurs, policymakers, business leaders and educators who want “to create partnerships, explore solutions, and shape the future of learning.”
That sort of described the event, which was held last week in San Diego. Yes, it was possible to find a few real discussions about education, but only a few. Doug Lederman of Inside…
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by Doug Ward
Promising products from an edtech conference
Hundreds of start-ups and established companies promoted their ideas and educational technology products at the ASU GSV Summit last week in San Diego. Many were quite good, even if they didn’t live up to the magic that some of them promised.
I’ll write more later about some of the ideas that emerged from the summit, a gathering of technology companies, investors, and educators. For now, though, I’d like to highlight some of the technologies that stood out as having the most potential. This is anything but a…
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by Doug Ward
A plea to ditch the education argle bargle
By Doug Ward
In one of my favorite poems, Taylor Mali mocks sloppy writing, juvenile articulation, and the general inability to put together words in a meaningful way. That poem, “Totally like whatever, you know?,” was brought to life by Ronnie Bruce’s animation (below), providing even more punch to Mali’s magnificent ending:
Because contrary to the wisdom of the bumper sticker,
it is not enough these days to simply QUESTION AUTHORITY.
You have…
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by Doug Ward
Two tech giants take on learning management
Microsoft’s Office software has long been the standard in business and education.
In a webinar this week, though, Microsoft showcased an online amalgamation of its software that looks very much like a learning management system.
Blackboard it isn’t, and that’s the point. Microsoft is drawing on the familiarity and ubiquity of its Office software to create an environment for class materials that is spare, visually appealing, and easy to use – all things that Blackboard isn’t.
The new software, called Class Dashboard (There was a link here, but the page no longer exist), isn’t all that…
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by Doug Ward
Classrooms matter. Technology matters. But …
After a session at the KU Teaching Summit last week, I spoke with a faculty member whose question I wasn’t able to get to during a discussion.
The session, Classrooms and the Future of Education, focused on how KU is working to create and renovate classrooms for active learning. Universities around the country are doing the same, putting in movable tables and chairs, and adding nontraditional furniture, whiteboards, monitors, and various digital accoutrements to make collaboration and hands-on learning easier, and learning environments more inviting.
The faculty member at my session said…
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by Doug Ward
New classrooms to help promote active learning
The School of Engineering at KU will open several new active learning classrooms this fall.
I’ve been involved in planning some of the summer training sessions for the rooms, so I’ve had a chance to explore them and see how they will work.
I’ve written before about the ways that room design can transform learning. Well-designed rooms reduce or eliminate the anonymity of a…
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by Doug Ward
Higher education’s tarnished image (part 2)
Most Americans still see a four-year degree as important, but it is not at the top of the list of things that will help someone achieve a successful career, a recent Heartland Monitor poll suggests.
In the poll, respondents ranked technology skills, an ability to work with diverse groups of people, keeping skills current, and having family connections above a four-year college degree.
They certainly didn’t dismiss a college education. More than half said a…
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by Doug Ward
Education Matters: Problems in technology use, college enrollment
Forget the technology. Instead, focus on the humanity.
That’s the advice of Kirstin Wilcox, a lecturer at the University of Illinois-Champaign. Wilcox isn’t anti-technology. Rather, she says, learning technology generally means something that helps deliver class material for large lecture classes, not something that helps students understand literary texts in small classes.
Once-novel technologies like wikis, blogs or online discussions have…
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by Doug Ward