Thursday, April 28, 2016

Study | Twitter to become your future teacher



Study | Twitter to become your future teacher

Micro-blogging can help teachers-students engage better

·         The study finds that 93% of students surveyed think Twitter enable them to interact and share perspectives with a global audience outside the classroom
·         The study shows the potential benefits of using Twitter as a pedagogical tool based on survey results, interviews, and classroom observations of eighth-grade students in science classes, according to researchers from University of Vermont in the US.
·         Students reported significant increases in four key areas that contributed to their learning—exposure to reputable science and leaders, in real time; a broadening of the audience for their work outside the classroom; more opportunities for connecting science to their own lives; and new ways to communicate about science.
·         Particularly motivating was the ability to interact via Twitter with leading organisations such as National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and science-related programmes, researchers said.
·         “NASA, and scientists that I follow, tweet a lot about cool science stuff,” said one student. Researchers suggested to another student who was interested in black holes that she reach out via Twitter to well-known and popular astrophysicist Katie Mack.
·         Mack tweeted back to the student and included her in a conversation about black holes with other experts and students, researchers said.
·         The study found that 93% of students surveyed think Twitter enabled them to interact and share perspectives with a global audience outside the classroom.
·         “When I have something important to share about science that I like, as many as 52 people (Twitter followers) can see what I tweet instantly,” said one student.
·         Another student said they use Twitter for academic support by tweeting with other students about concepts, assignments and projects, researchers said.
·         As many as 91% said Twitter helped them make connections between science and their own lives and interests, they said.
·         “Twitter has made me think about things that I like and had me think about the science related to them,” said one student.
·         Others said Twitter helped them learn about science in new ways that related to their everyday lives, researchers said.
·         Around 81% of students agreed that Twitter helped them think creatively about new ways to communicate science, they said.

Study Published | Middle School Journal

Regards

Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co

Best Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23, 2016.  The title of the paper is “Removing Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
Note | If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking efforts for the same.

CampusHunt.in -India gets its first free, highly Interactive Education Portal

CampusHunt.in -India gets its first free, highly Interactive Education Portal

The first fully transparent, interactive higher education portal has been introduced in India. This education portal and android mobile app, CampusHunt.in is registered under Scandium Technologies Pvt Ltd.

With the aim to transform the future of education by improving the quality and making it easily accessible, affordable and career focused, this portal was created by young professionals from various MNC’s such as IBM, Wells Fargo, Infosys and Accenture.

This recent portal is unique and useful in the following ways:

  • Completely free and transparent, with no hidden costs or service charges
  • Highly interactive and user-friendly higher education portal, which comes with an android mobile app
  • Students can find colleges based on different intelligent filters like location, fees, courses, college ratings, academic qualifications and campus placement rankings
  • Provides an agile interface, where students can delve into details of the colleges such as hostels, canteens, WiFi, transport, labs and libraries.
    CampusHunt aims to:
  • Make the admission process for higher education automated, so that higher education can be easily accessible for students from every nook and corner of India
  • Enable students to make properly thought-out decisions based on factual information of preferred colleges.


Regards

Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co

Best Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23, 2016.  The title of the paper is “Removing Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
Note | If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking efforts for the same.

HRD Ministry and NCERT work together for ‘Digital India’ via e-classes,e-books and websites



HRD Ministry and NCERT work together for ‘Digital India’ via e-classes,e-books and websites

Slowly, but steadily the dream for  ‘Digital India’ of  our Prime Minister, Narendra Modi is being fulfilled. In a recent development, the Ministry of HRD has  come up with a proposal to impart education through e-Classes and e-books.  Working on the lines, about 93,000 e-Books for the college students are already available under National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT) Programme.

Laying more stress on digital education, online courses’ called ‘MOOCs’ for students from class 9 to post graduation, in any discipline, will be made available through e-Classes under a programme called Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds (SWAYAM), which  is likely to begin around the middle of this year.

Moreover, Information and Communication Technology (ICT) enabled teaching and learning is supported in government and government aided Secondary and Higher Secondary schools.

Adding more to it, the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has also decided to go digital by launching e-books and e-classes. It has also started a website called ‘e-Pathshala’ to disseminate all the NCERT textbooks, audio, video, images, interactive objects etc. The digital contents including e-books from Class I-XII are available on e-Pathshala,  in English, Hindi, Urdu and Sanskrit. The stakeholders (students, teachers, educators and parents) can search, access, download and read and use these e-contents through multiple technology platforms i.e. mobile phones, and tablets and on web through laptops and desktops.

