Learn By Doing

A Lifelong Learner Shares Thoughts About Education

  • Due to a problem with my RSS feed throug FeedBurner, I have had to regenerate a new feed.  Please setup a new link, either click on the RSS Entries link in the lower right of the page or use your own tools to select the new feed.  Sorry for the annoyance.

    A reader noticed this, thanks for the help.

  • From Wired magazine as How Khan Academy is Changing the Rules of Education.  You see, you use the tool, first like you think you are going to as an assist for after school, and then you simply change how instruction is delivered.  The valuable part of a teacher is individualizing the education and providing the support, not always the original lecture.  Make no mistakes here, some lectures Khan just doesn’t deliver the same way, the relationship builds through the presentation.  Where it doesn’t….well, read the article.

    Initially, Thordarson thought Khan Academy would merely be a helpful supplement to her normal instruction. But it quickly become far more than that. She’s now on her way to “flipping” the way her class works. This involves replacing some of her lectures with Khan’s videos, which students can watch at home. Then, in class, they focus on working problem sets. The idea is to invert the normal rhythms of school, so that lectures are viewed on the kids’ own time and homework is done at school. It sounds weird, Thordarson admits, but this flipping makes sense when you think about it. It’s when they’re doing homework that students are really grappling with a subject and are most likely to need someone to talk to. And now Thordarson can tell just when this grappling occurs: Khan Academy provides teachers with a dashboard application that lets her see the instant a student gets stuck.

    “I’m able to give specific, pinpointed help when needed,” she says.

    The result is that Thordarson’s students move at their own pace. Those who are struggling get surgically targeted guidance, while advanced kids like Carpenter rocket far ahead; once they’re answering questions without making mistakes, Khan’s site automatically recommends new topics to move on to. Over half the class is now tackling subjects like algebra and geometric formulas. And even the less precocious kids are improving: Only 3 percent of her students were classified as average or lower in end-of-year tests, down from 13 percent at midyear.

  • Zeitgeist: a list of the most visited courses last month at MIT OpenCourseWare Project.


  • From Kissmetrics come the infographic on the left.  Think about your course sequencing people, the last College I visited was still teaching Introduction courses that didn’t include Mobile Browsing, Content Management Systems, or even introduce CSS3, let alone seriously use CSS from Day 1.  Move on!

    Can you believe that the first published website is already 20 years old? Web design has come a long way since the first website was published by Tim Berners-Lee in 1991. This infographic is a peek at the evolutionary tale of web design, which is ironically still in its infant stages. Enjoy the infographic below and let your imagination wander. You might find yourself asking, “Where will web design be in the next 20 years?”

    Read more: http://blog.kissmetrics.com/evolution-of-web-design/#ixzz1S2uSqbEa

  • I use dedicated desktop tools but I am always asked what an overview of tools and a reasonable classroom process to completing videos just using tools available on the web.  Yet each teacher has a different goal and objective for both the process and the product.  Here is a great online free resource from Richard Byrne.  It is free for editing and reuse in your own environment.  What can be better than this.  Click on the link below as the document rarely arrives in a timely fashion.  Those squirrels who move documents on the Internet are slow, probably watching Netflix movies.
    Making Videos on the Web – A Guide for Teachers