| | 2001 + 2004 + Examples + Open Source | 5 articles |
| Page 1 of 1 | Previous | Next | STEPHEN DOWNES: HALF AN HOUR APRIL 25, 2009 New Technology Supporting Informal Learning Foreman, 2004) As environments, they model complex relationships between variables, resulting in an experience that is unpredictable and unique each time played. The way musicians learn, for example, changes as they grow from novice to expert. For example, a learning system called Company Command, designed by officers in the U.S. | STEPHEN DOWNES: HALF AN HOUR NOVEMBER 16, 2008 The Future of Online Learning: Ten Years On Despite set-backs – for example, the lobbies by private corporations to prevent the deployment of municipal Wi-Fi – it is not unreasonable to expect that inexpensive wireless broadband will be ubiquitous in most populated areas. report from Gartner Consulting, for example, suggests that Windows Vista is collapsing under its own weight. | | | | | | | JON HUSBAND MARCH 28, 2010 Have We Finally Entered a Fundamental Rupture With the Past ? 2001: With the creation of Wikipedia, non-professionals (laypersons) can now contribute to the creation of web content, previously reserved solely for professionals (journalists, professors, experts, etc.). conference held in San Francisco in October 2004 marked the point of no return for this transition. Open-source method. | STEPHEN DOWNES: HALF AN HOUR MAY 30, 2013 MOOC - The Resurgence of Community in Online Learning 'In this presentation Stephen Downes addresses the question of how massive open online courses (MOOCs) will impact the future of distance education. The phenomenon of ''wrapped MOOCs'' will be described, and Downes will outline several examples of local support for global MOOCs. Second, there is the sense of ‘open’ as in gratis. | | |
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