Remove Books Remove Online Assessments Remove STEM Remove Student Engagement
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Why Should Students and Publishers Adapt eBooks in STEM Learning

Kitaboo on EdTech

STEM-based learning programs are being introduced in schools all across the globe. STEM has proved to be a much better educational program in terms of learning effectiveness and leading to better career opportunities than the regular curriculum. Easy to carry, easy to access, interactive and engaging, and so on. And why not?

eBook 61
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20 Ways to Personalize Your Learning This Summer

The CoolCatTeacher

Course: Designing Blended Learning for Student Engagement and Achievement “By the end of the course, you will be able to design and implement meaningful blended learning experiences with objective-aligned assessments and activities that foster core 21st-century skills.”

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Why This Professor Believes OER Can Make STEM More Inclusive and Affordable

Edsurge

Over the past nine years, Wilson hasn’t used a single for-profit book in his Computational Algebra classes. He and his students happily use open educational resources for textbooks. Is that really what’s best for students? As a student, I didn't have much money. Teacher after teacher didn’t use the material in the book.

OER 160
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The Emergency Home Learning (& More) Summit - 110 sessions + 80 replays #homelearningsummit #learningrevolution

The Learning Revolution Has Begun

hours a day.

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How Technology Has Improved Student Learning

eSchool News

Students become adept at navigating online resources, learning to critically assess information, and developing essential skills for the modern world. Furthermore, technology offers real-time feedback through online assessments, guiding students toward continuous improvement.

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The 100 Worst Ed-Tech Debacles of the Decade

Hack Education

The story examined a proposed practice: “Colleges require students to pay a course-materials fee, which would be used to buy e-books for all of them (whatever text the professor recommends, just as in the old model).” And digital bits have replaced the need to cut down trees to make paper and waste ink to create those books.”

Pearson 145