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10 Guidelines to Help Your Learners Find Credible Online Sources

LearnDash

When I first started writing essays for school, the rule we were given was “no online sources allowed.” Imagine trying to write a guide for citing online sources in 1997, the year before Google was founded? Or in 2005, before Facebook became open to the public? Later, we were told “you can use online sources, but not Wikipedia.”

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Creating Passionate Learners 2005 = same in 2011

Corporate eLearning Strategies and Development

2005 or 2006, the name Kathy Sierra is probably new to you. Let me start with why I am blogging on this topic. If you are new to Kathy Sierra, after listening to the recording above, you should read the archives of her blog at headrush.typepad.com. My favorite moment in blogging. Thanks for this great blog, Brent.

Learner 51
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5 common eLearning assessment mistakes (and how to fix them)

BrightCarbon

We’re back with a brand-spanking new blog post all about eLearning assessments. 2005) gathered and analysed data from lots of other studies from an 80-year period up to 2005. Mistake 4: Writing questions that are hard to understand Multiple-choice questions that are hard to understand place an unfair cognitive load on learners.

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The Last Post

Clive on Learning

Instrumentality · The Last Post In October 2005, I wrote my first post for the Clive on Learning. I am shifting to a new phase of my life in which I will be exploring other interests of mine, including music composition and writing, with an emphasis less on how others learn and more on how I learn and develop.

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Book instead of blogposts

Joitske Hulsebosch eLearning

I admire people like Richard Millington who blog faster than I can read. The reason that I did not find the time to blog is that I have written a book with Sibrenne Wagenaar called 'Leren in tijden van tweets, apps en likes '. Writing this book was almost like sculpting a model (which I did once).

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Blogging: Five of the best

Learning with e's

Photo by Florian Klauer on unsplash I have been privileged over the past few years to have garnered a good audience for my writing. As this blog approaches 8.5 Lessig, 2005, p. Ostensibly, the post is about a bizarre blog post by an academic who claimed that (ironically) blogging is 'sinful' and hampers research productivity.

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Exploring medical technologies

Learning with e's

Later, as an education academic I collaborated with several medical scientists to write position papers in a range of technology applications in bioscience and medicine. Our collaboration started after I received an email out of the blue from him back in late 2005.