116,074 research outputs found
Inovativno učno e-okolje Slovenščina na dlani
The author presents an innovative freely accessible e-learning environment Slovenian in the palm of your hand , created within the framework of the project of the same name at the University of Maribor
mLearning: the classroom in your pocket?
This paper reports the findings of a 1 year project which focussed solely on the potential of handheld computers for teacher professional development. The paper considers the fit between theory and practice, viewing the developing literature on mLearning as it might apply to teacher professional development, in the light of research evidence from project teachers using handheld computers. The teachers themselves used the analytical framework for teacher professional knowledge developed by Banks, Leach and Moon to consider their own experiences with the handheld computers. The study finds that handheld digital tools hold a number of pedagogic and pragmatic advantages over laptop or desktop computers for teachers, especially in rural communities; however, further technical development is required to fully orient the devices to classroom rather than office practices
How efficiently can one untangle a double-twist? Waving is believing!
It has long been known to mathematicians and physicists that while a full
rotation in three-dimensional Euclidean space causes tangling, two rotations
can be untangled. Formally, an untangling is a based nullhomotopy of the
double-twist loop in the special orthogonal group of rotations. We study a
particularly simple, geometrically defined untangling procedure, leading to new
conclusions regarding the minimum possible complexity of untanglings. We
animate and analyze how our untangling operates on frames in 3-space, and teach
readers in a video how to wave the nullhomotopy with their hands.Comment: To appear in The Mathematical Intelligencer. For supplemental videos,
see http://www.math.iupui.edu/~dramras/double-tip.html , or
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAfnEXvHU52ldJaOye-8kZV_C1CjxGx2C .
For a supplemental virtual reality experience, see
http://meglab.wikidot.com/visualizatio
Recommended from our members
Beyond the Spoken Word: Examining the Nature of Teacher Gesturing in the Context of an Elementary Engineering Curriculum for English-Learner Students
Our research team performed an exploratory analysis of teacher gesturing via a case study of an elementary teacher. We focused on gesturing, a practice found to support both bilingual English learner students’ linguistic development and mathematics achievement, during the teacher’s engineering and science lessons. The research team systematically analyzed teacher video data using McNeill’s gestural dimensions framework and found variation of gesturing types and rates when comparing engineering and baseline science lessons. Additionally, specific types of teacher-gestures appear to be associated with either behavioral or classroom management practices, procedural instructions, and discussion facilitation. We suggest that teacher-gestures such as these have the potential to facilitate bilingual English learners’ language acquisition, while also developing their STEM literacy in general and engineering capacity in particular. Further exploration of teacher-gestures in elementary engineering curricula could lead to an integrated STEM pedagogy that incorporates gesturing as a fundamental teaching strategy, bridging STEM instruction with linguistically responsive instructional practices.Educatio
Building Citywide Systems for Quality: A Guide and Case Studies for Afterschool Leaders
This guide is intended to help cities strengthen and sustain quality afterschool programs by using an emerging practice known as a quality improvement system (QIS). The guide explains how to start building a QIS or how to further develop existing efforts and features case studies of six communities' QIS
Clicks and Cliques. Exploring the Soul of the Community
In the paper we analyze 26 communities across the United States with the
objective to understand what attaches people to their community and how this
attachment differs among communities. How different are attached people from
unattached? What attaches people to their community? How different are the
communities? What are key drivers behind emotional attachment? To address these
questions, graphical, supervised and unsupervised learning tools were used and
information from the Census Bureau and the Knight Foundation were combined.
Using the same pre-processed variables as Knight (2010) most likely will drive
the results towards the same conclusions than the Knight foundation, so this
paper does not use those variables
Twin Memory
In this article, I examine a new concept of “Twin Memory’ which has emerged in memory classification research of conscious and unconscious memory representations. It is to analyse the presence of twin memory among the various memory systems, and also to provide a platform for the twin memory “anatomy” in the field of cognitive science, neuropsychology and neuroscience
Recommended from our members
Pictures in Your Mind: Using Interactive Gesture-Controlled Reliefs to Explore Art
Tactile reliefs offer many benefits over the more classic raised line drawings or tactile diagrams, as depth, 3D shape, and surface textures are directly perceivable. Although often created for blind and visually impaired (BVI) people, a wider range of people may benefit from such multimodal material. However, some reliefs are still difficult to understand without proper guidance or accompanying verbal descriptions, hindering autonomous exploration.
In this work, we present a gesture-controlled interactive audio guide (IAG) based on recent low-cost depth cameras that can be operated directly with the hands on relief surfaces during tactile exploration. The interactively explorable, location-dependent verbal and captioned descriptions promise rapid tactile accessibility to 2.5D spatial information in a home or education setting, to online resources, or as a kiosk installation at public places.
We present a working prototype, discuss design decisions, and present the results of two evaluation studies: the first with 13 BVI test users and the second follow-up study with 14 test users across a wide range of people with differences and difficulties associated with perception, memory, cognition, and communication. The participant-led research method of this latter study prompted new, significant and innovative developments
- …