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The early boom of Web-based education in the 1990s, both in the
United States and abroad (e.g., in Australia and the UK), saw a
flurry of publications on the subject of university and industry
partnerships, with a focus on ways in which online learning might
lead to new models of collaboration and engagement across
previously clearly delineated borders. Ten years later, as we
approach the end of the first decade of the 21st century, we see a
similar moment of opportunity for collaboration. Higher Education,
Emerging Technologies, and Community Partnerships: Concepts,
Models, and Practices is a comprehensive collection of research
with an emphasis on emerging technologies, community value, and
corporate partnerships. The contributions in this collection
provide strategies to implement partnerships. Outlining various
concepts from an educational and technological standpoint, this
reference book serves as a resource for academic administrators,
instructors and community practitioners.
A volume in Advances in Service-Learning Research Series Editor
Shelley H. Billig, RMC Research Corporation, Denver This eighth
volume in the Advances in Service-Learning Research series includes
eight essays selected from manuscripts submitted by participants in
the seventh annual conference of the International Association of
Research in Service-Learning and Community Engagement, held in
Tampa, Florida, in October, 2007. The volume builds upon the theme
of that conference: ""Sustainability and Scholarship: Research and
the K-20 Continuum,"" bringing together the work of scholars from
K-12 and higher education to argue for the connection between
rigorous and purposeful research and sustainable service-learning
and civic engagement. Articles range from models for program-level
assessment to examples of significant field-based research projects
to approaches to advance discipline-based sustainable impacts to
connections between civic education and sustainable
communities.Voices of community partners, students, faculty
members, administrators, and discipline- based organizations are
part of the conversation, and each of the essays raises important
challenges for future research that can help to shape, document,
and sustain the important impacts of work in this field.
Best Practices for Flipping the College Classroom provides a
comprehensive overview and systematic assessment of the flipped
classroom methodology in higher education. The book: Reviews
various pedagogical theories that inform flipped classroom practice
and provides a brief history from its inception in K-12 to its
implementation in higher education. Offers well-developed and
instructive case studies chronicling the implementation of flipped
strategies across a broad spectrum of academic disciplines,
physical environments, and student populations. Provides insights
and suggestions to instructors in higher education for the
implementation of flipped strategies in their own courses by
offering reflections on learning outcomes and student success in
flipped classrooms compared with those employing more traditional
models and by describing relevant technologies. Discusses
observations and analyses of student perceptions of flipping the
classroom as well as student practices and behaviors particular to
flipped classroom models. Illuminates several research models and
approaches for use and modification by teacher-scholars interested
in building on this research on their own campuses. The evidence
presented on the flipped classroom methodology by its supporters
and detractors at all levels has thus far been almost entirely
anecdotal or otherwise unreliable. Best Practices for Flipping the
College Classroom is the first book to provide faculty members
nuanced qualitative and quantitative evidence that both supports
and challenges the value of flipping the college classroom.
Best Practices for Flipping the College Classroom provides a
comprehensive overview and systematic assessment of the flipped
classroom methodology in higher education. The book: Reviews
various pedagogical theories that inform flipped classroom practice
and provides a brief history from its inception in K-12 to its
implementation in higher education. Offers well-developed and
instructive case studies chronicling the implementation of flipped
strategies across a broad spectrum of academic disciplines,
physical environments, and student populations. Provides insights
and suggestions to instructors in higher education for the
implementation of flipped strategies in their own courses by
offering reflections on learning outcomes and student success in
flipped classrooms compared with those employing more traditional
models and by describing relevant technologies. Discusses
observations and analyses of student perceptions of flipping the
classroom as well as student practices and behaviors particular to
flipped classroom models. Illuminates several research models and
approaches for use and modification by teacher-scholars interested
in building on this research on their own campuses. The evidence
presented on the flipped classroom methodology by its supporters
and detractors at all levels has thus far been almost entirely
anecdotal or otherwise unreliable. Best Practices for Flipping the
College Classroom is the first book to provide faculty members
nuanced qualitative and quantitative evidence that both supports
and challenges the value of flipping the college classroom.
A volume in Advances in Service-Learning Research Series Editor
Shelley H. Billig, RMC Research Corporation, Denver This eighth
volume in the Advances in Service-Learning Research series includes
eight essays selected from manuscripts submitted by participants in
the seventh annual conference of the International Association of
Research in Service-Learning and Community Engagement, held in
Tampa, Florida, in October, 2007. The volume builds upon the theme
of that conference: ""Sustainability and Scholarship: Research and
the K-20 Continuum,"" bringing together the work of scholars from
K-12 and higher education to argue for the connection between
rigorous and purposeful research and sustainable service-learning
and civic engagement. Articles range from models for program-level
assessment to examples of significant field-based research projects
to approaches to advance discipline-based sustainable impacts to
connections between civic education and sustainable
communities.Voices of community partners, students, faculty
members, administrators, and discipline- based organizations are
part of the conversation, and each of the essays raises important
challenges for future research that can help to shape, document,
and sustain the important impacts of work in this field.
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