Education 2.0 & 3.0
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Education 2.0 & 3.0
All about learning and technology
Curated by Yashy Tohsaku
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Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Putting in more: emotional work in adopting online tools in teaching and learning practices

Putting in more: emotional work in adopting online tools in teaching and learning practices | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

(2014). Putting in more: emotional work in adopting online tools in teaching and learning practices. Teaching in Higher Education: Vol. 19, No. 8, pp. 919-930. doi: 10.1080/13562517.2014.934343.

 

This paper explores the emotional journey associated with changing one's teaching and learning practices and how this constitutes emotional work. The paper analyses the emotions evident in the data from a small-scale phenomenological study of lecturers who are using technological tools in their teaching, learning and assessment practices in one higher education institution. The discussion illuminates the nature and scale of the emotional work experienced by some lecturers when changing their teaching and learning practices to incorporate technology. It indicates that this challenge is so extreme that even the most committed advocates of online teaching practices may consider giving up and reverting to traditional ways of teaching. The paper identifies strategies that lecturers use to manage the anxieties they experience in their adoption of online tools.


Via Elizabeth E Charles
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Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Amazing Facts about the Psychology of Learning and Memory - Learning Mind

Amazing Facts about the Psychology of Learning and Memory - Learning Mind | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it
Psychological research has long been fascinated with how humans learn and retain memories. Here are some amazing facts of how the brain learns and remembers.

Via Elizabeth E Charles
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Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Lecture Capture – Sometimes it’s better to be heard…and not seen | ALT Online Newsletter

Lecture Capture – Sometimes it’s better to be heard…and not seen | ALT Online Newsletter | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it

In my work as an educational technologist in Higher Education (and with academic/teaching experience in HE) I am more frequently receiving queries and requests from teaching staff who want to make a video of their lecture so it can be available to their students on their module site in the institutional VLE.


Via Elizabeth E Charles
Donna Farren's curator insight, November 4, 2014 4:14 PM

Great point about video not being always necessary!  Just watching someone talk is BORING!  Plus if it is just audio - downloading it becomes portable and now you are not tied to a screen.  I can listen in my car, on my walk, washing dishes...  Yes, maybe I need to listen and take notes, but sometimes a general overview of the content is nice too.