Jay Fulgencio, Ph.D.
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Top 20 Authoring Tools list based on User Experience

2/6/2022

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This Top 20 Authoring Tools list has been created using a holistic approach and is based on input from actual Authoring Tool users. The order of appearance depends on System Usability Score, Perceived Usefulness & Net Promoter Score. You can also find User-Friendly Authoring Tool Resources that will help you choose the right software.

This web link and infographic is reposted from
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https://elearningindustry.com/directory/software-categories/elearning-authoring-tools/best/user-experience?mc_cid=68f28b5303&mc_eid=55e5b41e93  
Top 20 Authoring Tool Software based on User Experience 2022

Dr. Jay Fulgencio

Learning Technology Specialist www.jayphd18.com 

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3 Reasons Why Higher Education Institutions Need to Mirror MOOC's

6/29/2021

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In recent ed-tech news, an educational technology company, 2U Inc., is buying web-based course provider edX. When I read the article, I could not believe that in the years since edX started, that edX would be bought out for $800 million. As an ed-tech specialist and scholar, the news brings joy and, at the same time, worries about the future of higher education. Does it make sense for a college student to graduate with thousands of students loans to end up at the same job they had while in college? Or better to take a few courses on sites like edX and Coursera to learn a trade, get accredited, and get a decent job for a fraction of the cost. Let me give you three reasons why higher education institutions need to be more like open education platforms such as EdX and Coursera. 

Cost
According to U.S. News, higher education cost has jumped 212%, and that's just for in-state tuition and fees at public universities. If I am an 18-year-old student who doesn’t want to get into financial debt with student loans earning a specialization via Coursera may be a better choice.

The recent U.S. Supreme Court
case rejecting the student loan bankruptcy case makes a stronger case of why students need to look at other education venues instead of the traditional higher education institutions. Why pay $40,000 plus a year at a traditional private university when you can pay $1,344.60 for a MicroBachelors Progam in Cybersecurity Fundamentals via edX that includes nine courses. Why not go the route of online massive open online course (MOOC) providers such as edX and Coursera? 

Access
The 2020 COVID pandemic changed the world forever and education as well. The pandemic has provided an outlet for the rise of online education and much-needed access to training and education material. People are always on the go and need access to content 24/7. If I can access, my Netflix shows 24/7, why can't I have instant access to my education? Edx and Coursera provide access to educational content at a self-paced level, meaning that I can log in and out to access the content at my disposal as a student.

In higher education, you have to wait for the professor to provide the verbal content unless you are taking an asynchronous course. People want easy, fast, and 24/7 access to material and MOOCproviders such as edX and Coursera provide 24/7 access. 

Free trial
When I was an undergraduate, to get a trial of a course, I had to register for the course and attend the first day to know if I would like the course. If I did not enjoy the course, I had to scramble and pray that there was still a course available. MOOC provides anyone with free access to the course, and if they don’t like the course, you don’t have to rush and find a new course.

​Higher education institutions don’t have the luxury of offering a free trial of a course for credit towards a degree because of costs, logistics, and capacity. However, wouldn’t it be great if universities provided a small sample of the course beyond the course description? We live in the Netflix era, where learners expect a free trial version or trailer video of the course. 
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MOOCs provide low-cost, full access with a free trial version of education content. How will traditional higher education institutions do the same for the Instant Access Generation?

Dr. Jay

Learning Technology Specialist 

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The Top 3 Reasons to use Sutori

4/20/2021

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I first got wind of Sutori when I looked up top tech tools for the classroom back in 2019. At first, I was hesitant to check out yet another tech tool for the classroom. My hesitation was from the countless times I would read about the next tech tool to take over the classroom. However, Sutori was not about taking over the classroom; it was more about providing a tool to use in the classroom. Sutori lets you transform your lessons into collaborative learning experiences. Sutori is the interactive version of PowerPoint that enables you to control your presentation with interactive tools such as quizzes, audio, video, forum, and files.  The three reasons you should give Sutori a try in your classroom is because Sutori automatically saves your work, provides several options for your presentation, and easy integration. 

Automatic Saver
When I first started to use Sutori, I was surprised at how Sutori automatically saves your work like Google tools (Google Word, Excel, PowerPoint). If there is anything that I despise about the desktop PowerPoint, I have to save my work. Remember the times when you were working on a project and your computer crashes without saving? Well, the good thing about Sutori is that your work saves automatically. You can focus on your work without having to worry about losing your work. Kudos to Sutori software developers for adding the automatic save feature. 

