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The Difference Between Empathy and Sympathy (And when to use each one) Working with Cognitive Load | Learn. Show. Repeat. When I first started working as an eLearning instructional designer I became interested in the learning process and how people learn. I figured that if I knew more about information processing and learning, I could hopefully design more effective courses and materials. I came across a book called Efficiency in Learning: Evidence-Based Guidelines to Manage Cognitive Load by Ruth Colvin Clark, Frank Nguyen and John Sweller. In this book I discovered – among other things – Cognitive Load Theory (CLT) which is based on studies of human cognitive architecture – how we process and organise information. In our brains, we have two types of memory. CLT proposes that there are three types of cognitive load: Intrinsic: this is the level of complexity inherent in the material being studied.

Extraneous: this is cognitive load imposed by non-relevant elements that require extra mental processing e.g. decorative pictures, animations etc. that add nothing to the learning experience. References: Mayer, R. eLearning Educational Designer Job in Melbourne. Epworth Corporate (Richmond) Permanent Full TimeNewly created educational designer positionBe part of a team committed to effective and innovative health care educationUse your expertise to design great learning experiencesEpworth HealthCare is committed to being the Australian leader for innovation and excellence in clinical education.

We are seeking a highly experienced education professional to join our eLearning team as eLearning Educational Designer. This role will challenge, develop and reward the right person whose commitment to educational outcomes is matched by great skills in designing effective and engaging elearning and blended learning and a sustained ability to rapidly and accurately complete multiple concurrent development projects. You will be a key member of the Epworth eLearning team, supporting the team’s work by designing effective engaging and targeted learning experiences and assessment.

As eLearning Educational Designer you will: Serious eLearning Manifesto | By putting forth this Manifesto, Michael Allen, Julie Dirksen, Clark Quinn, and Will Thalheimer invite all learning professionals to pledge to do the things that are necessary to create an engaging and effective experience fo. 10 Must-Read Articles About Blended Learning. Gamification Basics. Evaluation framework.

As communities and networks go more mainstream there is an increasing demand from organizations to have ways of monitoring their value. How can we make the connection between the activities of a community or network and the improved performance of an organization, institution or even a country? In our value assessment framework, published by the Open University of the Netherlands, we identify five levels of value creation of a community or network: Cycle 1.

Immediate value: the activities and interactions between members have value in and of themselvesCycle 2. For a reliable picture of how the community is creating value we would have to follow the value creation across these different cycles. Sponsors, evaluators and leaders of communities and networks should be able to use the framework and accompanying toolkit. Contents Download You can download the full text in PDF format here: Download the evaluation framework Citation See also. 178 Articulate Storyline 2 Templates. 30+ QR Code Resources. Revisiting the definition of Mobile Learning. 20th Century Assessment In A 21st Century Learning Environment. 20th Century Assessment In A 21st Century Learning Environment by Terry Heick Testing is a major challenge in education. Agreeing on what’s to be tested and how it’s to be administered is a matter of much debate.

It’s also a big business. According to SmarterBalanced.org, the per-student cost for testing is currently around $31 per student. Recently there has been movement in this area, with a slew of organizations– among them the Smarter Balanced Consortium linked to above–developing new approaches to assessing student understanding. These efforts include adding adaptive computer-based testing to the existing assessments forms, which in many states include short-written responses. A Picture of 21st Century Learning If you can, imagine a 21st century learning environment. Learners buzz about a classroom working on a project to improve local water quality. They demonstrate a consistent pattern of reflection, deconstruction, and evolution of thought while bridging physical and digital audiences.

How Teachers Make Cell Phones Work in the Classroom. A.P. Chemistry students use their cell phones to answer their teacher's question. When we talk about using cell phones in class, we’re not just talking about using cell phones in class. The idea of mobile learning touches on just about every subject that any technology addresses: social media, digital citizenship, content-knowledge versus skill-building, Internet filtering and safety laws, teaching techniques, bring-your-own-device policies, school budgets. At its core, the issues associated with mobile learning get to the very fundamentals of what happens in class everyday. At their best, cell phones and mobile devices seamlessly facilitate what students and teachers already do in thriving, inspiring classrooms.

In the most ideal class settings, mobile devices disappear into the background, like markers and whiteboards, pencil and paper – not because they’re not being used, but because they’re simply tools, a means to an end. In Ramsey Musallam’s A.P. Related. Cleaning Up Your Digital Identity: A Student’s Perspective. 30 Of The Best Apps For Group Project-Based Learning.

