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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup)
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Introduction to Hybrid Teaching: People, Pedagogy, Politics

Introduction to Hybrid Teaching: People, Pedagogy, Politics | blended learning | Scoop.it
Caring for others has never been so vital. We teach humanity, not technology. Use hybrid education to build community.

Via Peter Mellow, juandoming
Marinhos's curator insight, March 12, 2021 2:22 PM
Em tempos de fechamento de escola  o ensino híbrido (talvez seja mais conveniente falar em aprendizagem híbrida) é tema na pauta educacional.
Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Digital #MediaArt(s) Numérique(s)
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Hackster.io - The community dedicated to learning hardware

Hackster.io - The community dedicated to learning hardware | blended learning | Scoop.it

We started in 2013 with a commitment to help people everywhere learn how to program, connect and create Internet-connected hardware. Today, our community has grown to 50,000 developers, makers and entrepreneurs who build projects as means for learning and discovery.


We put people and learning ahead of commercial interests, and we’ve built an amazing network of partners who believe in our mission: if we do our job right, Hackster will accelerate the solving of really big problems. By equipping inventive people with the resources they need, we hope to help them create technologies that impact meaningful issues, such as a healthy environment, wildlife preservation, and our own welfare.


Via Jacques Urbanska
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from 21st Century Learning and Teaching
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A New Pedagogy is Emerging... and Online Learning is a Key Contributing Factor | teachonline.ca | #ModernPedagogy #ModernLEARNing

A New Pedagogy is Emerging... and Online Learning is a Key Contributing Factor | teachonline.ca | #ModernPedagogy #ModernLEARNing | blended learning | Scoop.it

At first, many faculty sought to replicate online what they normally do in a classroom. They soon discovered this was not a strategy that was practical, as not all students could access synchronous classes reliably and many had challenges, such as other siblings or parents needing access to the technology, the costs of broadband Internet access exceeding their ability to pay, or were in different time zones. Nor was it efficient.

In fact, what faculty began to discover is what has been known for some time. There is “no empirical evidence that says that classroom instruction benefits students (compared to alternatives) from a learning achievement perspective”, a finding from the Centre for the Study of Learning and Performance at Concordia University. Faculty began to experiment with personal challenges, small group work, project-based learning and the recording of short videos. They began to explore pedagogy, the science and art of instruction based on design.

Faculty sought help from colleagues with previous experience teaching online, looking for evidence for what worked in their discipline. They were inspired by examples for creative arts and music, where Zoom rehearsals and performances produced remarkable and life-changing events. Some discovered open education resources, materials, labs, videos, simulations, games, that helped them find new ways of engaging their online learners. Some truly innovative design ideas emerged, such a course on COVID-19 in which a different “angle” (epidemiology, economics, psychology, virology, politics) became the focus for each week taught by a faculty member from that discipline.

 

Learn more / En savoir plus / Mehr erfahren:

 

https://www.scoop.it/topic/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=pedagogy

 


Via Gust MEES
Gust MEES's curator insight, October 10, 2020 9:15 AM

At first, many faculty sought to replicate online what they normally do in a classroom. They soon discovered this was not a strategy that was practical, as not all students could access synchronous classes reliably and many had challenges, such as other siblings or parents needing access to the technology, the costs of broadband Internet access exceeding their ability to pay, or were in different time zones. Nor was it efficient.

In fact, what faculty began to discover is what has been known for some time. There is “no empirical evidence that says that classroom instruction benefits students (compared to alternatives) from a learning achievement perspective”, a finding from the Centre for the Study of Learning and Performance at Concordia University. Faculty began to experiment with personal challenges, small group work, project-based learning and the recording of short videos. They began to explore pedagogy, the science and art of instruction based on design.

Faculty sought help from colleagues with previous experience teaching online, looking for evidence for what worked in their discipline. They were inspired by examples for creative arts and music, where Zoom rehearsals and performances produced remarkable and life-changing events. Some discovered open education resources, materials, labs, videos, simulations, games, that helped them find new ways of engaging their online learners. Some truly innovative design ideas emerged, such a course on COVID-19 in which a different “angle” (epidemiology, economics, psychology, virology, politics) became the focus for each week taught by a faculty member from that discipline.

 

Learn more / En savoir plus / Mehr erfahren:

 

https://www.scoop.it/topic/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=pedagogy