The Options
As consumers, we like options but not too many options, or else we become overwhelmed. Sutori provides a unique selection of options when adding a slide. The options include: text, link, image, multiple-choice, match quiz, video, audio, “did you know?” file attachment, forum discussion, and bibliography. The multiple-choice option is simply a quiz option, just like the match quiz. The “did you know?” is an option to add a fact about a particular topic. The rest of the options are self-explanatory. The “add media” option for each slide is incredible because you can upload your picture, upload a link, a YouTube link, Google Drive document, voice recorder or select an image from Unsplash, which provides millions of royalty-free photos. 

Easy Integration
Once you complete your Sutori you can share it on various platforms. You can share with Google Classroom, Microsoft Teams, Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. On top of the sharing, you can embed your Sutori presentation to your website. So if your educator with a classroom website, you can embed your presentation for easy access. You can also send out the public link to share with your students, colleagues, and the public. I am sharing one of the Sutori presentations I did for a conference a couple of weeks ago. 
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What are you waiting for? Are you ready to give Sutori a try? 


Dr. Jay

Learning Technology Specialist with business experience.  Check out more at www.jayphd.com 

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3 Lessons Learned from Active Learning Online

2/19/2021

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A few weeks ago, I received an email promoting a book titled Active Learning Online by Stephen M. Kosslyn. When I receive such promotional emails, I usually delete the email and move on. However, I decided to check out the book, and good thing I did purchase the book. As an instructor, teaching online is not new to me; however, I benefited from getting new ideas to teach students online. No matter how many years you’ve been teaching online, let me explain the three lessons I learned from Stephen M. Kosslyn. 

Online Students Need Activities
COVID-19 forced educators from both K-12 and higher education to get acclimated with online teaching. I found that I was now dealing with students who did not like online teaching and had no choice but to take online courses. Whether the student is asynchronous or synchronous online course activities are a must. 

When it comes to online learning is not about putting a YouTube video and calling it a day. The activities have to be engaging with the intent that the student is learning. Whether the activity is a scavenger hunt, debating a pro/con issue, or providing discussion forums that ask students to offer their own opinion, you need to keep students engaged. 

Even if you believe that students don’t want to do online activities, they do because they want to feel engaged and learn by doing. 

Don’t Cram learning material in one module
Imagine me cramming all the information on how to assemble a 3,000 piece LEGO set into one page. I bet you would feel overwhelmed and confused. The same goes for when you’re creating your online course. Don’t cram all of the learning material into one module. Space out your learning materials into the proper amount of modules. 

Students learn best when you pace out the learning materials into numerous modules. Perhaps three to five learning objectives per module would be sufficient. However, this all depends on the level of content and the number of weeks for the course. 

Active learning is a process
Active learning is more than a definition; it’s a process that takes time to comprehend. Active learning in the online classroom is about engaging students to communicate and express their knowledge. In my decade of teaching experience, I felt that COVID-19 challenge my online teaching skills. I had to make sure that I was applying active learning principles and practices into my online courses. 

The book indeed did challenge my inclination about active learning, the principles behind active learning, and the ways you can implement it in the online classroom. I encourage you to learn the process of active learning so you can get students engaged in the online classroom. The more engaged the student is in the online classroom, the more satisfied they will be with their learning experience at your institution. 
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How will you use active learning in the online classroom? 

Dr. Jay

Learning Technology Specialist 

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Online learning explained in fewer than 140 characters

2/8/2020

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Remember the days when Twitter only allowed 140 characters in one tweet? Now that Twitter lets you write 280 characters, people are obligated to write more. But for the sake of this argument, let's pretend that Twitter was only 140 characters, and you tweeted me the question, "what is online learning?" I would respond, "Online learning is any type of learning that is synchronous or asynchronous that happens full or partly over the internet. There is no one way of online learning and has a broad range of ways to display over the internet." As you can see, one tweet can limit my full explanation. Let me explain online learning in three parts: broad explanation, examples, and future of online learning. 

Broad Explanation of Online Learning
Online learning is easy to understand but complex to define the reason being is that online learning covers a broad range of areas. Online learning, as defined by Tony Bates, is any form of learning conducted wholly or partially over the internet. The any form is broad enough for anyone to interpret their way because online learning is a mode of delivery, not a method of teaching.