30 Of The Best Apps For Group Project-Based Learning Project-based learning is a matter of identifying needs and opportunities (using an app like flipboard), gathering potential resources (using an app like pinterest), collecting notes and artifacts (with an app like Evernote), concept-mapping potential scale or angles for the project (using an app like simplemind), assigning roles (with an appp like Trello), scheduling deadlines (with apps like Google Calendar), and sharing it all (with apps like OneDrive or Google Drive). With that in mind, below are 30 of the best apps for getting this kind of work done in the classroom, with an emphasis on group project-based learning apps for both Android and iPad (and even a few for plain old browsers). 30 Of The Best Apps For Group Project-Based Learning. Blogs and wikis in formal higher education: examples of open education. 15 Tips For Facilitating Online Discussion.

Facilitating discussions between students is one of those things that is infinitely easier when you’re teaching in a physical classroom rather than online. When the students are all in one room, discussions happen more naturally. Facilitating the same type of productive, useful discussion when teaching online is more of a challenge. The handy infographic below from Mia MacMeekin takes a look at some tips and best practices for facilitating discussions when you’re teaching online.

If you teach online and have any favorite tips and tricks, leave us a message in the comments! 15 Tips For Facilitating Online Discussion 10 Prompts to Stimulate Conversation Can you clarify? 20 Guiding Questions To Develop A Digital Literacy Plan - 16 Guiding Questions To Develop A Digital Literacy Plan by TeachThought Staff Literacy is a chief concern for both academic and professional progress.

Digital literacy is emerging as a genuine concern in education as technology competes with traditional texts for student attention. There have been recent revisions in academic standards, but these should be considered insufficient to address the rapidly changing literacy needs of students. So we’ve put together some questions to help design a plan to respond on your own–and to do so based on effective and accessible data and measurement of student performance.

While data can mislead and obscure–often tragically–literacy skills is one area where it’s hard to argue with. The consistent assessment and promotion of a student’s ability to consume and produce a variety of digital and non-digital texts is at the foundation of any school’s mission. 20 Questions As A Guide It is included as an image at the bottom of the post. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 Ways to Optimize Your iPad for Kids With Special Needs. When we think about ways the iPad has changed the world, our minds usually shoot to publishing, entertainment, or mobile communication. For the community of people living with disabilities, the iPad may have broken even more ground. The iOS device is not only cool, but provides education, therapy and, of course, entertainment. Last summer, Mashable explored ways iPads are making these changes. Now we're following up with Sami Rahman, the father of 4-year-old Noah and co-founder of BridgingApps, the Internet's largest database of special needs app and reviews.

Noah began using his iPad when he was two and was assessed to be 12 months behind with language and cognition. SEE ALSO: 4 Ways iPads Are Changing the Lives of People With Disabilities Rahman recently released his book Getting Started: iPads for Special Needs. 1. One of the biggest differences between the iPad 2 and the new iPad is retina display, which can create an incredible visual experience. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. "Really? " 7. 8. 9. 10. iVisual Info Touch – Create Infographics on Your iPad. 44 QR Codes Resources For Teaching & Learning.

Elearning : The Articulate Community... Weekly Recap: The Articulate Community Highlights the Best E-Learning Tips & Insights. Dec92013 There’s no question about it, e-learning designers are in high demand. While that’s great news for our industry, being so busy makes it a challenge to keep up with all the new ideas and trends in e-learning. That’s why the Articulate community is so valuable. It’s easy to connect with other designers just like you, who can offer time-saving guidance, resources, and shortcuts to help you build better e-learning. Whether you’re looking for backgrounds, storyboard templates, pre-built interactions, or more, it’s easy to find the resources you need each week in E-learning Heroes. Community tutorials Adding shortcuts to the Quick Access Toolbar in Articulate Storyline Conversations in the community New blog posts.

Connectivism and MOOCs: The Web We Weave | COETAIL@Online 2013-14. “Connectivism is driven by the understanding that decisions are based on rapidly altering foundations. New information is continually being acquired. The ability to draw distinctions between important and unimportant information is vital. The ability to recognize when new information alters the landscape based on decisions made yesterday is also critical.” Despite being written in 2004, long before the advent of Twitter, Google+ (Facebook was in its infancy), the article on Connectivism presents ideas that equally transcend the past decade and absolutely apply to learning today.

The movement toward open content reflects agrowing shift in the way scholars in many partsof the world are conceptualizing education to aview that is more about the process of learningthan the information conveyed. What better way to understand the implications current and future online learning has and will have on your students than to reflect on your own learning through this model? Photo by Brandon Hoover. Infographics: overused, undervalued or still full of potential? Written by Karthik Subramanian When Florence Nightingale used a Coxcomb diagram to present the case for improvement in military hospitals to Queen Victoria in the 19th century, little did she know that the diagram would not only form an important part of the history of hospitals, but also the history of visual representation. Nightingale didn’t just want to present the facts about disease and mortality: her Coxcomb diagram maximises the emotional impact of those figures. As this early example reminds us, an ‘infographic’ isn’t just about compressing large amounts of information into an image.