Source | http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/

Regards

Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co

Best Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23, 2016.  The title of the paper is “Removing Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
Note | If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking efforts for the same.

Five writing apps that are mightier than the pen



Five writing apps that are mightier than the pen

Harry Potter may have been written on paper napkins, but you can do better with your smartphone
It used to be that when a moment of inspiration struck writers, they would have to rush over to a stone tablet, or find parchment and ink, to record their thoughts. Later, writers had to find paper and a typewriter, or a laptop or desktop computer, to get busy with their storytelling.

Nowadays, they can write into a smartphone and tablet app almost anywhere when an idea seizes them. So what are some of the popular apps for scribes?

Storyist

Storyist is the writing app I use most often to write this column, books and other articles. The app is a full-featured text editor, giving people the ability to customize fonts, colors and page formatting, embed images, and more. The app also has predesigned page formats to help write screenplays, manuscripts and novels.

To help build a novel, Storyist provides different types of “story sheets” to work on. You can use the sheets to note information about characters, plot points, scene settings and other details. This part of the app is surprisingly powerful, and I have found that the preformatted sections of the story sheets (for example, the Smells heading under the Settings story sheet) help me think about characters and scene settings. Storyist works well with or without a keyboard. It also saves documents seamlessly to the cloud so you can begin your work on your tablet and edit it on your phone. But its interface is a bit complex and takes some getting used to. The app costs $15 and works only on iOS devices.

iA Writer

For a writing app with a simpler interface than Storyist’s, check out iA Writer, which has little on-screen clutter like buttons and controls. The app borrows the look and feel of its writing interface from a traditional typewriter, including the font you type in.

The app’s cleverest feature is its “focus mode,” which fades out everything else in your document other than the line or paragraph you’re working on. This works similarly to how your eyes stay focused on the words you have just typed on the paper when using a traditional typewriter. Another clever option with iA Writer is that you can highlight adjectives, nouns, verbs and the like in different colors, which may prevent overdecorating of text.

To preview the final result, there is a visually neat mode that shows what the document would look like if printed in a traditional book format. The app also has some traditional word processing tricks like find and replace, and you can export your text in a format that is compatible with other word processors, including Microsoft Word. The app is available on iOS for $5 and is free on Android.

OmmWriter

OmmWriter is focused on creating a calm writing environment. The app makes it easier to concentrate on writing by removing as many distractions — like editing features — as possible. The Zen feeling is nurtured visually: The page you write on is decorated with delicate images of objects like trees. The app also encourages people to wear headphones while writing and plays a selection of gentle background music and natural sounds.

I found that OmmWriter’s simplicity helped focus my mind — but the app is not a real word processor, so those who want to do more complex edits may want to copy their text to another app. OmmWriter’s on-screen keyboard also takes a lot of getting used to, and I found myself making many more typos than I did when using Apple’s built-in keyboard. OmmWriter for the iPad is $5.

Scrivo Pro

Another app, Scrivo Pro, has a similar complexity to Storyist’s. Its most powerful feature is that it can work with files exported from Scrivener, a very popular creative-writing app that runs on traditional computers. Scrivo Pro is capable and powerful, but it has a steep learning curve. The iOS-only app is also expensive, at $20.

Monospace

Lastly, check out Monospace, a writing and note-taking app for Android. While Android apps sometimes lack the polish of iOS apps, Monospace has a clear and elegant design. It’s also free.

If you find yourself struck by writer’s block, you might want to turn to ShakeSpeak – a fun and experimental Android keyboard from the well-known keyboard maker SwiftKey. Unlike most third-party keyboards that offer new ways to type in whatever words you want, ShakeSpeak uses predictive text to help type in words like those William Shakespeare would have written. It’s free and fun, though most likely not for everyday use.

“Writing is easy,” Mark Twain once said. “All you have to do is cross out the wrong words.” With these apps, heeding his advice may now be easier on a smartphone or tablet than on paper

Source | Business Line | 28 April 2016

Regards

Pralhad Jadhav
Senior Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co

Best Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23, 2016.  The title of the paper is “Removing Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
Note | If anybody use these post for forwarding in any social media coverage or covering in the Newsletter please give due credit to those who are taking efforts for the same.