As a mode of delivery, there are plenty of ways to deliver online learning through a CD Rom, video, audio, YouTube, mobile, telecourses, and online. Online learning can happen in real-time (synchronous) or recorded (asynchronous). The broad explanation of online learning comes down to the following if your learning anything over the internet, it may be considered online learning. 


Examples
If you have attended university in the last decade or went through training for a job, there is a high possibility that you have either enrolled in an online course or have been through live online training. If you have, then you have experienced online learning. Another example of online learning are live or recorded webinars.

Online learning experiences vary from individuals perspective, but what is certain about online learning is convenience and accessibility. When you can watch an online course at your own pace or pause a recorded webinar to attend to something, you have taken control of your learning. 


Current online learning
The future of online learning is unpredictable. Thomas Edison once famously said in the 1900's that movies would replace textbooks in the classroom. Fast forward to 2020, and textbooks are still in the classroom. However, textbooks are now online with easy access through a tablet or computer.

​There is also the rise of the Open Education Resource (OER) textbook where students can access an OER textbook for free, and educators can adapt the textbook to their classroom needs. Organizations are creating online tutorials and online videos through YouTube for students to learn about a specific topic for free. Today's technology has expanded the amount of online learning available to students.


Online learning is any form of learning over the internet, and with technology growing at a faster rate than ever before, it will only be time before virtual reality takes over the classroom, and perhaps no student will need to attend a classroom physically. Online learning will continue to grow, but what it will look like ten years from now is only up to the market to dictate. Does my explanation help you know more about online learning in fewer than 140 words?

Learn more by taking Introduction to Online Learning course. 


Author

​Learning and Development Specialist. Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk ​ ​

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5 Killer Quora Answers on Educational Technology

4/9/2019

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Quora, the Q&A website where anyone in the world can ask questions and the answers are edited and organized by the community of users in the forms of opinions. Think about it as the live version of Wikipedia where people can go at you for posting the wrong answers. During my research for what is  educational technology I found a link to a Quora question about what is educational technology. In this post I focus on the 5 killer Quora answers on educational technology.
 
All of the answers were selected based on number of views and upvotes. Views do not signify that it’s the most accurate answer only that people in Quora viewed the answer the most thus making it a killer Quora answer.

I copied and past the answers to make it easier for you and was not intended to plagiarize an answer.


All of the questions come with the name of the person that wrote the answer, number of views and link to the answer so you can see for yourself the original posting.
 
Question 1
 
The first filler Quora answers on education technology is from the question, “what is educational technology?” The killer answer is from Gopal Iyer, works at Educational Initiatives – Answered August 8, 2017 with 3.9k views. 

https://bit.ly/2IqyUA9
 
Educational technology; defined as a platform to enhance learning through different digital tools, strives to improve pedagogical transactions anywhere, anytime. A crucial component of ET is its evolving nature, enabling children to learn better and faster. Now let me exemplify this and share my experience in the Indian context and how they have evolved in the recent years and what may the future look like?

First came the basic Windows Computers or desktop PC’s which stored information on floppy drives. Typically we were taught calculations, typing and a few basic languages and thus preparing us to take on the real world challenges. Since then education technology has come a long way, and its progress indeed amazes me. This is what a computer used to look like, during our ET sessions in our schools.

A few years later, in came, the laptops and tablets PC’s overthrowing the good old white elephants like the one’s above and made learning look more engaging and fruitful. However, what changed here was the shift in power from the teacher to the learner. Information was available at the touch of the button, thus making the student as powerful as the tutor. Learning also evolved - difficult concepts taught through apps, exercises provided for practices and real time feedbacks have been made possible, equipping teachers to point out gaps in learning. (a typical tablet equipped classroom)

Immersive learning the future
The future of educational technology looks further promising as the learner and the tutor both would be engaged simultaneously. Teaching in a classroom would be like a movie, lesson plans would be mounted on headsets and students would be encouraged to explore with their tutor. Imagine, biology being taught by immersive technique, wouldn't that be fun?

The power of engagement is indeed a gift of educational technology, and through its dynamic nature, it is certaintly capable of changing the way children learn in the classroom.

