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Administration
Assessment and Evaluation
Assistive Technologies
Associations and Organizations
Free Information Sources
Innovative Technologies
Instructional Resources
Laws and Legislation
Student Support Services
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Past Issues of BEEP
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Best Bets Archive
Project Eagle
For a subscription to BEEP, contact the Project Manager: lechnerj@spcollege.edu
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BEEP's Best Bets' Archives*
Final Revision September 1, 2007**
This archival BEEP feature, available only in the online version
of the publication, is an accumulation of the best Websites featured
in past issues. These links are arranged in the broad e-learning
categories that are of continued interest to those involved in
St. Petersburg College’s Project Eagle.
*The number in parentheses indicates the issue of BEEP
in which this Website last appeared.
**BEEP ceased publication on September 1, 2007.
For an overview of the accomplishments of Project Eagle, an eight-year effort
(1999-2007) to build a national e-learning model using Congressionally-authorized funds, see
Project Eagle Revisited Part I,
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), Number 57, 7/1/07 and
Project Eagle Revisited Part II,
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), Number 58, 9/1/07
Administration
- The Game Is On: Applying
Computer Gaming Principles to E-Learning.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 1/1/07. Entire issue looks at the increasingly
popular idea of adapting video gaming techniques to e-learning materials’ development.
(54)
- Online Retention: Keeping
Students Enrolled and Engaged. Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP),
11/1/06. Entire issue is devoted to the subject of student retention, with links to both online
enrollment and retention in general, plus a section on keeping e-learners engaged in their courses.
(53)
- The
Changing Academic Library, Web 2.0 and Putting the Two Together.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 7/1/06. Entire
issue is devoted to the revolutionary changes in academic
library services, the controversial concept of Web 2.0, and
how libraries’ delivery of information may be altered
even more dramatically by the use of Web 2.0’s strategies.
(51)
- "Changing
a Cultural Icon: The Academic Library As a Virtual Destination."
In-depth article by Jerry D. Campbell in
Educause Review (41:1), 1-2/06, on the accepted obsolescence
of the traditional academic library, with suggestions for
an electronic future. (49)
-
Educating the Net Generation. Free collection
of essays by Educause,
2006, on the concept of "Net Gen" students and implications
for their education. Downloadable chapter by chapter. (49)
- Dealing
with Disaster from a Distance: Hurricane Katrina and Beyond."
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 11/1/05. Entire
issue reports on post-hurricane e-learning efforts provided
nationwide, as well as information on planning for disaster
recovery. (47)
- "51
Competencies for Online Instructors." Article
by Theodore C. Smith in The Journal of Educators Online,
(2:2), July 2005, that identifies 51 specific skill sets needed
for e-faculty to succeed and outlines a training program that
addresses those needs. (46)
- Hybrid
Courses: Blending Online and Face-to-Face Instruction.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 7/1/05.Entire
issue examines the hybrid or blended course concept, an increasingly
popular alternative in which face-to-face and online instruction
are combined to a greater or lesser extent. (45)
- What
Makes an Award-Winning E-Learning Program: A Look at St. Petersburg
College's eCampus. Best Educational E-Practices
(BEEP), 11/1/04. Entire issue is devoted to the accomplishments
of the St. Petersburg College (FL) eCampus. (41)
-
"Online Course Development: What Does It Cost?"
Article by Judith Boettcher in Syllabus (17:12),
July/August 2004, that proposes a few guidelines for predicting
the costs involved in the design and development of online
courses. (40)
- Learning
Contracts, Service Standards, and Learning Support Agreements.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 5/1/04. Entire
issue examines shared responsibility in the e-learning process,
as demonstrated by the use of learning contracts, service
standards, and learning support agreements. (38)
- Theory
and Practice of Online Learning. Another complete
and downloadable book, this one edited by Terry Anderson and
Fathi Elloumi, Athabasca University (Canada), 2004, that is
self-described as a "perceptive and complete guide"
revisiting "the great dichotomies that have marked the
history of open and distance learning." (38)
- Instructional
Management Systems. Best Educational E-Practices
(BEEP), 1/1/04. Entire issue is devoted to an examination
of course/learning/learning content management systems: the
background/theory behind them, Websites with links to commercial
and open software, and case studies that can aid in the selection
process. (36)
- "Motivation
and Incentives for Distance Faculty." Article
by Angie Parker, Yavapai College (AZ), that presents the results
of a study on what motivates e-faculty. Analysis of more than
100 articles showed that e-faculty teach for self-satisfaction,
flexible scheduling, wider audience, stipends, decreased workload,
release time and using new technology. (35)
- "A
New Definition of Technological Literacy." Worth-reading
editorial by Geoffrey Fletcher in T.H.E. Focus, on
how the 1980's definition of computer literacy has given way
to the new concept of technological literacy. The latter,
far more integrated than the first, is one of using technology
to learn, rather than simply learning about technology. (35)
- MIT Open Courseware.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Collection of course
materials and other services created by MIT faculty and made
available to the public. (26)
- Distance
Education Clearinghouse. University
of Wisconsin Website that brings together e-learning information
from local, national and international sources. (15)
- Distance Learning
Exchange. Free, easy-to-use service maintained by
the State of Pennsylvania that provides a clearinghouse for
many Web-based educational opportunities. (15)
- Web-Based Learning Resources Library. Educator's
resource for delivery and management of education via the
Internet by Robert W. Jackson of the University of Tennessee,
Knoxville. (12)
- Determining the Costs of Online Classes.
