• Skip to main content
Mary Wiseman
  • START HERE
  • BLOG
  • SPEAKER
  • VIDEOS
  • ABOUT

Online learning

iNACOL Virtual School Symposium 2012

October 5, 2012 by izzy

I am so excited.  Later this month I will be heading to the Virtual School Symposium being held in New Orleans by iNACOL the International Association for K-12 Online Learning.

This symposium will bring together over 2,000 representatives from national, state, district, private, and other virtual school programs to attend the premier K-12 online and blended learning conference. Experts in K-12 virtual education will have robust networking opportunities; learn about the latest trends, challenges and opportunities in e-learning; interact in session presentations; and gain access to the latest research and best practices reports.

I am especially excited because I will be able to get my hands on the book Lessons Learned in Teacher Mentoring: Supporting Educators in K-12 Online Learning Environments–with the chapter I co-wrote.  This coupled with the fact I’ve always wanted to visit New Orleans raises the excitement.

Just this week at the CELT Conference, I heard speakers mentioning personalized learning and much discussion revolving around common core, particularly in the Math/Science subjects.  So, I am looking forward to connecting with others, gathering in New Orleans, who are wrestling with these same issues.

One presentation I am looking forward to is: New Learning Models: Making Learning Personal which promises to discuss the lines of distinction between online, mobile, blended, and computer-based learning which are fading. What does this mean for education?  What will school look like when students can literally carry their learning with them on a cell phone – and when their “campus” is wherever they choose to work? Polices around competency-based learning are also on the rise. Learning is becoming less linear, more discovery and interest-based, and ever more personal. This session is being presented by Florida Virtual School’s Jill Dickinson, Director of Curriculum Management.

Then there is another session, Professional Development Needs for Blended Learning. This session will explore, via a panel, the challenges faced when a school implements blended learning, what professional development do teachers, administrators and other staff need to insure a successful implementation?

There are so many sessions that look so great.  I also plan to get myself down to the French Quarters, have some great food and hear some fabulous jazz. Stay tuned for more.

Filed Under: 21st Century Learning Skills, iNACOL, iNOCOL, Online learning, Virtual Schools

iBook Author by Apple

January 20, 2012 by izzy

There are times in an instructional designer’s life when the game changes and Apple has just changed the game-again. This time it is with their iBook Author.  Those who are considering an elearning situation, should consider using this new tool. The ability to interact with the content built in iBooks is amazing for all types of learners. Integrating audio and video right into the iBook allows the learners to integrate with the content.

Anyone who needs a workbook, textbook, manual. job aid, even a magazine, or newsletter should consider this type of learning aid. I will be getting mine soon.

This amazing new [FREE] app iBook Author allows anyone to create beautiful Multi-Touch textbooks — and just about any other kind of book — for iPad. With galleries, video, interactive diagrams, 3D objects, and more, these books bring content to life in ways the printed page never could.

This application has the ability to drag and drop text, images, graphics, video, movies and more into the template.  Apple’s Widgets add Multi-Touch magic to books with interactive photo galleries that bring images to life, engrossing 3D objects you can’t help interacting with, animations that burst off the page, and more.

Another beautiful thing about iBooks Author, it lets you create books that people with disabilities can read and experience. The table of contents, glossary, widgets, main text, and more are built to automatically take advantage of VoiceOver technology. Add accessibility descriptions to any widget or media — including movies and quizzes — so even those with vision impairments can use them.

And you can publish it to the iBookstore or iTunes U or share it with anyone with an iPad.