 
Question 2

The second question, “What is the difference between educational technology and instructional technology?” The killer answer is from Ed Caruthers, Lifelong learner with 4k views.
 
https://bit.ly/2U7KpOQ
 
The way the terms are usually used

Education technology is technology used to help with education. The education can be on any subject. See the Khan Academy which uses technology to help language arts education, music education. 

Technology education is education in one or more technologies. Science, engineering and math are usually included within the more general technology to make STEM.


Question 3

The third question, “what is technology in education?” The killer answer is from Bill Watson, studied at California with 288 views.  
 
https://bit.ly/2G9wMer
 
The best example for use of technology in education is Mentis. Mentis is an open enterprise system for higher education that organizes data, automates processes & transform academia management.

Given below are the reasons:
· Mentis has number of apps namely E-Learning Compliance (ELC), Profiles, Faculty Productivity, Community Service Learning, Grant Management, Conflict of Interest, Mentor and Track & Internal Competitions which are really very useful for Universities and Colleges.
· Profiles app provides platform to let faculty easily describe all their teaching, research and service activities. Furthermore, it makes these activities available online, for other faculty, students, industry and community partners, to easily search and find.
· E-Learning Compliance (ELC) app helps improve your compliance management. You can use ELC to track and stay on top of your professional licensure and state authorization compliance.
  • You can access comprehensive database of state entities and licensure boards covering over 35 different professions.
  • Record and track all business, employment, advertisement, instruction and recruitment activities by program.
  • Slice and dice your student enrollment data with direct integration with your Student Information System.
  • Gather analytical information and derive insights from a number of prebuilt analytical reports.
  • A repository of all your program related information that can also be maintained by your program coordinators.
  • Save time with auto-reminders, to-dos and automatic website publishing.
Leverage your investment in Mentis by getting other apps or creating your own apps. All apps in Mentis also interact with each other, and with other third-party systems, via services. Data generated in one app can be easily consumed by the other thereby reducing data redundancy and improving the overall integrity of data.
·  Trusted by many universities and colleges in USA.

Find the snapshot of E-Learning Compliance (ELC) app in Mentis below: (pics found on weblink provided) 


*Disclosure: I am an employee of Inknowledge Inc.
For more information, please visit our official website Inknowledge Inc. You can also contact us at info@inknowledge.com.


​Question 4 

The fourth question “What do you understand by education technology and educational technology?” The killer answer is from Michael Cenkner, Teaching in K-12 with 270 views.
 
https://bit.ly/2I6va7j

Here’s my answer. We see it having at least seven distinct roles:
Integrating the educational technology expert in medical education: A role-based competency framework

MedEdPublish - Integrating the educational technology expert in medical education: A role-based competency framework. 
After we published this paper, we decided that the roles should be thought of as applying to a team of ed tech people, not just all with one person. We are currently doing a follow-up study to see how much people agree with this concept. Hope this helps.

Question 5
 
The fifth question is, “how is technology changing education?” The killer answer is from Joseph Gudino, Creative Marketing Writer with 10.6k views.
  
https://bit.ly/2U4dRFx
 
I would use three words to sum up how technology is changing education: faster, lighter, and deeper. I'll quickly describe what I mean by each. 

Faster: Research and communication technologies are allowing for quicker transfer of data between institutions, teachers, and students. This is shortening the amount of time that is expected for people to turnaround assignments or finish research.

Lighter: With services like Google Docs students are having to rely less on what they bring to the table in terms of software and able to take advantage of free third party services. Electronic textbooks and paperless assignments/quizzes/tests have proved a successful alternatives to physical papers for students and educators looking to reduce their carrying load.

Deeper: Due to technological advances teachers have access to more content today that ever before. If they want to explore any particular topic, many are just as far way as a simple Google search and a YouTube video to bring it alive. 

I did a great roundup recently of my favorite technologies for education. Here it is if you would like some more info: 8 Educational Technologies That Are Changing The Classroom

 


The killer answers are to be educational on what people are saying about educational technology. What is your killer answer to any of the educational technology questions? Answer by commenting on this blog post. 


Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk ​

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What the heck is educational technology?

4/4/2019

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 When I was a first-year doctoral student three years ago I recall a moment when a lady I approached for directions to an office I was looking for at Oklahoma State University – Stillwater campus asked if I could fix the formatting on her graduate students’ thesis. I was caught off guard, and I said I could not help out with that because that’s not what I do. The lady thought I was knowledgeable in IT and could fix anything related to technology because I told her I was a doctoral student in educational technology. I had to correct her, and now I am letting you all know what the heck is educational technology.
 
