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Learning Thursday #1: Mobile Technologies in Education

Adobe Captivate

Google Scholar. The Google Scholar link will take you to JSTOR, where you can read this article for free.). Using MyArtSpace as an example, the authors discuss the possibilities for mobile technology to form bridges between formal and informal learning. Educational Technology, 47 (3), 33–37.

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1st update on 10 Tools Challenge 2013

Jane Hart

4- Google Search 10- Wikipedia 52- Google Scholar 62- Bing. 38- Google Maps 51- SurveyMonkey 57- Google Translate. Authoring tools. PRODUCTIVITY TOOLS. Search/Research. Read it later tools. 66- Instapaper 76- Pocket. Miscellaneous. 92- Doodle 97- Quora. INSTRUCTIONAL TOOLS. Learning platforms.

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Instructional Design Tools to Adopt in 2022

Maestro

Authoring tools. Authoring tools. Do a search for “eLearning authoring tools” and you’ll find seemingly limitless options. There’s one more authoring tool that rivals Articulate Storyline and Articulate Rise, and we’ve had a chance to add it to our learning design software mix: Elucidat. Collaboration tools. Style guides.

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Taking Time to Learn with Alex Salas

TechSmith Camtasia

As an expert in the integration of instructional science with popular authoring tools, Alex has been a designer of learning programs for Fortune 100 companies such as Centene Corporation, Philips and Dell Technologies. I follow Google Scholar, instead of doing a Google search.

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Search

Tony Karrer

For example, if you are brand new to authoring tools, you might do a search: [link] [link] tools The facets in Grokker (shown on the right) - help to give you a sense of the space. It also helps you refine your search before you go into Google. The fact is that searching for "authoring tools" is probably not quite what you want.

Search 102
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Down to a 't'

Learning with e's

Google Scholar is a very useful tool if you are in the business of research. To my amusement, one author had cited me as Wheelert, S. I'm not going to name and shame all the authors here, because that would be churlish - but you can check it out for yourself if you care to. The paper was entitled The Emerging Web 2.0

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The intentional marginalization of blogging in the corporate learning sector

Janet Clarey

Longtime blogger Jim Groom , an Instructional Technology Specialist and adjunct professor at the University of Mary Washington , wrote about giving credit where credit is due (in traditional academic journals) when it comes to using ideas authored in “unconventional academic media,&# i.e. blogging, etc. I digress again.