Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Charity Antivirus

eat properly and exercise / alimentarsi correttamente e muoversi

28/02 --> 23/03

Monday, February 24, 2014

Sylvia Guinan ? E-Perfect !

Visual Design and inspiration Week Two EVO
My Eperfect textbook.

sylvia Guinan

  §§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§ Sylvia Guinan on Moodle MOOC 3 mp4 §§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§

Extract from Russian Dolls - YouTube
► 1:08► 1:08
www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQNkmLRmOpY
17/dic/2013 - Caricato da sylvia Guinan
Extract from Russian Dollssylvia Guinan·62 videos ... ELT-T Have Fun With Idioms Shanthi Cumaraswamy by ...
Altro di sylvia Guinan - in 181 cerchie di Google+
Russian Dolls extract - YouTube
► 1:51► 1:51
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8VYwK1SX0Ec
18/dic/2013 - Caricato da sylvia Guinan
Russian Dolls extract. sylvia Guinan·62 videos ... Watch Later The Art Of Sounding Nativeby sylvia Guinan22 ...
Altro di sylvia Guinan - in 181 cerchie di Google+
Sylvia Guinan on Moodle MOOC 3 mp4 - YouTube
► 19:13► 19:13
www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1PbL1wugnk
6 giorni fa - Caricato da sylvia Guinan
Sylvia Guinan on Moodle MOOC 3 mp4. sylvia Guinan·62 videos ... Russian Dolls extract by sylvia ...
Altro di sylvia Guinan - in 181 cerchie di Google+
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21/dic/2013 - Extract one Russian Dolls (A) Narrator Michael Gyori: Germany/Hawaii Writer Sylvia GuinanRussian Dolls (A) Short extract Percival Crabtree ...
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17/nov/2013 - PRESENTER: Sylvia Guinan ... a)The first extract called Russian Dollsis for advanced/proficiency level and may even by challenging for ...
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19/dic/2013 - PRESENTER: Sylvia Guinan ... a)The first extract called Russian Dollsis for advanced/proficiency level and may even by challenging for ...
A Writer's Review of 'Learn Natural English Through Storytelling ...
blog.wiziq.com/a-writers-review-of-learn-...
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di sylvia Guinan - in 181 cerchie di Google+
18/set/2013 - Sylvia Guinan reviews her new collaborative work called 'Learn Natural English ... The third story is the one I wrote called 'Russian Dolls'.
Sylvia Guinan, an inspiring and passionate Educator as well a talented ... Russian Dolls extract ... Enhanced listening through storytelling by Sylvia Guinan.
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Sylvia Guinan, an inspiring and passionate Educator as well a talented .... Russian Dolls extract ... Enhanced listening through storytelling by Sylvia Guinan.
Tips & How-To Archives - Fair Languages
fairlanguages.com/category/tips-how-to/

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Here are all the 18 of the new government / Ecco i 18 del nuovo governo (educazione civica 1)

[ITALY] 

PM Renzi presents the list of his (new) 
New Italian PM 
Matteo Renzi crop new.png
Matteo Renzi  has lifted reserve, 
forming the new government.

This is the list of ministers:
Secretary to the Prime. 
Graziano Delrio 2012.jpg

Interior: 
Angelino Alfano at the EPP Study Days in Palermo, 2011..png

Health: 
Beatrice Lorenzin.jpg

Economy: 
Pier Carlo Padoan
Transportation and Infrastructure: 
On. Maurizio Lupi.jpg

University: 
Foreign: 

Justice: 


Defense: 
Roberta Pinotti.jpg

Economic Development
Federica Guidi.jpg

Agriculture:
Environment:

Reforms and Relations with Parliament:
Maria Elena Boschi.jpg


Simplification:

Regional Affairs:


Friday, February 21, 2014

MDE master ( in) distante education ... lounge ... orientamento ... e-portfolio ...

Lounge
https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!forum/mde-lounge

Orienttation
https://sites.google.com/site/mdeorientation/

E-Portfolio

To be truly global + Abandon it but do not stop trying!

MOOCs
Try to Break the Language Barrier

Next up for online education portals
Coursera and edX:
breaking into the non-English
speaking world. To be truly global,
they need to expand 

