Education 2.0 & 3.0
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Education 2.0 & 3.0
All about learning and technology
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Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Higher Education Teaching and Learning
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Learning Lab - University of Queensland

The Learning Lab comprise a group of multi-disciplinary researchers and inter-professional partners aimed at transforming education and learning across schooling and beyond, through partnered innovations and research translation initiatives.

Via Peter Mellow
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Complex Questions and Illuminating Conversations: Women’s History Month Resources on the Learning Lab

Complex Questions and Illuminating Conversations: Women’s History Month Resources on the Learning Lab | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it
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Rescooped by Yashy Tohsaku from Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Creating Dynamic Undergraduate Learning Laboratories through Collaboration Between Archives, Libraries, and Digital Humanities /

Creating Dynamic Undergraduate Learning Laboratories through Collaboration Between Archives, Libraries, and Digital Humanities / | Education 2.0 & 3.0 | Scoop.it
In an environment of rapid change in higher education in which institutions strive to lure prospective students with unique curricula, there is a growing need to provide innovative pedagogical experiences for students through collaborations among archives, libraries, and digital humanities. Three colleagues at a small Liberal Arts university—a digital librarian, a historian-archivist, and a historian-digital humanist—planned an integrated set of assignments and projects in an “Introduction to Digital Humanities” course that introduced students to archival management and digitization of archival material. This article demonstrates how we developed this signature course and curriculum on a limited budget in the context of a liberal arts university, and illuminate how it capitalized on relationships forged among the archives, the library, the history department and the digital humanities program. We first describe our collaborative workflow, and how we involve undergraduate student-workers in these efforts. Next, we provide a detailed lesson plan for an Introduction to Digital Humanities course that integrates traditional archival materials, in this case photographs and blueprints of campus structures, into a digital archive. Finally, we share how our students converted these photographs and blueprints into digital 3D models via Sketchup, a powerful architectural modeling software.

Via Elizabeth E Charles
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