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Sarah Horrigan's Library tagged NTUEDU   View Popular

23 Nov 09

Evaluation cookbook contents

http://www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/InfoKits/Resources/external-resources/eval-plan-interact30

www.icbl.hw.ac.uk/...contents.html - Preview

NTUEDU evaluation cookbook research contents Methods elearning online resource

09 Nov 09

iknow

An estimated 6.4 hours per employee are spent looking for information in the workplace each week in the UK. 37% of the searches prove unsuccessful*.

In financial terms, an estimated £3.7 billion is spent on time wasted looking for information that cannot be found.

It’s a staggering amount, so what can be done about it?

The following activities are examples of training materials which will help you save time in finding, using, and organising information at work.

iknow.open.ac.uk/wordpress - Preview

NTUEDU iknow OpenUniversity work-based learning study information literacyskills litskills evaluation online elearning

Phil’s JISC CETIS blog» Blog Archive » Feeding a repository

There has been some discussion recently about mechanisms for remote or bulk deposit in repositories and similar services. David Flanders ran a very thought provoking and lively show and tell meeting a couple of weeks ago looking at deposit. In part this is familiar territory; looking at and tweaking the work that the creators of the SWORD profile have done based on APP; or looking again at webDav. But there is also a newly emerging approach of using RSS or Atom feeds to populate repositories, a sort of feed-deposit. Coincidentally we also received a query at CETIS from a repository which is looking to collect outputs of the UKOER programme asking for help in firming-up the requirements for bulk or remote deposit, and asking how RSS possibly fitted into this.

blogs.cetis.ac.uk/...feed-deposit - Preview

NTUSHARE JISC CETIS repository content OER sharing online resources NTUEDU

03 Nov 09

Webcasts

This webcast will highlight and clarify legal issues relevant to the creation and dissemination of Open Educational Resources. We will provide a combination of presentations and question and answer sessions which will consist of practical and helpful guidance for institutions involved in OER work. Presenters include Naomi Korn, one of JISC's IP consultants, who will be focussing on Creative Commons licences and how they apply to OER projects.

Although the webcast is primarily focused on OER pilot projects that are part of the open educational resources programme, supported by JISC and The Higher Education Academy, the content will also be of interest more widely to programme managers, lecturers, tutors and support staff interested in copyright and OER production and distribution.

www.jisclegal.ac.uk/Default.aspx - Preview

webcasts JISC JISCLegal NTUSHARE copyright OER repository sharing rights IPR NTUEDU

The Complete Guide to Google Wave: How to Use Google Wave

Google Wave is a new web-based collaboration tool that's notoriously difficult to understand. This guide will help. Here you'll learn how to use Google Wave to get things done with your group. Because Wave is such a new product that's evolving quickly, this guidebook is a work in progress that will update in concert with Wave as it grows and changes. Read more about The Complete Guide to Google Wave.

completewaveguide.com - Preview

collaboration google wave googlewave guide howto google wave free online resource NTUEDU

27 Oct 09

UK gets its own Creative Commons - ZDNet.co.uk

A version of the Creative Commons licensing scheme adapted for the UK's legal landscape will be formally launched in London on Wednesday evening.

Creative Commons was first developed by US academic Lawrence Lessig as a more flexible alternative to the traditional copyright laws. It allows content creators to grant some rights to the public while keeping others — for example, allowing anyone to republish their material as long as it is attributed.

news.zdnet.co.uk/...0,1000000308,39191659,00.htm - Preview

zdnet creativecommons copyright online materials sharing educational elearning share NTUSHARE NTUEDU

23 Oct 09

Times Higher Education - Why offline? It's very personal

Desire to protect status and student contact fuels resistance to e-learning. Rebecca Attwood writes

Academics are resistant to e-learning because they feel it threatens their identity as tutors and because they want to protect face-to-face teaching relationships, a study has found.

www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp - Preview

elearning online education THES report face-to-face offline learning NTUEDU

20 Oct 09

Learn@UW Quiz Question Importer Tool | Technology Solutions for Teaching and Research

The Learn@UW / Desire2Learn Question Importer Tool allows you to easily create Desire2Learn-ready CSV (comma separated value) files from existing quiz or exam documents. You can copy your question & answer text into the tool directly from programs such as Microsoft Word, iWork Pages or any other word processing/text editing programs, and after some slight reformatting and simple markup addition, quickly import your questions & answers into a D2L Question Library.

At this time, the generator can only format the following question types for import into D2L: Multiple Choice, Multi-select (multiple answer), True/False, Long Answer (essay), Short Answer (also works as “fill in the blank”), Matching & Ordering.
Complete documentation is available at: https://academictech.doit.wisc.edu/files/D2L question tool documentation.pdf (PDF, 109 KB)

academictech.doit.wisc.edu/...learnuw-quiz-importer - Preview

NTUEDU resource ideas online teaching eassessment e-assessment D2L VLE import tool quiz questions

15 Oct 09

Educational Evidence Portal > Home

The UK Educational Evidence Portal

This portal helps you find educational evidence from a range of reputable UK sources using a single search. It is designed for both professional and lay people interested in education and children's services.

www.eep.ac.uk/...Default.aspx - Preview

evidence research portal educational education elearning online resource NTUEDU

14 Oct 09

A Database

A Database is an innovative new tool that lifts the archiving and recording of contemporary art onto a new plane. Its ease of access for artists and public alike will create communities at both ends of the message while democratising the medium.

The distinguishing features of its software system address two key issues in the long-term preservation of data in a digital environment:

* Storage in open access (non-proprietary) formats.
* Systems that do not rely on the long-term survival of a software vendor.

AD is also distinguished from other systems by its unique resource discovery tools that prioritise the image rather than the text.

www.adatabase.org/...homepage - Preview

NTUSHARE NTUEDU opensource database repository artanddesign art contemporary

The e-Framework > Home

The e-Framework for Education and Research is an international initiative that provides information to institutions on investing in and using information technology infrastructure. It advocates service-oriented approaches to facilitate technical interoperability of core infrastructure as well as effective use of available funding.

www.e-framework.org - Preview

NTUSHARE jisc e-learning education technology framework learning standards repository NTUEDU elearning sharing eframework

07 Oct 09

Resources — University of Leicester

This is where you can find out about our range of resources. Our resources come in various formats, including text-based study guides, IT guides, interactive tutorials, check lists, templates and recommended links to external resources. We have organised them into a number of different areas:

* study skills
* writing skills
* presentation skills
* numeracy skills
* IT skills

www2.le.ac.uk/...resources - Preview

NTUEDU elearning tools education collaboration skills information free resources Leicester

06 Oct 09

Presentation Zen: Sumi-e, color, and the art of less

A fundamental design and life lesson from the Zen arts is to never use more when less will do. This goes for the use of color as well. The problem with most slide presentations is not that visuals contain too few colors, it's that they contain too many. A common practice is to use several different vivid hues (colors) in presentation slides when even a single hue in various shades or tints would have been more effective. The ancient art of Japanese brush painting called Sumi-e (墨絵) provides a powerful lesson concerning the use of color, communication, and restraints. Sumi-e was brought to Japan from China and is an art deeply rooted in Zen, embodying many of the tenets of the Zen aesthetic including simplicity and the idea of maximum effect with minimum means. In Sumi-e, great works are achieved with only black ink on washi (rice paper) or silk scroll. Using the black ink to achieve several variations of tones, we learn that powerful visual messages can be created with a single "color" in the form of different shades and tints. (

www.presentationzen.com/...goes-for-the-use-of-color.html - Preview

sumi presentation visual appearance web design less elearning NTUEDU

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