What is educational technology?
If you type in “definition of educational technology” on the google search engine, you will get 226,000,000 results. I am not going to siphon through all of the results nor will I use Wikipedia as the definition of educational technology.

The first definition I will use for this post comes from the Association for Educational Communications & Technology (AECT) 2012 standards, which is a leading association for educational technology:
"Educational technology is the study and ethical practice of facilitating    learning and improving performance by creating, using and managing appropriate technological processes and resources."
 
The second source for defining educational technology comes from The Encyclopedia of Educational Technology:
"Educational technology is a systematic, iterative process for designing instruction or training used to improve performance."
 
To keep it simple educational technology is a systematic process for facilitating learning and improving performance with appropriate technology.
 
Is educational technology all about technology?
One of the main components of educational technology comes from assessing the need and cost factor. Last year a client I was working with that helped adult educators bring technology in the classroom had a significant setback that the educators faced, the cost and buy-in from their institution.
 
Educational technology is not about selecting the latest technology in the classroom that will change the way students learn. There is a lot that goes into using technology in the classroom. For example, does the institution have enough financial resources to purchase and maintain the technology for the long term? Does technology integrate into the curriculum? How will educators be trained in the use of technology?
 
Educational Technology fade
Educational technology has been around for over a century with the start of motion pictures and the radio. Thomas Edison once declared that videos would do away with textbooks. That was at the beginning of the 20th century, and we are still using books in the classroom in the 21st century.

Educational technology is not responsible for the latest technology fade that comes into education (e.g., MOOC, Smartboard). What educational technology does is that it facilitates technology and certainly does not do the teaching. Educational technology is not responsible for technology fades in the classroom just as pizza is not the sole responsibility for people’s obesity.

Educators need to their homework first before falling for the latest educational technology fade.
 
Educational technology is a systematic process for facilitating learning and improving performance with appropriate technology. When using technology in the classroom educate yourself on the technology and see who it will improve performance in your class.

Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk ​

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3 Life Lessons about Educational Technology

3/31/2019

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I’ve had my fair share of life lessons with educational technology. Educational technology is continuously changing with no end in sight of new and innovate technologies for the classroom. As an educator, I get tired of the “new and innovative” technologies and methods for the classroom. I am open to new ideas but I’ve had my fair share of life lessons that have opened up my teaching for the best. In this blog post, I will discuss the three real-life lessons about educational technology.
 
Educational Tech is not your friend
As an educator, I’ve had experiences and seen it myself where technology is not your friend and probably will never be and here is why. Technology is not meant to overtake your teaching or intended to be better than your teaching. As the educator technology is supplemental to the, not the actual teaching.

I recall students telling me how they don’t like it when educators show them hour-long videos in the classroom when they want to learn, and they find it a waste of time.

Why show up to class if the educator will show one-hour long movies in the class instead of teaching, which leads me to my next point, videos in the classroom.  
 
Videos are not your answers
A video is not always the answer to your teaching. As I mentioned in the previous section, technology is not your teaching; it is the supplement to your instruction. When showing a video in the classroom, there are questions that you have to ask yourself first, which you can read about in a previous post I wrote.
 
After answering the questions and assessing the video than show the video in class. If you are showing the video at a conference test it before the presentation. I can’t tell you the number of times I sat during presentations to watch the video not work correctly.

The presenter wastes 5 minutes trying to figure it out and by the time the tech comes and figures it out it’s been 10 minutes to watch a 2 minutes clip that had no sense in showing in the first place. Remember, technology is not your friend.   
 
Don’t follow the crowd
Presenting at numerous conferences over the years throughout the country I am open to listening to other presenters discuss the latest technology and how they use it in the classroom. But I am not quick to jump and follow the crowd.

I remember Twitter being the big thing in teaching and how everyone needed to use Twitter in the classroom. I won’t lie I also fell into the Twitter in the classroom crowd, heck I even presented on Twitter in the class.

After realizing that Twitter only worked for one group of students and not others I stopped. Don’t follow the crowd, assess your needs first and see if it fits your teaching style and pedagogy.
 
Don’t get suckered into the educational technology hype and don’t rush to the technology. What works for one classroom may not work for your class. Let my three life lessons in educational technology guide you in the classroom.  

Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk ​

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Where will higher education be 5 years from now?

3/27/2019

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Self-driving cars and trucks are on the verge of being the norm. Kiosks are overtaking fast food restaurants and airport check-ins. And even UPS drivers are learning how to drive via virtual reality before hitting the road in an actual truck. But where does this leave higher education institutions? Higher education institutions may need to think about for the future such as do they need to embrace cryptocurrency in its curriculum? Should students be able to earn a degree that takes months not years? Will students be able to order via a kiosk rather than through a human behind a cashier? In this article, I discuss where will higher education be five years from now.
 
Courses in Cryptocurrency
There is a growing phenomenon about cryptocurrency, and higher education will have to embrace it sooner or later. Remember the whole crypto current phase were one bitcoin was worth over $9,000. Since then the price has dropped dramatically. However, that has not pushed people away from cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency will be the norm on college campuses. There are even organizations on campuses for cryptocurrency. For example. The University of Minnesota has the Cryptocurrency Club. The reason why is because it’s the new wave of currency, ten years from now we will have a digital atmosphere, and students need to know technology.
 
Micro degrees will be recognized
Five years from now micro degrees will be more accepted by employers because they will come from institutions of higher learning and not an organization offering $50 for certification of completion.
 
Not all students have the time to go to college full time and may only need a few courses to get the proper training on a particular subject. With institutions needing revenue, they will come around and start granting micro degrees as an official degree to increase enrollment and as a revenue driver. 
 
Cafeterias will be self-serving
A while ago I was teaching a business course at an institution in a Chicago suburb where the cafeteria had self-serving vending machines and grab as you go. With institutions having to cut costs I can see where a large number of institutions will do away with its cafeteria staff and have vending machines and self-serving stations. Why waste costs on staff when you can place vending machines to serve student’s needs. And this also goes for coffees shops on campus where kiosks will be the norm.
 
Higher education institutions will have to move towards the future whether that’s jumping on the cryptocurrency bandwagon, awarding micro degrees or self-serving cafeterias time has changed and it's time higher education institutions do the same. Where do you see higher education five years from now?  

Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk  ​

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The Ugly Truth about Educational Technology

3/25/2019

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The ugly truth about technology is the digital divide. The digital divide in the United States can be a debate such as the have & have not’s, lack of access to technology due to geography or lack of access to the Internet to name a few. For the sake of argument in this post my reference of digital divide is the gap between those who have access to technology (e.g., computers, tablets) and those that do not have access to technology. I will discuss my intake on the importance of a needs assessment of the digital divide.
 
Personal experience with the digital divide
 
As a child growing up in Chicago, my father scored a used computer from his job that had limited capabilities. The only thing me and my sister could do was play the computer game programmed and watch a 1996 encyclopedia CD that my father had bought.
 
Our digital divide wasn’t due to access or geography but instead lack of training. It wasn’t until my dad moved us to the Southwest suburbs of Chicago, IL in the fourth grade that I had the proper computer training.
 
Moving to the suburbs where schools were funded at a higher level than Chicago Public Schools provided access to better quality technology and instruction on the technology.  That is why before stating that the digital divide is purely based on economics there needs to be a needs assessment.
 
The needs assessment of digital divide
 
A needs assessment to determine what is the digital divide can help determine if the divide is based on skills, geography, economic opportunity or some other reason. Once the divide has been clarified through needs assessment an implementation can be introduced for lessening the digital divide gap.
 
If there is an economic divide, then the focus could be on obtaining technology grants or increasing the budget for technology in the classroom. With budget cuts and lack of state support grants may be the solution for many. When applying for a technology grant think about sustaining the funding for the long term because technology breaks, gets lost, or needs repair. Grant money does good for access to the technology but remember that technology needs to be maintained.
 
If the divide is based on lack of home access, find programs that internet providers have for families that qualify for low-cost internet. Cox Communications has a plan for qualified households to get low-cost internet in their home. I would even go as far as providing computer skill classes to parents which is a win for both the parents and schools. The parents learn how to use technology which can help them get better jobs, and the schools get a parent who can help their child with their homework.
 
If the divide is geography than tools such as KA Lite, which is the offline version of Khan Academy, or apps that don’t need WiFi can be a solution. The amount of tools that can be used offline is limited but they are out in the market.
 
