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4 novembre 2013

Le journalisme scientifique dans les controverses

http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRp5SrCR2hW2zoZV9fjHONxBZChRezL1byfIFHK60H0g-ppUa20T7PuGgPar Sylvestre Huet. Le colloque "Le journalisme scientifiques dans les controverses" co-organisé par un centre de recherche, l'ISCC (Institut des sciences de la communication du Cnrs) et l'AJSPI  tenu au 101 rue de l'Université, à l'invitation de l'Office parlementaire d'évaluation des choix scientifiques et technologiques, a rencontré un grand succès.
Avec près de 300 inscrits, il a rassemblé des chercheurs de toutes disciplines, des journalistes, spécialisés en sciences ou non, des responsables de communication et de presse d'organismes de recherche et d'université ainsi que quelques élus, Députés et Sénateurs.
Les débats ont été intéressants, et ont montré les nombreuses pistes de travail possibles entre chercheurs et journalistes sur le métier et la production des journalistes scientifiques ou sur les sujets qu'ils traitent.
Ce succès permet ainsi d'envisager la poursuite de la collaboration entre l'AJSPI et l'ISCC dans le cadre de la convention signée cette année. Qu'il s'agisse de colloques, d'ateliers, de thèses ou de travaux de recherches.
Lors de l'ouverture du colloque, Sylvestre Huet a, comme président de l'AJSPI, prononcé une courte allocution sur les raisons pour lesquelles l'AJSPI s'est lancée dans cette aventure. Suite...

4 novembre 2013

Hey, Look! I'm Radical!

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/large/public/CRW.jpgBy Lee Skallerup Bessette. There was recently a piece in Wired praising a new, radical teaching method that is sweeping...a classroom in Mexico. It will produce geniuses, truly! A whole generation of them! To say I was skeptical about this article when I read the title is an understatement, and I actually actively avoided reading it for almost a whole day. I was glad to see that what the article was talking about was actually “just” peer-driven learning, something I have been doing for a few years now in my classroom. I’m not sure if I’m producing geniuses or not, but I am creating (I hope) more motivated and engaged students, not to mention more aware of their educations. Read more...
4 novembre 2013

It's AcWriMo!

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/large/public/CRW.jpgBy Lee Skallerup Bessette. Inspired by National Novel Writing Month (or #NaNoWriMo) on Twitter, November has become the go-to month for getting writing done, and getting it done publicly. Last year, I participated in Digital Writing Month, and this year, I’m right back into it with Academic Writing Month (or #acwrimo on Twitter). The idea is to set yourself a writing goal, make it public, and share your progress as the month wears on (and November can certainly wear, can’t it?). Read more...
4 novembre 2013

Teaching sustainability in 21st Century America - #8

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/green.jpg?itok=D8D3DXB7By G. Rendell. A recent post to the Green Schools listserv asked whether sustainability folks at any other institution had good models for evaluating "triple bottom line" returns on investment.  The writer said his school wanted to consider environmental and social, as well as traditional economic, returns when evaluating projects. But then he went on to list 8 or 10 different measures of economic return (ROI, IRR, net present value, simple payback, etc., etc., etc.) which proposed "triple bottom line" models had to address.  Which, to my mind indicated that while environmental and social factors might technically enter into decision processes, economic factors were still in first, second and third place.  In truth, I've never seen a purely economic project evaluation model which took into consideration all the various economic metrics this supposedly more-than-just-economic protocol seemed to be demanding. Read more...

4 novembre 2013

5 Questions About Adaptive Learning Platforms

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/technology_and_learning_blog_header.jpg?itok=aQthgJ91By Joshua Kim. How many of you have actually spent quality time in an adaptive learning platform?
Not me ... and I’m getting worried about this gap in my experience.
(Although Phil Hill’s post Differentiated, Personalized & Adaptive Learning: some clarity for EDUCAUSE was very helpful. Thanks Phil. Now everyone go visit MindWires).
My strong sense is that the next few years in edtech will be dominated by two inter-related trends. Read more...

4 novembre 2013

Amazon's Whispersync, Reading and Higher Ed

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/technology_and_learning_blog_header.jpg?itok=aQthgJ91By Joshua Kim. The real question is what you think about the relationship between consumer technology and higher ed?
Is higher ed competing with Amazon, Google, Facebook, etc. etc.?
What does that question even mean? What exactly are we competing for? Attention? Relevancy? Eyeballs? Dollars? 
This is the framework that we should take into thinking about what Amazon’s Whispersync technology means for higher ed. Read more...

4 novembre 2013

A Confession of Faith in Books

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/library_babel_fish_blog_header.jpg?itok=qNL3hM7KBy Barbara Fister. I am a book person. I read a lot of them. I own a lot of them, and give a lot of them away  I really like being in the stacks of my library, even though sometimes what I’m doing there is deciding which books shouldn't be there. I am a book person who is dismayed that it’s getting harder to share scholarship through the medium of books. It’s not that we aren’t publishing enough books, it’s that we still – stupidly – demand books as a token of productivity exchangeable for the chance at a regular living wage even as the traditional infrastructure for making books public is crumbling. Read more...

4 novembre 2013

Unfunded Ph.D.s: To Go or Not To Go

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/Screen%20Shot%202011-12-12%20at%2012.29.48%20PM.png?itok=ITDqfJNPBy Natascha ChtenaWhen applying to Ph.D. programs, I was often advised to consider an acceptance without departmental funding as a polite rejection. I chose to pursue an unfunded Ph.D. regardless. Partly because I really wanted to go back to school, partly because I really wanted to work with my current advisor, partly because I really wanted to move to the States and this was an opportunity to do so. After securing partial funding from a private institution overseas, I felt empowered, special and, even, unbreakable. Read more...

4 novembre 2013

How to (Not) Talk about Your Research

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/Screen%20Shot%202011-12-12%20at%2012.29.48%20PM.png?itok=ITDqfJNPBy Erin Bedford. It’s happened to the best of us. First, the question: “so, what is your research on?” Then, the blank stare as you try to explain. And finally, the uninterested but polite nod and smile. The other day, one of my past classmates asked me what I was working on. When I was given the blank stare from someone with an identical background to me, I realized that I have a problem. I’m tired of not being understood. No more hiding behind excuses like “my work is too complicated” or “they don’t actually care.” It’s time to figure out why we aren’t understood and what we can do to change that. What mistakes do we make when talking about our research? Read more...

4 novembre 2013

Minimalist College: The Testing Floor

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/reality_check_blog_header.jpg?itok=lL0ruOrZBy John Lombardi. The ongoing pursuit of the cheapest and least intrusive higher education alternatives continues apace. Some find the activity new and exciting, although of course we’ve always been able to get educated by reading books and studying on our own.  The new twist is that we can now sign up for computer mediated reading and studying on our own, a convenience in the fast-food tradition of highly efficient standardized production of useful commodity products. To guarantee the benefit of this form of higher education, we develop a battery of tests that ensure no student is left behind in the race to certification as an educated and competent adult. Many in the state-supported higher education policy realm see these tests as mechanisms to reduce the number of students in real universities and drive them through a fast food education that produces certification at a low cost, perhaps only $10K or less for a college diploma. Read more...

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