Interactive Website developed by Brian M. Morgan of Marshall
University (West VA) to help users determine if the development
of a particular online course is economically feasible for
their institutions. (5)
Assessment and Evaluation
Assistive Technologies
- "Programmers Try to Keep Disability Access Up to Date with the Web's Dynamic Advances." Associated Press release,
1/16/07, on the need for and development of new systems like iAccessible2 to handle new and dynamic
Web 2.0 features.
(55)
- Google Site to Aid the Blind.
Website for the blind and visually impaired. Takes into account several factors, including a given
page’s simplicity, how much visual imagery it carries, and if its primary purpose is immediately
viable with keyboard navigation.
(53)
-
Innovative Tactile Solutions for the Blind
.
First released by the VirTouch Corporation in December 2003,
the mouse-like VTPlayer lets the visually impaired experience
images of all kinds in a tactile way. The company continues
to add educational software products compatible with the VTPlayer,
which can be installed on almost all Windows-based computers.
(45)
-
AccessDL.
Website of the National Center on Accessible Distance Learning,
a DOE-funded organization that shares guidance and resources
on making e-learning courses accessible to students and instructors
with disabilities. (44)
- Bookshare.org.
Nonprofit digital book service that allows downloading of thousands
of titles for blind and learning-disabled students for as little
as $6.00 per text. Chosen as one of the top ed-tech stories
of 2004 by eSchool News. (44)
-
Adaptive Technology Resource Centre. Website maintained
at the University of Toronto that advances information technology
accessible to all.Includes many links to outside sources. (37)
- AbleData.
Website maintained by the National Institute on Disability and
Rehabilitation Research, U.S. Department of Education. Links
to many assistive technology resources. (5)
Associations and Organizations
- New
Media Consortium. International nonprofit
consortium of nearly 200 leading learning-focused organizations
that explore and use new media and new technologies. (44)
- Merlot. Well-known
and growing collection of peer-reviewed online learning materials
and more. Officially titled Multimedia Educational Resource
for Learning and Online Teaching. (26)
- World
Lecture Hall. University of Texas. Links to pages created
by faculty worldwide who are using the Web to deliver course
materials. (26)
- Global Alliance for
Transnational Education (GATE). International organization
concerned with quality that has devised a standard of best practices
for transnational education. (23)
- International Council
for Open and Distance Education (ICDE). Global, non-governmental
organization responsible for open and distance learning, with
members from 140 countries. (23)
- Community College Baccalaureate
Association. Association that promotes the development
and acceptance of community college baccalaureate degrees. (20)
- Consortium of Distance Education. Consortium
hosted by Burlington Community College (NJ) to acquire and share
knowledge about state-of-the-art e-learning in higher education.
(20)
- Instructional Technology Council (ITC).
Organization that provides leadership, information and resources
to expand and enhance e-learning through the use of technology.
(20)
- League for Innovation in the Community College.
Organization that offers innovative solutions and extensive
information about e-learning, with a focus on community colleges.
(20)
- Educause.
Association of more than 1900 colleges and 200 corporations
formed to advance higher education by promoting the intelligent
use of information technology. (15)
- Global Network
Academy. In addition to a list of thousands of e-courses
and e-learning programs, the academy provides some free Website
hosting and links to useful resources. (15)
- Regional and Statewide Efforts. In addition to national
organizations and associations, regions and states have formed
agencies that allow participation by those within their boundaries.
The Electronic
Campus of the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB),
for example, provides services to institutions in that region.
State-level ventures like the Florida Distance
Learning Consortium is just one of many. (15)
- United States Distance
Learning Association (USDLA). Non-profit organization
formed in 1987 to promote development of e-learning at all levels,
including home school education, corporate training, military/government
training, and telemedicine. (15)
- World Association for
Online Education (WAOE). International professional
organization concerned with teaching online, public services
for international society, and collaboration with other educational
organizations functioning in cyberspace. (15)
Free Information Sources
- Northern Light. Recent reappearance of a
venerable search engine (1997-2002), now largely devoted to business research, that provides access to
both free and fee-based online sources.