Moving forward
The digital divide won’t be solved overnight nor will it all be corrected with money. Starting with the need assessment is one way to assess the issue and move on to the next step which is finding an adequate solution to digital divide.

My sister and I didn’t face an economic divide instead we didn’t have proper access to training at our school, and my parents didn’t know any better.

​How will you assess the digital divide?  

Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk  ​

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Lessons learned from the 2017 SWSX Edu

3/21/2019

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I would describe SXSW Edu as the educator's place to be where innovation and technology intersect, which was my first time attending SXSW Edu, and I have to say I enjoyed every minute of the conference. From power walking from session to session to drinking lots of coffee and taking copious notes from the great workshops.
 
Designing Your Own Learning App
The session on developing your learning app was informative and insightful. Participants had the opportunity to create a wireframe for a learning app through a six-step process that incorporated learning problem exploration and analysis; learning sciences consultation; prototyping; and user testing, based on a learner chosen from a set of cards. My learner was a college freshman student named Pedro, no I am not making it up, who was easily bored, hard worker, and needed to find a major. The app I created for Pedro was based on the search for the right major and career that fit his strengths and on the path to graduate from college in four years.
 
Let’s Go Open
The workshop was about the Department of Education – Educational Technology Office initiative on GoOpen, which is getting school districts to implement open education resources such as textbooks in the classroom. I was left with wondering why can’t universities have a national initiative to push for open-education textbooks on campus. I know that some campuses are doing it, but there should be a leader taking charge, so there are assistance and shared goals. It seems that higher education is taking a backseat to open education resources.
 
Design + Leadership
The workshop was human-centered design mixed with leadership. The room was packed, but half way into the session people left either because they didn’t like it or had to work, which was true for almost all the workshops I attended. I got to experience what a human-centered design workshop is all about. There was some confusion as to how a human-centered design works in the school setting, but by the end, participants helped each other out figure out how to HCD works.
 
Storyboard
One of my last sessions was insightful and helpful, storyboard. The workshop helped me put together a storyboard for a course I am developing, Analyze your Personal Budget. The thing about storyboarding is that it allows you to draw out your classroom both from the student and instructor perspective that way you can see what your missing, and is easy to think about it on your heads but once put on paper the class makes more sense.
 
Learning resources from workshops: 
Making long-term memories in minutes: a spaced learning pattern from memory research in education 
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00589/full 
 
The Pen is mightier than the keyboard: advantages of longhand over laptop note taking 
http://drawingchildrenintoreading.com/assets/the_pen_is_mightier_than_the_keyboard-libre.pdf
 
Cornell Notetaking Method 
http://lsc.cornell.edu/study-skills/cornell-note-taking-system/
 
The Testing Effect: Illustrating a fundamental concept and changing study strategies 
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2668/bee20e4fd7b2175d2e1340de3373b77d37b0.pdf
 
Quizzing in Middle-School Science: Successful Transfer Performance on Classroom Exams
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.739.816&rep=rep1&type=pdf

There were plenty of great workshops I attended but I highlighted some key ones that helped me shape course ideas for the near future. If you have not attended SXSW Edu I highly encourage you to do so next year. Did I mention the conference takes place in Austin, Texas? 
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SWIVL helped me catch my teaching mistakes

3/21/2019

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Swivl help me catch my utter mistakes when teaching. My high school freshman football coach would always remind us, “the eye in the sky never lies” meaning the camera never lies even if we do. Years after high school football I still remember the quote and Swivl reminded me that I cannot lie about my performance. 

A few years ago I was introduced to Swivl, which is a portable device that lets you take control of your recording using a tablet or phone. I used Swivl to record one of my presentations, Financial Peak Series. The Series was a three part series focused on a particular personal finance topic: budgeting, credit score/report, and student loans. 

At first, I was happy with my performance, but after watching the video, I couldn’t believe how many times I kept saying, “right.” In the first two minutes, I say, “right” at least five times. 

If I had asked a member of the audience their opinion, they would have probably said it was good. However, Swivl, which is the eye in the sky, never lies. After watching the video, I worked on eliminating the word “right” after every other sentence, my posture, and eye contact. 

No matter how well we think, we are we can always improve significantly. Looking at our performance, you can pick up body posture and vocabulary that you can fine tune for the next presentation. Don’t always take someone’s work about your performance. Look at yourself, examine, and see what you can work on and continue to improve. 