their reach.
146 SHARES

http://www.inc.com/issie-lapowsky/mooc-providers-break-language-barrier.html

Since their inception, companies like Coursera and edX, both purveyors of massively open online courses or MOOCS, have had grand plans to radically expand access to an elite education around the world. So you live in Lesotho? No problem. Join edX, and you can take Harvard courses for free online.
That is, if you speak English.
These days there's plenty of debate about MOOC mania: Are these companies really worth the millions of dollars venture capitalists are pouring into them? Are they really providing students a first class education? Another issue with the outsized ambitions of these companies: so far, they haven't found a way to be truly global and breach the language barrier at scale. Now, that's starting to change.
On Thursday, edX announced it's partnering with 10 Chinese universities to launch the country's largest online learning portal, called XuetangX. The universities will use edX's open source platform to build their own courses in Chinese, as well as license courses from edX's global university partners.
"There's only so many people edX can support," says edX co-founder Anant Agarwal. "We open sourced our platform exactly for this reason."
It's the most recent news in a week that's been chock full of announcements about MOOC providers going global. Late last week, edX also announced its new partnership with the French Ministry of Education to launch France Universite Numerique, a government-run online learning portal that also runs on edX's open-source platform. It was a major vote of confidence for a still-nascent industry. Then came the news this week that Coursera would be launching Coursera Zone, a Chinese-language online education site, hosted on the leading Chinese Internet portal NetEase. Different from edX's model, Coursera Zone will offer courses from Coursera's existing university partners, but with Chinese language discussion forums and other course materials. Translating Coursera courses into Chinese, however, is a project that's still underway.
"Almost any way you slice it, China is the No. 1 country in terms of the potential for growth and impact on students," says Andrew Ng, co-founder of Coursera. "In terms of expanding our reach, China's a huge market and helps us reach their market."
And China is only the tip of the iceberg. After all, "Harvard" probably translates well in a whole host of countries.
These international partnerships also hint at a future in which MOOC providers are as much about serving businesses as they are about serving consumers. As I've written in the past, Coursera and edX are busy trying to figuring out ways to improve education on campus, a service for which universities are willing to pay. Nations have much deeper pockets. If more countries take France's lead to launch their own online portals, that would not only help MOOC providers overcome the language barrier without doing the heavy lifting, but it also would enable these companies to charge for support services and for licensed courses from other universities.
"This would open up a very interesting business model for edX," says Agarwal, who says he's in talks with several other governments to set up similar agreements. 
So far, however, Agarwal says no money has changed hands between edX, one of the only non-profit MOOC providers, and its international partners. In this space, he says, revenue generation will always be secondary to doing what's right for students, and that includes giving students courses in a language they understand.
"It seems to be par for the course in this high-speed, fast moving MOOC business, where things happen so fast," Agarwal says. "We start by doing the right thing and then the formal arrangements follow." 
But follow they must, if these education providers want to deliver on their audacious goals.  
IMAGE: NASA GODDARD PHOTO AND VIDEO
LAST UPDATED: OCT 10, 2013



_______________________________________________________________________________

http://www.openculture.com/2013/04/10_reasons_you_didnt_complete_a_mooc.html

MOOC Interrupted: Top 10 Reasons Our Readers Didn’t Finish a Massive Open Online Course

mooc completion
On Tuesday, we gave you a Visualization of the Big Problem for MOOCs, which comes down to this: low completion rates. To be clear, the completion rates aren’t so much a problem for you; they’re more a problem for the MOOC providers and their business models. But let’s not get bogged down in that. We ended our post by asking you to share your own experience with MOOCs — particularly, to tell us why you started and stopped a MOOC. We got close to 50 thoughtful responses. And below we’ve summarized the 10 most commonly-cited reasons. Here they are:
1.) Takes Too Much Time: Sometimes you enroll in a MOOC, only to discover that it takes way too much time. “Just didn’t have time to do all the work.” “As a full-time working adult, I found it exceedingly difficult to watch hours upon hours of video lectures.” That’s a refrain we heard again and again.
2.) Assumes Too Much Knowledge: Other times you enroll in a MOOC, only to find that it requires too much base knowledge, like a knowledge of advanced mathematics. That makes the course an instant non-starter. So you opt out. Simple as that.
3.) Too Basic, Not Really at the Level of Stanford, Oxford and MIT: On the flip side, some say that their MOOCs weren’t really operating on a serious university level. The coursework was too easy, the workload and assignments weren’t high enough. A literature course felt more like a glorified book club. In short, the courses weren’t the real university deal.
4.) Lecture Fatigue: MOOCs often rely on formal video lectures, which, for many of you, is an“obsolete and inefficient format.” And they’re just sometimes boring. MOOCs would be better served if they relied more heavily on interactive forms of pedagogy. Val put it well when she said, “We should not try to bring a brick and mortar lecture to your living room. Use the resources available and make the learning engaging with shorter segments…. The goal should be to teach and teach better. If one of these online universities can figure that out, then the money will follow.”
5.) Poor Course Design: You signed up for a MOOC and didn’t know how to get going. One student related his experience: “From day one I had no idea what I was supposed to do. There were instructions all over the place. Groups to join with phantom members that never commented or interacted, and a syllabus that was being revised as the course went through it’s first week.”
6.) Clunky Community/Communication Tools: This has been the Achilles’ heel of online learning for years, and so far the MOOCs haven’t quite figured it out. It’s not unusual to hear this kind of comment from students: “I find that the discussion forums aren’t very useful or engaging. They are not a very good substitute for active in-class discussion.”
7.) Bad Peer Review & Trolls: Because MOOCs are so big, you often don’t get feedback from the professor. Instead you get it from algorithms and peers. And sometimes the peers can be less than constructive. One reader writes: “I chose to stop doing the peer response section of the class due to some students being treated rudely [by other students]; in fact, the entire peer response section of the class is done in a way I would NEVER have asked of students in a classroom…. [T]here is no involvement of the professor or TA’s in monitoring the TORRENT of complaints about peer reviews.”
8.) Surprised by Hidden Costs: Sometimes you discover that free MOOCs aren’t exactly free. They have hidden costs. Brooke dropped her MOOC when she realized that the readings were from the professor’s expensive textbook.
9.) You’re Just Shopping Around: You shop for courses, which involves registering for many courses, keeping some, and dropping others. That inflates the low completion rate, but it gives you freedom. As one reader said, “I am very, very happy about being able to be so picky.”
10.) You’re There to Learn, Not for the Credential at the End: Sometimes you do everything (watch the videos, do the readings, etc.) but take the final exam. In a certain way, you’re auditing, which suits many of you just fine. It’s precisely what you want to do. But that, too, makes the low completion rates look worse than they maybe are.
Thanks to everyone who took the time to participate. We really appreciate it! And if you’re looking for a new MOOC, don’t miss our list, 300 Free MOOCs from Great Universities (Many Offering Certificates).

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