On the education subreddit I came across 100 Most Inspiring and Innovative Blogs for Educators. It has some good finds, including Jane's E-Learning Pick of the Day. Jane posts small articles with links to interesting online resources. Go look for yourself.
I found a couple of mind mappers I hadn't seen before, and one that a friend had mentioned called The Brain. The video demos look good.
There's also an open-source web-based HTML editor called Amaya I hadn't seen before.
By the way, the neologism "blag" comes from "blog" as an intentional misselling, courtesy of xkcd:
So...log comes from a ship throwing a piece of wood over the side to see how fast it's moving, which comes to mean the book the readings are written in, which comes to mean any form of recording information regularly. Meanwhile "world wide web" gets shorted post haste to "web," and the two words get put together to make "web log," which contracts to "blog" and now (if you're sufficiently geeky and want to be ironic) "blag." Isn't language fun?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
"How much data do you have?" is an inevitable question for program-level data analysis. For example, assessment reports that attem...
-
The annual NACUBO report on tuition discounts was covered in Inside Higher Ed back in April, including a figure showing historical rates. (...
-
I'm scheduled to give a talk on grade statistics on Monday 10/26, reviewing the work in the lead article of JAIE's edition on grades...
-
(A parable for academic workers and those who direct their activities) by David W. Kammler, Professor Mathematics Department Southern Illino...
-
I read Peter Sacks' Standardized Minds a few years ago when I was helping put together our general education assessment process . This...
-
In the last article , I showed a numerical example of how to increase the accuracy of a test by splitting it in half and judging the sub-sco...
-
Introduction Within the world of educational assessment, rubrics play a large role in the attempt to turn student learning into numbers. ...
-
tl;dr Searched SACS reports for learning outcomes. Table of links, general observations, proposal to create a consortium to make public th...
-
Introduction A few days ago , I listed problems with using rubric scores as data to understand learning. One of these problems is how to i...
-
This post is the first of a series on student achievement. The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) summarizes graduation rates...
an webbed brain example (beeing using this software since 1998) Web 2.0 in Education - a work in progress for a conference panel session.
ReplyDeleteCool! I didn't know you could publish them as live objects. (Clicking on a node centers it and rearranges the others)
ReplyDelete