Join Tad Johnson for the webinar. When:September 9, 2015 (Wednesday)2:00-2:30pm BST (London, GMT+1:00)  Who:Tad Johnson, Solutions Architect Students and teachers love the iPad for creating content, interactive lessons, and the rich educational app ecosystem. With Casper Focus from JAMF Software, you can turn the iPad into a great tool for assessments as well. Weekly quizzes, formative assessments, and online exams can be conducted simply and securely using iPad.In our webinar, Conducting Classroom Assessments with iPad, we'll show you how to put the iPad to work in your classroom.You'll learn:How to prepare iPad for use in the classroom How teachers can focus a student's iPad on an app or website for assessments  The role of MDM and additional tools for success in the classroom Join us September 9th at 2:00 p.m. BST; 3:00 p.m. CEST as Tad Johnson shows us how to transform the iPad into the ultimate teaching tool.   Register today!
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:37am</span>
Why You Need A Good Microphone Audio is a powerful medium. It's a powerful medium on its own, but also an integral part of video. For many of us that's where the conversation about audio ends. We feel like it's someone else's responsibility because they record the voice overs, or they record the sound. But things […] The post The Best Microphone Options for the Training Professional appeared first on Litmos.
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:37am</span>
This eBook below, 77 Tips on Today’s Hottest Topics from DevLearn Thought Leaders, features tips from workshop presenters at DevLearn 2015, exploring critical topics for today’s learning professionals. Download your complimentary copy today!  Photo: David KellyIn the introduction to this eBook, David Kelly, Vice President, Program Development, The eLearning Guild, writes, "Each year there’s one event that the global learning and performance community looks towards to showcase the most innovative applications of learning technologies and engage in discussions that help shape what’s next in the world of learning. That event is DevLearn.""Each year there’s one event that the global learning and performance community looks towards to showcase the most innovative applications of learning technologies and engage in discussions that help shape what’s next in the world of learning. That event is DevLearn." DevLearn is the place where the industry’s foremost thought leaders and innovative doers gather to connect, share, and challenge each other. It’s where the most creative energy in our field gathers to examine the possibilities of today and shape the opportunities of tomorrow. It’s also the place we host a series ofworkshops that take deep dives into many of the most important competencies in our field. In this eBook, we explore 77 tips provided to us by the members of The eLearning Guild community who will be leading workshops on these topics at the DevLearn 2015 Conference & Expo. These experts explore critical topics and skills for today’s learning and performance professionals, among them:• Sharon Boller on Common Game Design Mistakes• Melissa Chambers on Design for the Virtual Classroom• Julie Dirksen on Human Behavior• David Ferguson on Job Aids• Karen Hyder on the Uniqueness of the Virtual Classroom• Pooja Jaisingh on eLearning Design• Karl Kapp on Developing Learning Games• Mark Lassoff on Using Story and Characters in Learning Games• Connie Malamed on Virtual Design• Koreen Pagano on Learning Metrics• Clark Quinn on Cognition and How the Brain Learns• Kirsten Rourke on Adobe Creative Cloud• Lou Russell on Project Management• Kevin Siegel on Adobe Captivate• Tim Slade on eLearning 101• Megan Torrance on Agile Project Management and Using HumoDownload your complimentary copy today!  Additional resources Join the community of industry pioneers that’s shaping the future of learning, and witness learning innovation in the making! Register Now  
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:37am</span>
Follow on Twitter as @katherinelongKatherine Long, The Seattle Times writes, "University professor is turning to early math scholars in research focused on using primary math sources." Central Washington University math professor Dominic Klyve is pioneering a novel new way to teach math — by relying on some of the oldest mathematical texts ever written. Central Washington University math professor Dominic Klyve (photo courtesy Central Washington University) Klyve has been awarded a $1.5 million National Science Foundation grant, which will be shared among six other universities and will be used to test whether teaching math using primary sources will make it easier for college students to grasp math concepts.Klyve believes that studying the struggles of early math scholars, like Euclid and Archimedes, can help give college students insights that are missing in most college textbooks."Over generations, as the original author’s ideas are copied and recopied, transcribed and interpreted, we end up with a modern textbook that is stripped away of all context," he said.Modern textbooks are filled with the equations used to solve math problems, but rarely do they explain how and why the equations were developed, Klyve said.As an example, Klyve says that an influential Swiss mathematician, Leonhard Euler, wrote a paper on prime numbers and factoring that is easy for even a first-year math student to understand, yet clearly shows Euler’s struggle to come up with a theory to explain the concepts he was exploring. "There are some things he writes that make little sense, there are some things that are brilliant," Klyve said. "By the time you finish reading it, you understand the basic concepts. But you can also get a sense of what it is to do mathematical discovery."Read more... Source: eCampus News
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
As the technology around us evolves, the way we learn also evolves along with it. Learning and Technology are closely linked than ever before in schools, higher education institutions as well as corporate houses. A survey by leading community of IT professionals, EDUCAUSE surveyed more than 17,000 faculty members from 151 institutions and more than 75,000 students from 213 institutions.... Continue Reading
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
"A common impairment with lifelong consequences turns out to be highly contagious between parent and child, a new study shows." according to Jan Hoffman.Photo: New York Times (blog)The impairment? Math anxiety.Means of transmission? Homework help.Children of highly math-anxious parents learned less math and were more likely to develop math anxiety themselves, but only when their parents provided frequent help on math homework, according to a study of first- and second-graders, published in Psychological Science.Researchers tested 438 children from 29 public and private schools in three Midwestern states for math ability as well as math anxiety, at the beginning and end of the school year. Their parents completed questionnaires about math anxiety, and about how often they helped their children with homework.So much for good intentions. The more the math-anxious parents tried to work with their children, the worse their children did in math, slipping more than a third of a grade level behind their peers. And the children’s weaker math achievements increased their nascent math anxiety.Photo: Sian L. Beilock"The parents are not out to sabotage their kids," said Sian L. Beilock, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Chicago and the author of "Choke," about anxiety and performance. "But we have to ensure their input is productive. They need to have an awareness of their own math anxiety and that what you say is important."...Parental math anxiety is exacerbated whenever schools introduce new methods of learning math, said Harris Cooper, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University, who has studied the effects of homework. Read more... Source: New York Times (blog)
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
Education freaks in the house, let me hear you say ‘Yeah Yeah’… Silence? Okay, moving on. Today we will be talking about where you can great courses for free online. Online Courses or MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) are essentially a great way of gaining theoretical, practical and up-to-date knowledge that you might not otherwise... Read More Source: Where to Get the Best Free Online Courses
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
Everybody has one's own model of learning; some of them more effective than others. In this article, I would like to convince you to become collectors of learning experiences which will help you to build learning context by experiencing things. This post was first published on eLearning Industry.
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
E-Learn--World Conference on E-Learning is an international conference organized by the Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE) and co-sponsored by the International Journal on E-Learning. This post was first published on eLearning Industry.
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
I’m realizing that a major theme of my work and the revolution is that what we do in organizations, and what we do as L&D practitioners, is not aligned with how we think, work, and learn.  And to that extent, we’re doomed to failure. We can, and need to, do better. Let’s start with thinking. […]
Alltop   .   Blog   .   <span class='date ' tip=''><i class='icon-time'></i>&nbsp;Aug 26, 2015 06:36am</span>
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