May 27, 2012

DIGITAL EDUCATION


The purpose of this book is to provide a panorama of the application of new digital technologies in education as the century comes to an end. In some cases we have described instances where this technology has already been implemented with great success, in others we discuss promises that have still to be confirmed. We also hope to awaken "critical enthusiasm" for an effective and beneficial implementation of the best technology in the service of education and the individual.

By  :
Antonio M. Battro and Percival J. Denham

Web-Teaching, 2nd Edition


Web courses and Web-based course supplements have popped up all over the world. No central force has yet emerged which dominates the field. Indeed, nearly every college, from the large to the small, has become a player.
Tremendous, broad-based Web-delivery activity has characterized the last few years of the 20th century. Elementary students publish Web-sites. Teachers use Web-pages to communicate with parents.
Web-commerce has flourished. The wave of Web-commerce has paled that of Web-teaching. The infrastructure that is emerging to support Web-commerce ultimately will permit piggybacking of Web-teaching. We can expect fast Web access to be available in students' homes.
We see this edition as continuing to offer helpful, research-based suggestions to teachers who would improve their teaching using the Web. The first edition of Web-Teaching was somewhat dated when it came off the press. This edition also shoots at a quickly moving target. Much has happened in four years. Little has happened, however, to modify the principal messages of the first edition. This edition attempts to focus reader attention on research reported from the early days of Web teaching.

There are six things we can say about Web teaching at this time:
1. Course Management Software (WebCT, CourseInfo) has emerged and been embraced strongly by teachers. As a result, the number of teachers whose courses have some Web presence is mushrooming. For our first edition, Web teachers who managed their own servers represented a large fraction of those using the Web. This no longer is so; today few teachers manage their own Web servers.
2. The first edition suggested that Web teaching might not be successful in certain content areas. It turns out that Web teaching can be applied to nearly any non-laboratory course in the curriculum. Even portions of some laboratory and studio courses have been handled well on the Web.
3. While extensive studies are not available, early results suggest that students in Web courses learn about the same amount as do students in traditional courses. Drop out rates in Web-based courses are higher than in traditional courses, but similar to other distance courses.
4. There have been no results that suggest strong learning gains from multimedia approaches to teaching. Thus far, it appears that media have small effects. Active learning approaches have larger positive effects on learning outcomes.
5. Many teachers have developed Web supplements for their courses. There is very strong evidence that the students who use these resources learn better than those who do not.
6. Very few teachers have enjoyed time efficiencies as the result of developing a Web presence. Quite the opposite; teachers find that Web courses take more time. This is especially true of courses involving discussion, where reading Internet-based discussions can become an enormous chore.

By :
David Brooks, Diane Nolan, Susan Gallagher

May 26, 2012

Articulate Studio 12



Articulate Studio ’12 products share a single unified player, so learners navigate with one set of controls—even when courses include Articulate Quizmaker assessments and Articulate Engage interactions. The unified player also lets you list slide titles, quiz questions, and interaction steps on a single, consolidated menu.

Add illustrated and photographic characters to your courses, quizzes, and interactive e-learning content. Articulate Studio ’12 includes a character library with thousands of combinations of characters, expressions, and poses. Purchase additional Articulate character packs to extend your character library even more

Publish e-learning content to multiple formats so learners can interact with it on iPads, desktops, laptops, Android devices, and more. Articulate Studio ’12 products publish to Flash and to Articulate Mobile Player—a native iOS application that optimizes content for the iPad. Studio ’12 products also publish to HTML5, an increasingly popular format for rich multimedia content.

Localize your content with the right-to-left language support in Articulate Studio ’12. It also supports double-byte character sets (DBCS), so you can even translate your content into Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.

and more features.
It is Comming Soon

May 20, 2012

Nearpod is solution for the synchronized use of iPads in the classroom


An all-in-one solution for the synchronized use of iPads in the classroom.
Create, Engage and Assess
With Nearpod it’s easy, really easy.
Bring the classroom to life with interactive mobile
presentations that teachers create and
customize themselves.
And it’s free.

http://www.nearpod.com/

May 19, 2012

More Free powerpoint templates

PowerPoint templates, free to download and use.

You can found them here :

GoClass a powerful new mobile tool


A powerful new tool for innovative teaching and inspired learning.
GoClass is a teaching application for tablet devices that redefines the boundaries of computing in the classroom. Connect with your students like never before, customize and fine-tune your lesson plans on the fly, engage students in new ways and continuously evaluate their understanding while you are in class.

GoClass is a powerful tool that allows an instructor to build, edit and manage class sessions. Like for any classroom, the instructor can use resources such as text, notes, media, questions and research tools to build organized and timed lesson plans. It allows you to annotate on images or draw diagrams, share materials and ask questions in the lesson plans with students during class. Furthermore, the app captures results data for formative assessments conducted in class for after-class review.

GoClass creates a unique opportunity for students to follow a class at their own pace. Students can study materials shared by the instructor, and interact with text and images using touch interactions such as pinch, zoom, pan, etc. You can use this app to answer in-class questions and review the complete lesson along with logs of your responses after class.

Articulate Storyline vs. Adobe Captivate


This is a good comparison between Articulate Storyline & Adobe Captivate

Articulate Storyline has been called a Game Changer and the question is if it can win a die-hard Adobe Captivate fan like me over.

You can complete reading from the source page:

Good Time