It’s really the art of telling a story by turning that data into a more subtle and persuasive visual narrative. In the past two years infographics have grown more commonplace. Firstly to refresh your interest, check out the striking work of David McCandless on the Information is Beautiful website and in his books. What is the purpose of the infographic? Four Excellent Resources for Course Designers. This post features a collection of carefully selected resources specific to course design for online and blended courses. I’m in the process of building a bank of resources accessible from this blog geared to educators seeking skill development in facilitating and designing online courses. Previous posts featured resources specific to teaching online courses, and in this post I share four instructional design resources. Resources include a brief description that highlights the value of each and an icon indicating its type.

For the list of previously featured resources and/or for the icon legend please refer to the resources tab of this site. 1) An excellent site created by Contact North to serve faculty and instructors of post-secondary institutions in Ontario, Canada is The Ontario Online Learning Portal. The site also hosts a series ‘Game Changers‘ which features case studies from institutions around the world that are implementing innovative methods in online education. Related Posts:

The Must-Have Guide To Twitter Manners. Megan Thornton. Educreations Sign Up Already registered? Log In Megan Thornton Subjects Taught Science, Professional Development School Deakin University Total Lesson Views3,857 Megan Thornton's Lessons Educreations Class created Nov. 5 at 4:19 PM 9 views Educreations: Deakin Learning Conference 2013 Workshop created Oct. 20 at 7:57 PM 35 views HSN104 Energy In Food created Aug. 27 at 8:32 PM 457 views HSN104 Dietary Fibre Practical Method created Aug. 26 at 7:44 PM 594 views HSN104 What Is Dietary Fibre?

Created Aug. 26 at 12:06 AM 476 views Chemical Bonds created Aug. 4 at 6:45 PM 215 views Analysis Of Fat Content created July 25 at 8:53 PM 583 views HSN104: Polar And Non-Polar Compounds (Fat Extraction) created July 24 at 11:50 PM 432 views Kjeldahl Basics And Reasoning created July 17 at 7:04 PM 869 views Kjeldahl Titration created July 14 at 5:46 PM 185 views About Careers iPad Terms Privacy Log In © 2014 Educreations, Inc. Educreations for HSN104. Dr. Jaclyn Broadbent of Deakin University - Blended Learning. Top Apps for Professional Development. Twitter App (free) Twitter is one of the most active and beneficial social networks on the web. All educators would be wise to join the conversation. If you haven’t used Twitter yet, I would recommend that you read these excellent blog posts: Google Voice (free) Text and call for free!

Also allows you to read transcribed voicemail messages or listen to them. Skype (free) A beautiful app that allows you to make and receive VOIP calls on your iOS device. HeyTell (free) A fun “walkie-talkie” app for quick voice communication. Consumption Apps FlipBoard (free) A beautiful app that turns your RSS reader (such as Google Reader) into a magazine. Zite (free) Similar to FlipBoard, however instead of just providing a beautiful interface to view content you select, Zite tries to introduce you to new content sources based off of sources you currently read. QR Code Readers Diigo (free) Research Apps: Google Search App (free) Genius Scan (free) The 10 Most Popular Tech-Education Twitter Hashtags in 2013. Catch Them Learning: Mobile Devices for Formative Assessment - Digital Literacy Workshops. The 6 Types Of Assessments (And How They're Changing)

Welcome to Human Resources. Need fresh ideas for your e-learning? try our Spicy Learning Guide! The Millennials Are Coming! Proven Engagement Strategies by Elisabeth Arellano. Blog | MOOC Research. Top-Ten IT Issues, 2013: Welcome to the Connected Age (EDUCAUSE Review. Dragontape – Create Custom YouTube Mixes. A walk in the shoes of a dementia patient. DIGITAL%20TOOLS%20FOR%20BUSY%20ACADEMICS%20WEB%20v11. Vol 14, No 1 (2013) Mobile Learning Handbook | Ict4champions. Can Everyone Be Smart at Everything? Q&A: Every Expert Will Teach Online In 10 Years - Getting Smart by Sarah Cargill - blended learning, IOLchat, MOOC. 50 Shades of Mobile.

Top 8 Educational Apps for Health Education. Development Education.

Learning 2.0

Infographic - Google Yourself. 21st C skills. SlideShark: PowerPoint Finally Gets a Deserving iPad App. A Video Lecture You Won’t Soon Forget: Video Games and Storytelling. Bill Gates: Why 'game-based learning' is the future of education. Personalised learning. Flipped classroom. Creativity. Neuroscience. Interactive graphic for Kolb's experiential learning model. A-Guide-to-Four-Cs. Gamification. Inclusive teaching.