I sent an e-mail to some folks I thought might be interested in the geography puzzle I mentioned yesterday. Bernie Dodge from San Diego State responded that he also liked the Geography Olympics site.
In addition, he told me about another great geography game site called Geosense. Geosense is awesome! I've set it as my temporary home page.
Another site that is kind of fun dealing with US state locations is the Can You Pass Third Grade? site.
Terri Wilbanks, a friend and foreign language instructor at my university, had a cute comment about Nunavit, Canada's largest and newest territory.
"Nunavit? I think that's a place my mom used to talk about but I thought it was smaller...... 'I want Nunavit in my house!' "
Finally, if you wish to follow up with some basic knowledge about a particular country, check out the CIA World Factbook. I have no idea what data the CIA is collecting about you if you use this, but the resource is very good.
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Burkina Faso?
Where is Nunavit?
How about Burkina Faso?
Myanmar?
I suggest you order The Global Puzzle from geographyolympics.com/.
It’s about $15. I read about it in USA Today and ordered one for my father-in-law for Christmas and one for me for the hell of it.
That was very fortunate.
I have been sufficiently humbled by my limited geographic knowledge and Brenda and I have had great fun solving the puzzle on our dining room table to boot.
I wish I had thought to market this idea.
How about Burkina Faso?
Myanmar?
I suggest you order The Global Puzzle from geographyolympics.com/.
It’s about $15. I read about it in USA Today and ordered one for my father-in-law for Christmas and one for me for the hell of it.
That was very fortunate.
I have been sufficiently humbled by my limited geographic knowledge and Brenda and I have had great fun solving the puzzle on our dining room table to boot.
I wish I had thought to market this idea.
Saturday, December 18, 2004
Videoconferencing Sites
Members of a listserv I belong to (DEOS-L - The Distance Education Online Symposium [DEOS-L@lists.psu.edu]) has had a number of good suggestions regarding Videoconferencing reference sites. A few of these are below:
An introduction to using videoconferencing technology for teaching
by Jodi Reed and Merry Woodruff of San Diego State University.
http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/vidconf/Using.html
“VCAlberta.ca aims to be a community driven site that provides advice on the videoconferencing standards in Alberta and answers questions on how to effectively conduct many different kinds of videoconferences. There are tools, forums, frequently asked questions in addition to a directory and tips and tricks articles.”
http://vcalberta.ca/
The Center for Interactive Learning and Collaboration has a pretty good resources section.
http://www.cilc.org/tools_and_resources.aspx
Lisa Tyler, of Global Compliance Network, has an internet-based tutorial about educational videoconferencing success strategies
To view it, go to www.gcn1.net and login using "gcn" for the username and "dugan" for the password. You will need the Flash plugin.
An introduction to using videoconferencing technology for teaching
by Jodi Reed and Merry Woodruff of San Diego State University.
http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/vidconf/Using.html
“VCAlberta.ca aims to be a community driven site that provides advice on the videoconferencing standards in Alberta and answers questions on how to effectively conduct many different kinds of videoconferences. There are tools, forums, frequently asked questions in addition to a directory and tips and tricks articles.”
http://vcalberta.ca/
The Center for Interactive Learning and Collaboration has a pretty good resources section.
http://www.cilc.org/tools_and_resources.aspx
Lisa Tyler, of Global Compliance Network, has an internet-based tutorial about educational videoconferencing success strategies
To view it, go to www.gcn1.net and login using "gcn" for the username and "dugan" for the password. You will need the Flash plugin.
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
Sloan-C-Resources
From the Sloan-C Resources Report "The online enrollment projections have been realized, and there is no evidence that enrollments have reached a plateau. Online enrollments continue to grow at rates faster than for the overall student body, and schools expect the rate of growth to further increase:
- Over 1.9 million students were studying online in the fall of 2003.
- Schools expect the number of online students to grow to over 2.6 million by the fall of 2004.
- Schools expect online enrollment growth to accelerate the expected average growth rate for online students for 2004 is 24.8%, up from 19.8% in 2003.
- Overall, schools were pretty accurate in predicting enrollment growth last year's predicted online enrollment for 2003 was 1,920,734; this year's number from the survey is 1,971,397. "
Distributed vs. Distance Education in Higher Ed?
This first paper in the ACE/EDUCAUSE series, Distributed Education and Its Challenges: An Overview, provides a general framework for understanding the key questions that distributed education poses to the higher education community. This overview paper identifies significant issues associated with distributed education and suggests a series of questions to help institutional leaders establish and validate their options. (from the paper's abstract)
http://www.acenet.edu/bookstore/pdf/distributed-learning/distributed-learning-01.pdf
http://www.acenet.edu/bookstore/pdf/distributed-learning/distributed-learning-01.pdf
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