(56)
- OldMagazineArticles.com
Website with free access to magazine articles back to the early 20th century, presented in the same
format in which they first appeared, including illustrations.
(55)
- OpenDOAR.
Authoritative directory of academic open-access repositories maintained by the University of Nottingham (UK).
As well as providing a simple repository list, OpenDOAR lets users search for repositories or repository
contents.
(54)
- "New
Search Engines Help Users Find Blogs." Article
by Vauchini Vara, copied from The Wall Street Journal,
9/7/05, reporting on new blog-searching products like
Technorati,
Feedster,
Bloglines,
IceRocket,
and DayPop.
(47)
- Free
Software and Information Sources for E-Learning. Best
Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 4/1/05. Entire issue is
devoted to exaamining the latest in free and open source software,
as well as new information sources for e-learning.
(44)
- Distance
Education Clearinghouse Conference Database. Excellent
month-by-month lists of worldwide conferences, seminars, workshops
and other events related to e-learning.
(41)
- Highbeam Research.
Formerly called eLibrary, a Website with more than
32 million documents from 2,800+ sources, updated daily and
going back twenty years. Free membership includes searches of
both articles (unlimited) and Web sources (five), and allows
profiles and search query saves. Paid membership, with full-text
articles, is $19.95/month or $99.95/year. (41)
- Google
and Beyond: Finding Information on the Web. Best
Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 7/1/04. Entire issue examines
the Google phenomenon, as well its alternatives and methods
of conducting Web-based research. (39)
- Landmark
Citation Machine. Web tool by David Warwick of
The Landmark Project that creates bibliographic
citations either in APA, 5th edition, or MLA, 6th edition, format
simply by entering information about the source, which may include
articles, interviews, Web pages, and more. (38)
- Educator's Reference Desk. With the terminations
of its question/answer AskERIC service in December 2003, the
DOE has set up a Website that continues to offer an interface
to the ERIC database, plus access to links to online education
information previously assembled by AskERIC. (37)
- Project
Eagle Research Capsules. Summaries of recent e-learning
research reports and statstics. Produced by Project
Eagle, a $470,750 grant, 8/1/03-7/31/07, St.
Petersburg College. (37)
- Library.Spot.com. Award-winning, free,
reviewed, vertical information portal for easily finding topical
information of all kinds. (35)
- Libraries on the Web: USA Academic Libraries.
Website maintained at the University of California, Berkeley,
that lists and links to all academic libraries that offer online
services. (27)
- Infomine: Scholarly
Internet Resource Collections. Searchable database with
more than 40,000 academically valuable e-sources. (26)
- Martindale's - The Reference Desk. Incredibly
exhaustive and award-winning Web site created by one individual,
Jim Martindale. Includes interactive sign language and Braille
access. (26)
- The Freebie
Directory. Just about anything that can be obtained
for free via the Internet. (26)
Innovative Technologies
- Part I: A Smarter Web.
Article by John Borland in Technology Review, 3/19/07, about the Semantic Web concept, that will
make online searching more intelligent by giving computers the ability to understand Web content. See also
Part II, 3/20/07, on
the same subject.
(56)
- The Seventh Annual Look at Leading Edge E-Learning Technologies. Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 3/1/07. Entire issue is a
summary of some of the newest and best innovations. Includes links to major upcoming educational
technology conferences in 2007.
(55)
- How to:
Read Wikipedia on an iPod. Perl script created by Matt Swann that can be downloaded to an
iPod so users can access the Wikipedia on that device.
(54)
- "Calif.
Regulators OK Broadband over Power Line Test."
First practical application of the use of power lines to provide
high-speed Internet service.
(51)
- The
Sixth Annual Look at Leading Edge E-Learning Technologies.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 3/1/06. Entire
issue is a summary of some of the newest and best innovations.
Includes links to major upcoming ed tech conferences in 2006.
(49)
- iPods
and Wikis and Blogs (Oh My!). Best Educational
E-Practices (BEEP), 1/1/06.. Entire issue is devoted to
the unexpected impact on elearning of three products: Apple
ipod, wiki and weblog.
(48)
- "When
the Web Was New." Reprinted article by Wade
Roush from Technology Review, April 1995, that looks
at what was then the newest technology, "the vast electronic
mall known as the World Wide Web." Worth reading if only
to marvel at the advances made in the past ten years. (46)
- Imagination at Work. An amazing and free
Web-based writing and sketching tool sponsored by GE. Users
can create script or images free-hand and in color, then preview
and email their completed work to others. (31)
- Internet2.
Official and comprehensive Web site of the University Corporation
for Advanced Internet Development (UCAID), the Internet2 leaders.
