Par Paul Santelmann, Responsable de la Prospective à l’AFPA. L’enquête Sumer (surveillance médicale des expositions aux risques professionnels) décrit notamment les contraintes organisationnelles auxquelles sont soumis les salariés et permet d’établir des liens entre les modes de management des salariés et les différents risques physiques et psycho-sociaux auxquels ils sont confrontés. La dernière étude de la DARES (analyses – janvier 2015 n°003) relative à cette enquête en 2010, s’est focalisée sur les entretiens professionnels annuels supposés cadrer l’activité des salariés. Or cette enquête révèle l’inexistence de ces entretiens pour 1/3 des salariés et leur faible instrumentation quand ils ont lieu. Lien : http://travail-emploi.gouv.fr/IMG/pdf/2015-003.pdf. Voir l'article...
Les #partenariats #Laboratoire-Entreprise au service de l’#innovation - Sophia Antipolis
Workshop REA « Les partenariats Laboratoire-Entreprise au service de l’innovation » à Sophia Antipolis le 29 janvier 2015 de 8h30 à 13h
Objectif du workshop :
Créer l’opportunité de mettre en présence les différents acteurs de l’innovation des mondes économique et académique sur des sujets phares ;
Informer chacun de ces acteurs sur les dispositifs et méthodes dont ils peuvent bénéficier pour développer des projets innovants collaboratifs,
Favoriser les partenariats laboratoires-entreprises et l’émergence d’idées nouvelles,
Valoriser les ressources humaines très qualifiées.
Téléchargez le programme détailléTéléchargez le Communiqué de PresseInscrivez-vous. Voir l'article...
Le « pilotage » du travail en question…
Making Sense of Words That Don't
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Making Sense of Words That Don't
Kelli Sandman-Hurley, Edutopia, 2015/01/23
This is an article that combines two separate concepts, does so in a confusing way, and will confuse rather than enlighten if used to teach language. The concepts are, on the one hand, prefixes and suffixes, and on the other hand, word roots and etymology (or what might be thought of as families of words). More...
A Photo A Day Keeps the Dullness Away
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. A Photo A Day Keeps the Dullness Away
Alan Levine, CogDogBlog, 2015/01/23
One comment I saw several times in my recent survey was that people missed seeing my photos in OLDaily. I do enjoy sharing my photos, and I'll look to finding a good way to reincorporate them. But in the meantime, just like Alan Levine here, I've been participating in a photo-a-day project off and on for years. More...
Why Finland is finished as role model in education
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Why Finland is finished as role model in education
Donald Clark, Donald Clark Plan B, 2015/01/23
This is generally a good article but it has the old saw about how mono-cultural mono-lingual countries are the ones who do really well on the PISA tests. One commentator noted that Finland education supports several languages, and of course Finns typically speak English as well as their native language. More...
Teaching and learning through dialogue
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Teaching and learning through dialogue
Steve Wheeler, Learning With Es, 2015/01/23
I think that dialogue is really important in learning, but then, I construe 'dialogue' much more broadly than most - I think of a walk through the woods as a dialogue with the park, or a walk through a city as a dialogue with its inhabitants. More...
Using Gamification to create a Blogging Culture
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Using Gamification to create a Blogging Culture
Sumeet Moghe, The Learning Generalist, 2015/01/23
I like the way this experiment begins: "How about we used the same money that we’d use to hire a journalist, to instead engage ThoughtWorkers in writing about their work lives". More...
The Mirage of Measurable Success
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. The Mirage of Measurable Success
Matt Crosslin, EduGeek Journal, 2015/01/22
Interesting article that despite the title is more concerned with the evaluation of dalmooc, which I think was intended to be an instance of a dual-MOOC (ie., both cMOOC and xMOOC). The inevitable result was that some people thought it was more cMOOC than they expected, while others thought it was more xMOOC than they expected. More...
A Hippocratic Oath for Ed-Tech
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. A Hippocratic Oath for Ed-Tech
Audrey Watters, Hack Education, 2015/01/22
I think this is a good idea. That's why I proposed it in 2008 and revisited it in 2010. "Drawing from the Hippocratic Oath, perhaps it would insist that students be recognized as humans, not as data points. It would demand a respect for student privacy. More...
Gaming in Education: Gamification?
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Gaming in Education: Gamification?
Elliott Bristow, The Edublogger, 2015/01/21
During my education my school went through several attempts to create a house system, first with six houses (named after Greek letters: I the Psi house leader), then with Canadian scientists (I was in Banting house, but the system was wrecked by the wags who named theirs the Best house). More...