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What You Need to Know About MOOC's - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education

What You Need to Know About MOOC's - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education | Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools | Scoop.it
Call it the year of the mega-class.

Colleges and professors have rushed to try a new form of online teaching known as MOOC’s—short for "massive open online courses." The courses raise questions about the future of teaching, the value of a degree, and the effect technology will have on how colleges operate. Struggling to make sense of it all? On this page you’ll find highlights from The Chronicle's coverage of MOOC's.

What are MOOC's?
MOOC's are classes that are taught online to large numbers of students, with minimal involvement by professors. Typically, students watch short video lectures and complete assignments that are graded either by machines or by other students. That way a lone professor can support a class with hundreds of thousands of participants.

Why all the hype?
Advocates of MOOC's have big ambitions, and that makes some college leaders nervous. They're especially worried about having to compete with free courses from some of the world’s most exclusive universities. Of course, we still don't know how much the courses will change the education landscape, and there are plenty of skeptics.


Via Susan Bainbridge
Peter B. Sloep's curator insight, January 3, 2:35 PM

Shortest possible history of MOOCs, but still useful for the uniitiated. However, as Susan Bainbridge already noted, there's one glaring omission, the Connectivist MOOCs by Siemens, Downes, Cormier are not mentioned at all. I know all the brouha is about the xMOOCs, but out of courtesy to the namegivers and originators, they should have been included in this overview; and also to avoid any possible confusion, a lot of the criticisms that apply to xMOOCs simply do not apply to cMOOCs, on the contrary rather. (@pbsloep)  

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The Blio App - Leveling the Playing Field for Dyslexics

The Blio App - Leveling the Playing Field for Dyslexics | Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools | Scoop.it

Blio is an ereader that can read various formats including PDF, epub and XML.  What does this mean for students with reading disabilities or dyslexia?

 

Blio includes:

> a text-to-speech feature that will cost $10;

>  a sync feature where it will sync audio books with test and highlight the word as it is being read;

> a notetaking feature where you can select text and add a note;

> a visual customization feature that can change the view, text size, etc.

>  a reading speed feature;

> a search text feature;

> a one-touch look up feature that can locate the definition of a word.


Via Kathleen McClaskey, Maggie Rouman, Tina Marie DeLong
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Rescooped by Lou Salza from Transmedia: Storytelling for the Digital Age
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With Google's New Glasses, Your Head Is Your Smartphone

With Google's New Glasses, Your Head Is Your Smartphone | Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools | Scoop.it

"Google's Glass augmented reality system may be the smartphone (smartspecs?) of the near future, neatly linking our digital lives with our real ones. Is this a good thing?"

 

DRC:  I guess the question has to be asked, but the tech is too cool for anyone to really care about the answer.  Will it live up to its promise?  That's a question people will care about.


Via The Digital Rocking Chair
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