Canalblog
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
Formation Continue du Supérieur
13 octobre 2013

Skills mismatch hurts firms

http://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/www2.canada.com/images/newspapers/calgaryherald/widgets/paper_image.gifBy Derek Sankey. Organization calls for concrete steps to ease shortfall. Skills held by new graduates and workers hitting the job market often don't match the skills employers need and that is exacerbating labour shortages across 14 critical sectors that rely on highly-skilled technology workers, according to the Canadian Council of Technicians and Technologists.
At the organization's National Technology Conference held last week in Winnipeg, employers, educators, government officials and industry observers came together to try to tackle the issue and others. More...

13 octobre 2013

Grade inflation and the cult of self-esteem

By David Moscrop, Ottawa Citizen. During the first year of my undergraduate degree, I was given a score of 99 per cent on an essay about the Canadian health-care system. Audacious and invincible, as all undergraduates are, I wandered up to the professor after the class to inquire as to why I’d come up short of perfection. “Well,” he said as he looked over the paper, “there’s a run-on sentence in the introduction. So it’s not perfect.” Indeed.
A recent story in the Citizen exposed grade inflation at Carleton University — a phenomenon, I hasten to add, that isn’t unique to that school. The piece highlighted the apparent proficiency of Carleton’s students, including the fact that one third of every grade awarded is in the A range; also noted is the seven per cent rise in average scores over the last 12 years. Naturally, the university attributes this increase in braininess to better students and instruction. More...

13 octobre 2013

Students, country shortchanged by insular ivory tower attitudes

http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/media/www/images/flag/gam-masthead.pngBy Gwyn Morgan. What is the return on a university education? Sadly, many Canadians graduate to find that their $30,000 debt (national average) has bought them employment prospects no better than when they left high school. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce estimates more than 500,000 postsecondary graduates will be working in low-skilled jobs by 2016, while 1.5 million skilled jobs will go unfilled. What is the problem, and how can it be fixed? More...

13 octobre 2013

Large digital-skills divide among Canadian adults, OECD study shows

http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/media/www/images/flag/gam-masthead.pngBy Jill Mahoney. Canada is facing a gaping digital divide, with large swaths of the adult population scoring at both the highest and lowest levels on an international test of computer problem-solving skills. The survey found that Canada had the second-highest proportion of adults who excelled on a test that measured participants’ abilities to complete multi-step tasks using computers. At the same time, the country lagged near the bottom of the pack for the proportion of respondents who did poorly on the assessment. More...

13 octobre 2013

Too few female CEOs? Universities must step in

http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/media/www/images/flag/gam-masthead.pngBy Barbara Orser. In the introductory lecture of my entrepreneurship class, I present students with two scenarios. In the first, each student is described as having a brilliant idea for a new business. Optimism and experience leads them to believe that it is a ‘sure fire’ winner. A question is posed: “Who is willing to pursue business start-up?” Hands are raised. More...

13 octobre 2013

How much are you spending on that MOOC? Is it worth it?

http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/media/www/images/flag/gam-masthead.pngBy Marilyn M. Lombardi. We can thank the University of Manitoba for launching the massive open online course craze.
Back in 2008, Manitoba’s “Connectivism and Connective Knowledge” online course was made available for free to online “auditors.” When more than 2,000 people unexpectedly signed up for the experience, an acronym (“MOOC”) and a movement was born. My involvement with MOOCs started in the summer of 2012 when Duke University was approached by Coursera, a Stanford university spin-off company with venture capital in its coffers and a message of global social responsibility to which chief academic officers at elite institutions were quick to respond. More...

13 octobre 2013

Recent reports and papers on MOOCs and Online education

http://www.icde.org/filestore/dev/GFX/ny_logo_100.pngThis overview of nine key documents published over the past year is provided to support the ongoing debate on MOOCs, Open Educational Resources and online education, and to support the change processes in this time of openness. Dates of publication and extent are noted.
Any suggestions for reports and papers to be added to this list are very welcome! Please contact the ICDE Secretariat.
Introduction to Moocs: Avalanche, Illusion or Augmentation? Policy Brief Published by the UNESCO Institute for Information Technologies in Education
http://iite.unesco.org/publications/3214722
This Policy Brief aims to provide a background to the expansion of MOOCs, explain their differences and similarities, identify the types of students using MOOCs, investigate their business models and potential direction, and finally to scope the risks and benefits associated with their development. More...

13 octobre 2013

MOOC, SPOC, MOOR And The Walking Dead – The Journey Continues

http://1.gravatar.com/avatar/dc05a2ca5a40a50b085f9ce7d2dc7d13?s=68&d=http%3A%2F%2F1.gravatar.com%2Favatar%2Fad516503a11cd5ca435acc9bb6523536%3Fs%3D68&r=GBy . When Technoduet first published its list of MOOC Providers about six months back, there were just 26 names.  Now it has 40 and growing.
Not only number of MOOC providers has multiplied, MOOC themselves have diversified.  We now have SPOC, MOOR  and even a MOOC based on a popular TV series.  The maturity, diversification and popularity of MOOC are all going up. More...

13 octobre 2013

The maturing of the MOOC: literature review of massive open online courses and other forms of online distance learning

Provides an overview of recent reports, writings and opinion on massive open online courses (MOOCs). BIS research paper number 130.
This report updates our knowledge on the development and impact of massive open online courses on learners and institutions at further education and higher education level. The study assessed available literature from various sources, including academic research articles and formal comprehensive reviews; blog posts; commentary and journalistic coverage. It concludes that massive open online courses are likely to become a standard element of university education with new teaching and learning methods that provide revenue and lower costs. A major challenge is finding suitable business models.
Research and analysis Massive open online courses and online distance learning: review
Organisation: Department for Business, Innovation & Skills
Page history: Published 18 September 2013
Policies: Improving the quality of further education and skills training1 other
Series: BIS research papers.

13 octobre 2013

Merit Aid: Not Just for the Middle Class

http://higheredwatch.newamerica.net/sites/all/themes/nafbase/images/logo.pngBy Stephen Burd. Supporters of “merit aid” often defend it as being a middle class benefit. When articles appear that are critical of non-need-based financial aid, they are typically greeted with responses such as this (taken from a forum on College Confidential):
I think that it is ridiculous to cut merit aid. The middle class will be in even more of a bind. The only reason I will be able to afford to go to a good school is if I get merit aid. I'm in the typical middle class FA situation- too "rich" to get FA but too poor to afford college.
Newly-released data by the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) show that a student’s chances of receiving merit aid increases as his or her family’s income rises. In fact, students from families making more than $250,000 a year are more likely to receive merit aid than those making less than half of that. More...

Newsletter
49 abonnés
Visiteurs
Depuis la création 2 783 549
Formation Continue du Supérieur
Archives