Thursday, June 28, 2012

Free Ebook from the eLearning Guild


  • Group: The eLearning Guild
  • Subject: Complimentary eBook: 65 Tips on Managing Projects and SMEs for eLearning
All the ideas in the world don’t matter if you can’t complete your eLearning project. If you don’t identify the core issues, build a good team, and keep the lines of communication open, your project faces an uphill climb.

This complimentary eBook draws on the experience of 11 professionals who are leading sessions in The eLearning Guild’s July 2012 Online Forum, “Managing Projects and SMEs for eLearning: Proven and Practical Solutions.” Let their expertise guide you in areas including Dealing with Stakeholders and Planning Your Project, Choosing and Managing Your Team, Effective Communication, Challenges and Constraints, and Quality Control.

Discover insightful tips to keep your eLearning projects on time and target. Download this complimentary eBook today!

Download now: http://bit.ly/KE5mqz

You do not need to be a member of The eLearning Guild to access this eBook, so please share this link with your network.

Thanks for being part of our LinkedIn group!

Jenny Thompson
The eLearning Guild

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

MOOCs Introduction and Resources

Free Online Enlightenment

If you haven't heard about MOOCs then you are missing out on some great free online courses and the discussion surrounding them.  MOOCs are Massively Open Online Courses and are offered by Ivy league schools, such as Princeton, Stanford, and MIT. Massive, because some courses have over 100,000 students signed up at one time!  Coursera, Udacity, and the Academic Room are examples of the major players in the MOOC arena.  You can find the history of MOOCs here. I have signed up for the Udacity CS101 course about creating a search engine.  The subjects offered through MOOCs are numerous and many are using completion of these courses to bolster their resume and make their applications to Ivy league schools more promising.  The delivery methods are great and it is a fantastic opportunity for Instructional Designers to get a free look at how others in the field are creating online courses.  I highly recommend all online instructors and course creators to sign up and take a course!

What MOOCs Will do:

1) Will make the TV show class free to people.

2) It will allow professors and colleges to be better than the history channel at providing knowledge on history and other topics.

3) It will allow some real pedagogical advances, challenging the notion of a 50 minute lecture. While his Coursera segments range from 7 to 15 minutes in length, Struck notes, that “the long narrative arc is sometimes the critical component to convey in my class.”

What MOOCs Won’t do:

1) Won’t revamp higher education as we know it. “I just don’t think that’s in the cards, Struck says.

2) It won’t kill the lecture completely.

3) Won’t democratize knowledge the way some think it will.

What MOOCs Might Do:

1) Expand wisdom.

2) Broaden empathy – understanding of what other people are feeling.

3) I don’t know, if in the aggregate, it will make us smarter.

4) I’m not sure if it will make teaching a more important part of self definition.

5) It might add to the credentialing frenzy of high school students who want to go to a Princeton or University of Pennsylvania, who see MOOC badges as another way to demonstrate their achievement, similar to AP classes.

More Articles about MOOCs:
EdX: Harvard and MIT MOOC
MOOC Skepticism 
How to Create your own MOOC
Using mLearning and MOOCs to Understand Chaos, Emergence, and Complexity in Education

Friday, June 15, 2012

The End of Higher Education: Epic2020


Check out these two videos! It is all about the advancements and the implications of the online learning platform for higher education. It also predicts the end of federal subsidies for the exorbitant tuition prices. Tuition has gone up 429% in the last 20 years. I think they are on to something. When I did an industry analysis of higher education, I too began to wonder about the sustainability of an institution dependent on support from a government $16 trillion dollars in debt!




Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Digital Higher Ed Content & The Long Tail | Higher Education Management







Sometimes patience is rewarded.


The focus of digital higher education during the previous decade was overwhelmingly on the technology itself – learning management systems, bandwidth, faculty literacy with technology, student technology support, and so forth. But I entered the world of higher education through an interest in the interaction of culture and markets, and for me digital content (or media) is key. The rest? Mere plumbing. Okay, that’s overstating it. But digital content is where people, culture, technology, organizations and markets meet. It’s messy, human and creative. And when you include analytics and social platforms, the potential of rich media to radically improve the quality and economics of higher education is extraordinary.


Now, in 2012, it appears that digital education content is finally getting some attention. 2012 is offering us OER (as well as OER with credentials), new authoring platforms, content-friendly devices (e.g. tablets) and aggressive innovation in the textbook publishing industry.

Resources | Webinars | Best Practices for Effective Online Curriculum Development

Resources | Webinars | Best Practices for Effective Online Curriculum Development:

Here is a Free Webinar you can register for!  It starts Tuesday June 19, 2012 at 1pm EDT (10am PDT).  Learning House is a Moodle host and online curriculum developer for higher education.

According to the website the topics covered include:
  • Building a platform that allows continuous improvement
  • Designing programs that meet student outcomes with efficient use of institutional resources
  • Combining content, teaching and technology expertise in course development
  • Leveraging open education resources
  • And more!
I hope to see you in there! :)