The following are the links to articles, blog post, YouTube videos, TED Talks and books that were used or referenced in the PIDP 3210 Curriculum Development course that ran in College of New Caledonia in Prince George British Columbia (January-February 2015).

Not Suited For School But Suited for Learning

You will find this video, learning philosophy and links to many of my presentations, and my favorite blog posts on my blog About page.

The Head Won’t Go Where the Heart Hasn’t Been

Benjamin Bloom argued that we need to address all the domains and find a balance. We often over emphasize the cognitive domain, relegate the psychomotor to the trades or other overtly physical disciplines and limit the affective domain to ethical or values issues. This limitation will severely limit the change that is necessary for learning. The blog post The Head Won’t Go Where the Heart Hasn’t Been post includes a more detailed explanation of the importance of the affective domain and has links to the Behavioral Science (BS) Guys video How to Change People Who Don’t Want to Change and also a related TED Talk Why TED Talks don’t change people’s behaviors.

Fixed VS Growth Mindset
The Power of belief — mindset and success | Eduardo Briceno | TEDxManhattanBeach

You will find a very useful Fixed vs Growth Mindset graphic and a short comparison of how the Fixed Vs Growth Mindset is equivalent to the Print Vs Digital Information Age on the blog post Fixed Vs Growth Mindset = Print Vs Digital Information Age

Carol Dweck’s book Mindset: The New Psychology of Success is definitely worth the read.

Mistakes are for learning
It’s a Mistake Not to Use Mistakes as Part of the Learning Process blog post refers to Brian Goldman’s TED Talk:

Doctors make mistakes. Can we talk about that?

Intrinsic VS Extrinsic Motivation
RSA Animate – Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us

Daniel Pink’s book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us
is worth the read.

Don’t Let Learning Styles Limit Your Learning
Learning Styles Don’t Exist

Content Saturation
In the article Rescuing Nursing Education from Content Saturation: The Case for a Concept-Based Curriculum Jean F. Giddens and Debra P. Brady argue that nursing education has been plagued with a saturation of content for many years. Fortunately, they offer recommendations on how to move away from content delivery and saturation and how to create a learning environment based on a conceptual approach to curriculum development. Even though this article is focused on nursing it is a good read for any instructor in any discipline.

People Don’t Buy What You Do They Buy Why You Do It
Start with why – how great leaders inspire action | Simon Sinek | TEDxPugetSound

Simon Sinek’s book Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action
is worth the read.

Parenting and Child Development
There were several discussions over the final weekend regarding parenting and Gary Neufeild’s book Hold On to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers was referenced and is worth the read.

The BEST TED talks to take in:
Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?

Sir Ken Robinson: Bring on the learning revolution!

The blog post Want to Change the World – Tell a Good Story offers links to the top TED Talks of all time.

DeathtoStock_Medium6-1024
Source: deathtothestockphoto.com

Progression of Blended, Online & Mobile Learning

I built my first blended learning course in 1994 and started teaching fully online in 1995 and in the past twenty years I have seen steady progress in the use and acceptance of online learning. Unfortunately, I have always been overly optimistic and have believed that well designed online learning could radically improve our educational systems. When the smartphone started to hit saturation levels in north america and mobile learning hit the peak of its hype cycle in 2010/11 I was further encouraged that the notion of “all the time and anywhere” learning had finally become widely accepted. The forward momentum of mobile learning was abruptly interrupted by the latest disruptor to higher education–MOOCS

MOOC Hype

The MOOC hype started in earnest in 2011 and was in full force with formation of Udacity, Coursera, edX and several other content/course delivery organizations in 2012. Many higher education administrators and proponents of the MOOC hype claimed that the disruptive aspect of MOOCs would not only change education but that it would bring an end to traditional education. Many of these claims are similar to the claims made in the mid 1990’s and early 2000’s when the online learning pioneers started to take advantage of the potential of the internet. The reality of immature learning management systems, poor or missing instructional design, abysmal completion rates (often in the single digits) and the high costs of MOOCs have significantly quenched the MOOC hype.

Reality Check – Its Still About The Learning

The latest figures that come from the Babson Survey Research Group’s annual survey, which was based on a 2014 survey of more than 2,800 academic leaders, reveals:

MOOCs are no longer considered a useful tool to learn about online pedagogy
MOOCs pedagogy

MOOCs are not sustainable
MOOCs Sustainable

Education costs, learning outcomes, and competency based education are much more important than MOOCs
MOOCs Importance

The Babson survey also reveals that academic leaders believe that some aspects of online learning are positive:

  • Online education has become mission-critical, even at small colleges.
  • “Hybrid” courses are at least as good as face-to-face courses.

The survey reveals that most professors still don’t think online courses are legit so whether the adverse effects of the MOOC hype are a contributing factor or that faculty just have not learned how or received the professional development to build effective online learning environments, even in 2015 we  still have a long way to go before online learning is fully accepted.

Read the full report…

http://youtu.be/ce31WjiVcY0

desk-setup

Source: Featured photo credit: How To Set Up Your Desk For Your Best Day At Work via huffingtonpost.com

Related Lifehacker.com post – How to Set up Your Desk to Increase Productivity at Work