Watching a video is not a waste of time. Professional athletes watch film of themselves and opponents because it’s how athletes get better at their craft. The same with you use Swivl and record your presentations and get rid of the bad habits.  

Dr. J Real Talk

Discussing business, ed tech, and life. Follow me on social media @DrJRealTalk 

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Why Ed Tech is really worth the time

7/25/2017

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​Earlier this week I received my copy of The Economist, The future of learning: How technology is transforming education. The first article under the leader's section titled, “Together, technology and teachers can revamp schools” captivated my attention from the first to the last word. As an educational technology (ed tech) advocate, user, and student of the profession I will highlight parts of the article that I agree and disagree.
 
The article started by stating how the ed tech has a cycle of hype and flop due to teachers and their unions along with the unproven methods of ed tech. I am assuming the writer has not talked to all teachers across the country because surely not every teacher or union is against ed tech.  The hype and flop happen with any industry except in the education industry “factory methods” of teaching is still prevalent, and innovation takes a while.
 
The article also claims that for ed tech to function correctly in schools three things must be right: personalized learning must follow how students learn, narrows the inequalities of education, and ed tech potential relies on teachers embracing it.
 
I will agree on the personalized learning must follow how students learn. When a new ed tech tool comes out everyone is fascinated by the tool and when you add the “personalized learning” tag to it even more so. The tool has to do what it says it will do, and there has been actual evidence that it is increasing student’s knowledge, not just scores.
 
In regards to the inequalities that is up to the states to determine when every school district gets its far share. As long as school districts rely on property tax for funding, I don’t see how inequality in education will disappear. There is only so much philanthropy money to go around.
 
Teachers are embracing technology, but with time the newer breed of students will take over the arcane methods of “factory teaching.” All over the country, there are weekly education twitter chats such as #oklaed for educators in Oklahoma and #edchatsa for teachers in South Africa among many others that share ideas and better teaching practices. So going back to the point of teachers being the reason for the hype and flop, check out one the local ed chats to see not every teacher is to blame.
 
I wholeheartedly agree with the article's statement, “given what ed tech promises today, closed-mindedness has no place in the classroom.” For ed tech to work there has to be an open mind, find what works for the class, and have results not just outcomes.
 
 

Mr. J

​Personal Finance & Entrepreneurship educator and blogger. Follow Mr. J on social media @MrJRealTalk

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Social Media in the hip-hop industry

7/21/2017

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50cent made a guest appearance on the New York City radio morning show The Breakfast Club, where he discussed a number of  topics. One verbal riff in particular was loaded with business relevance, as 50 Cent opined on the power of social media in the hip-hop industry. The artist claimed that social media has actually changed the way hip-hop artists market themselves and their music to the general audience.

Read more at http://www.commdiginews.com/business-2/social-media-in-the-hip-hop-industry-20852/#6lZlZ0QOMeaVkAzG.99

Mr. J

​​Personal finance & entrepreneur educator and blogger. Follow Mr. J on social media @MrJRealTalk 


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Technology and Education: Stop the Inequality

2/2/2017

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21st-century technology keeps getting sophisticated by the day. We have gone from phone with cords to smartphone, from mail carrier to Email, and horses to Lyft for a ride to the airport. And technology is getting more sophisticated to fix. For example, to repair a tech issue in a Tesla you cannot just take it to your local auto mechanic to get it fixed, you need a Tesla professional. To fix your Mac computer, you need an Apple genius.

My father was telling me that at the manufacturing company he works for they recently added tablets. My father did not go further into telling me whether or not he got proper training but I am assuming someone had to teach my dad how to use the tablet at work. A recent article in The Economist Lifelong Learning mentions how if education does not keep up with technology the result will be inequality. The article should not be whether or not the lack of technology will create inequality instead it should be how can technology be accessible in every home so people like my dad can train themselves on using the tablet at work.

MOOCs was one solution, but with the steady decline in popularity, MOOCs may not provide the answer to solving inequality should education fail to keep up with technology. Inequality could probably decrease if the workplace devoted one hour a month for every employee to have training on the latest technology used in their field. It could probably help in lessening the inequality that is rising in the educational failure of keeping up with technology? Technology advances on a daily basis and so should educate people on technology. Education holds the key to our future, and we should not let the failing pace of education and technology create inequality. 

Mr. J

Personal finance & entrepreneur educator and blogger. Follow Mr. J on social media @MrJRealTalk 

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