August 18, 2008

Prepare for the Fall using Blackboard

Prepare for the upcoming semester by attending sessions on using Blackboard.

Blackboard 8 - New Features focuses on the Grade Center (formally the grade book).

Preparing Your Blackboard Course focuses on using Blackboard to organizing your documents with the Content System, communicating with students via Announcements & e-Mail, setting up regular assignments & safe assignments, organizing online discussions and much more.


BlackBoard 8 - New Features
08/25/2008 10:00 AM Register

Preparing Your BlackBoard Course
08/25/2008 01:00 PM Register

Preparing Your BlackBoard Course
08/26/2008 10:00 AM Register

BlackBoard 8 - New Features
08/26/2008 01:00 PM Register

BlackBoard 8 - New Features
08/27/2008 10:00 AM Register

Preparing Your BlackBoard Course
08/27/2008 01:00 PM Register

BlackBoard 8 - New Features
09/02/2008 10:00 AM Register

Preparing Your BlackBoard Course
09/02/2008 01:00 PM Register

August 15, 2008

Digital Storytelling to Illuminate Composing Processes in First-Year Writing

Ed Jones.JPGDr. Ed Jones, Associate Professor of English, was awarded a 2008-2009 Faculty Innovation Grant. The FIG project involved seven students who had just completed their freshman year. The goal for the students was to create digital stories illustrating "conversion" or "aha" moments during the first-year writing program. The finished digital stories will be used as a resource for the incoming freshman class and the English faculty.

Students created their digital stories using Adobe Premiere Elements 4.0 and Adobe Photoshop Elements 6.0, both of which are part of the standard software on the new laptops (T61 and X61).

In total, the students spent five days planning, writing, revising, conducting personal and peer review, locating resources, taking photos, and building and editing in Elements and Photoshop. When they were finished, students converted their final digital stories to video format. Below are two examples:


Lost in My Own Voice by Krystal Fields


Jump into the Writing Center by Melissa Marcial

A link to all of the digital stories has been placed on the English 1201 website. Click on Digital stories of first-year writing experience to see all of the wonderful student projects.

August 14, 2008

Blackboard 8: New Grade Center Overview

August 11, 2008

Upgrade to MyWeb.shu.edu(Blackboard) complete

We have successfully upgraded from version 7.3 to Blackboard 8.

Blackboard 8 brings two major feature enhancements: The Grade Center (formerly known as the gradebook) and student Self/Peer Assessments. For more information and resources to make the transition as smooth as possible, click here.

August 8, 2008

authorPOINT LITE

At one of our recent Technology Summer Series days, Developing Critical Thinkers ... Chris Shamberg called my attention to a free tool that is a plug-in for Microsoft Office PowerPoint called authorPOINT LITE. This application will allow you to share your presentations online through a free online presentation sharing platform called authorSTREAM. Through this process, your PowerPoint presentation is converted to a Flash format. You have the options to make your presentation "public" or "private". The private option lets you share presentations securely with only registered users that you invite through a web link. Of course, registration is free.

screen_shotauthorpoint_lite.jpg


Continue reading "authorPOINT LITE" »

August 6, 2008

Can you FIGHT Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty in Your Online Course?

Cheating on exams, activities and plagiarized papers are always a concern for those teaching online courses. Is there anything we can do to prevent or reduce the temptation of cheating? The good news is yes; there are things we can do to build an environment in which students are less likely to cheat. The bad news is it takes a little more work on our part and it's not 100% fail proof. Studies have shown there are many reasons why students cheat, ranging from trying to maintain their scholarship, task overload and external factors (family, work, life pressures, time management). How can we foster academic honesty in our classes? While there are several models for plagiarism prevention, they all have three things in common. It is important to note that these items are also best practices when building an online course.

Continue reading "Can you FIGHT Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty in Your Online Course?" »

Highlight and Share the Web


Diigo is a Web 2.0 tool that allows you to highlight and share your web references. This is a great research tool and makes it easier to retrieve specific information on web pages. With Diigo, you can go beyond bookmarking and saving favorites. To learn more, watch the following video:

August 4, 2008

Upgrade to MyWeb.shu.edu(Blackboard

On Sunday, August 10, the Department of Information Technology will upgrade MyWeb.shu.edu (Blackboard) to the version 8, latest release,). The upgrade will require Blackboard to be unavailable for use on Sunday, August 10, 2008 during the normal maintenance window of 12:01 AM through 8:00 AM. There will be access to webmail but not Banner during this upgrade period.

Blackboard 8 brings two major feature enhancements: The Grade Center (formerly known as the gradebook) and student Self/Peer Assessments. For more information and resources to make the transition as smooth as possible, click here.

July 30, 2008

Dipity: Create Your Own Timeline!

dipity.jpg

Dipity is a neat little tool that allows you to create timelines quickly and easily and share them with others. You can also allow others to edit the timeline, making it a great way to have students collaborate on the creation of a timeline for a group project. You can control the privacy settings on the timeline so that it is only viewable and/or editable by people you specify. The tool is web-based, so there is no program to download or files to install.

It is very easy to sign up for a free account and begin creating your own timeline. You have the option of adding both images and videos to timeline events, as well as Google map locations. Simply type in an address, and the map will appear when the event description is clicked on the timeline.

In addition, there are multiple views of the timeline, including a text list of the events (suitable for printing), a flipbook view (one event at a time), as well as a map view of all the events with locations. Finally, there are over 20,000 timelines available for viewing that were created by people all over the world. The timelines are organized into categories and are easily searchable on the main page. These would be a great resource to use in your classes for students to see visually and geographically how particular events were sequenced. Check it out!

July 29, 2008

Cuil - The new search engine on the block

A new search engine launched this week: Cuil. Developed by Stanford professor Tom Costello and former Google search architect Anna Patterson, Cuil offers a new way to search.

Features of this new web browser include: Drilldown, Roll-over definitions, Tabs, and Navigation suggestions.


Cuil.jpg