Filed Under: 21st Century Learning Skills, Audio, Books, Creativity, critical thinking, Digital Media, eBook, Education, Free Tools, Front Page Slider, iBook Author, instructional design, Mobile, Online learning, Online Textbooks, Storytelling Tagged With: 21st Century Learning Skills, A, Audio, Books, Creativity, critical thinking, Design, Education, eLearning, Free Tools, Front Page Slider, Inspiration, instructional design, Publishing, Video

Coursekit

December 22, 2011 by izzy

Here’s a way to streamline an online course. Coursekit brings the learning management system [LMS] directly to the instructor and student-i.e. The Users-all for free.  The experience is focused on simple and elegant and includes the basics: a calender, file sharing, submitting assignments, and grading work.  One noticeable difference, compared to other LMS interfaces, is how Coursekit brings the user directly into ‘the classroom’ and not to the typical dashboard…which makes it more like a real classroom experience.

Just as a student would walk into a physical classroom, online students first appear in The Stream of the your online classroom and it has the feel of Facebook.  Unlike Facebook, within The Stream, students can upload; text, images, video, and audio.  Each element in The Stream brings up a side panel when you click on it. As Coursekit’s creator Joseph Cohen explains, “The result is that it turns short stuff into long stuff.”  This allows the ability to have a space to discuss in length and works much like a Twitter feed.

As for textbooks, Coursekit is pursuing an online free system for textbooks as well. “The textbooks of the future will not be textbooks,” Cohen says. But there will be a need for educational content, and much of that will be bought (remember, direct-to-instructor is already at the heart of that businesses). If all goes well, Coursekit is the seed of the storefront of the future for educational products, with a ready-made group of customers who are already logging in. All this might look something like Inkling.

In my humble opinion, it is all driving towards a more personalized experience for learning and it’s all quite exciting.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Front Page Slider, instructional design, Online learning, Online Textbooks Tagged With: Coursekit, Front Page Slider, Inkling, instructional design, Online learning, Online Textbooks

The Self-Directed Learning [SDL] Support Model: Training Educators for Online Learning

December 16, 2011 by izzy

Since August, I have been on a journey working with some fabulous educators, instructional designers and just all-round wonderful women drafting outlines and creating the content for a chapter that will be published in a book which is being published by the International Association for K-12 Online Learning [also known as iNACOL]. We just completed our draft of our chapter and are so excited.

This chapter will present a student-centered model for online teacher mentoring. The one-to-many online model is designed to be scalable, self-directed, and leverages social learning. The program, Self-Directed Learning [SDL] Support Model: Training Educators for Online Learning, introduces teachers to ideas of self-directed learning, partnering pedagogy, and metacognition while orienting new and prospective virtual teachers to the online learning environment. To maximize impact and sustainability, this program employs the Cognitive Coaching model through a social learning community.

Without giving away all our secrets -you’ll have to wait until the whole book Lessons Learned in Teacher Mentoring: Supporting Educators in K-12 Online Learning Environments is published [due out in the fall of 2012]- we explain ‘how’ we developed and taught an online course which has helped many educators-across Massachusetts- become better learners and in turn better educators.

Our chapter goes into great detail explaining how we used self-directed learning techniques and skills to teach educators how-to understand and use essential self-directed learning skills such as: goal setting, metacognition, motivation, critical thinking and time management.  We also discuss how we designed our online course, how we delivered it and how we improved it.

I can tell you that by implementing the use of social learning, collaboration and ePortfolios we have had a very good success rate with this online course. Here is what a few of our participants said about our course:

“This was a new way to approach teaching.”

“The course really helped me understand how to encourage and coach students not just around content but around linking content to their own goals in life.”

“It’s cool to watch students change over the course of the year. They start talking about what their goals are and what skills they’ve learned. Online learning puts their education in their own hands—it’s wonderful!”

 

Filed Under: 21st Century Learning Skills, Cognitive Coaching, Collaborative for Educational Services, critical thinking, Education, eLearning, elearning coach training, Front Page Slider, iNACOL, Online learning, Social learning Tagged With: 21st Century Learning Skills, Cognitive Coaching, critical thinking, Education, eLearning, Front Page Slider, iNACOL, instructional design, Online learning, Social Learning

© 2024 Mary Wiseman Designs. All Rights Reserved. Webspinner Msondevshop.graphics