Sessions of Interest, but that I couldn't go to
Part ][ of my reportage back from Campus Technology 2011 - the sessions that I couldn't go to but seemed very interesting. To say that there was a lot of stuff of interest at Campus Tech would be an understatement. The following are sessions that I would have liked to have gone to but didn't have the opportunity to attend because they conflicted with other sessions I wanted to go to.
Quite a few things on mLearning, on Assessments, ePortfolios and Rubrics, and of course my favorite topic: communities of practice. I was actually quite bummed that I couldn't make the communities of practice session, but I was at a limited audience Google presentation. I do hope that they stream videos from each session since most (if not all) sessions were recorded.
What do you think? Are mLearning and ePortofolios such big topics these days?
- iPads: Applications and Uses in Education
- User-Centered Learning Space Design
- Online Research Tools for Educators: Collaborate without Jet Lag!
- M-Learning on Speed Dial: How to Develop a Nimble Academic Mobile Learning Strategy for Your Campus
- Pod Rooms: Faculty Friendly Classroom Technology
- ePortfolios Integrating People Life and Learning
- Community of Practice in Online Education - Collaborative Curriculum
- We All Have iPads...Now What?
- Walking Ulysses: Collaborative and Mobile Mapping in the Humanities
- Getting it Right: An Innovative Strategy for e-Learning Management
- eAssessment: Using Electronic Portfolios for Curriculum Improvement
- Building a Culture of Assessment Using Rubrics: A Web 2.0 Approach
- Using Popular Social Networking Tools In (and Out of) the Classroom
Quite a few things on mLearning, on Assessments, ePortfolios and Rubrics, and of course my favorite topic: communities of practice. I was actually quite bummed that I couldn't make the communities of practice session, but I was at a limited audience Google presentation. I do hope that they stream videos from each session since most (if not all) sessions were recorded.
What do you think? Are mLearning and ePortofolios such big topics these days?
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