(27)
- Original
Response-O-Matic Free Form Processor. Advertiser-supported
Web site that allows the creation of forms of any kind, which
can then be downloaded to the user's Web site(26)
- Learn the Net. Premier, multi-lingual site
offering instruction on every aspect of Internet use. (26)
- CNET.com. Ongoing
source of evaluation of new and existing technologies of all
kinds. (18)
Instructional Resources
- Adapting Learning Materials for Distance Learning. Online publication by the Commonwealth of
Learning, 2007, with tips on adapting existing materials of all kinds to an online environment.
(57)
- Designing Learning Objects for Online Learning. Online publication by the Commonwealth of Learning,
2007, with tips on designing reusable learning objects for e-courses.
(57)
- MIT to Offer Its Courses Free Online by Year’s End. Reuters release announcing that 1800
Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s courses will soon be free to all on a non-credit basis.
(56)
- "Panel
Studies High Cost of College Texts." Article by Stuart Silverstein,
Los Angeles Times, 3/7/07,
on panel recommendations that instructors use articles, lecture notes, study guides and other materials available
free online and provide students with texts they can rent, not buy.
(56)
- Teaching Critical Thinking Skills and Other Tips for E-Faculty.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 9/1/06. Entire issue is devoted once again to bringing
faculty up to date on the latest developments related to online instruction, with a focus on
teaching critical thinking skills.
(52)
- Instructional Best Bets for the New Academic Year.
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 9/1/05. Entire issue
is devoted to bringing faculty up to date on the latest developments
related to online instruction. (46)
- Filamentality.
Designed primarily for educators, a fill-in-the-blank guide
that includes picking a topic, searching the Web, gathering
good Internet links, and turning them into learning activities.
(43)
- Learner's
Library. Website that allows instructors
to develop "coursepacks" of copyrighted full-text reading materials
from a database of more than 120 million book entries, 200,000+
full-text journal articles, and a set of value-added research
aids. Flat rate is $15 per coursepack. (43)
- LanguageTeach
(LT) Development Tool. Software that enables materials
developers without special technical knowledge to create and
store educational Web-based interactive material. (43)
- Portaportal.
Web-based bookmarking utility that allows free online storage
of links to favorite sources, so that bookmarks/favorites are
no longer limited to use on one machine. (43)
- Seven
Principles of Good Teaching Practice. Comprehensive
lists of good practices for instructors both in the regular
classroom and online by Dr. James W. King, University of Nebraska.
Principles include student-faculty contact, active learning,
time on task, cooperation among students, prompt feedback, high
expectations and respect for learning diversity. (38)
- "Strategies to Succeed in Distance Education."
Article by Farhad Saba, Distance-Educator.com CEO, with some
new approaches to help e-students learn and their instructors
teach. (37)
- "Predictors of Engagement and Participation in an
On-Line Course." Article by Marc D. Miller and other
Georgia university staff in The Online Journal of Distance
Learning Administration (6:1), Spring 2003. It explores
several models of online course construction that can help develop
effective online learning and training programs. (34)
- RateMyProfessors.com. Student-generated
database with ratings of college professors nationwide. It has
hundreds of thousands of entries, some with very candid student
comments.(34)
- Reusable
Learning Objects (RLO's). Best Educational E-Practices
(BEEP), 9/1/03. Entire issue is devoted to an examination of
learning objects, both the background/theory of the concept
and examples/repositories of the learning objects themselves.
(34)
- "A Basic Guide to Writing Student Learning Outcome
Statements." Step-by-step guide to writing learning
outcomes. Created and maintained by the University of Western
Australia. (30)
- Learning Outcomes: Bibliography of Internet Resources.
Website with links to broad issues maintained by Malaspina University-College
(Canada). (30)
- Learning Style Web Sites. Rated list of
sites, with more than just tests, maintained by Athabasca University
(Canada). (30)
- Portals
and Portfolios. Best Educational E-Practices
(BEEP), 2/1/03. The entire issue is devoted to an examination
of these concepts, both the background of the concept and examples/repositories
of both portals and portfolios. (29)
- Catalyst. University of Washington. Series
of e-learning resources that includes action plans for setting
up various elements of a Web-based course, including audio and
video components. (26)
- Developing and Teaching an Online Course: A Faculty
Handbook, May 2000. Grant MacEwan College,
Alberta, Canada. An 88-page manual on online course development.
(26)
- WWW4teachers.org. University of Kansas.
A "must" for e-structors at all levels, with reproducible
tools, plus links to material for professional development,
a site of the week, and much more. (26)
- Educating with New Technologies: Networked Learning
Communities. Developed at Harvard (MA) to help educators
develop effective ways of using new technologies. (24)
- Facilitating Online Learning . Tips from
Australia on the skills needed for online teachers and students,
plus advice on getting started and keeping the momentum. (24)
- Teaching Tips Index. Honolulu Community
College. Impressive collection of tips for college teaching,
both face-to-face and online, that covers 18 topics related
to successful instruction. (24)
- Higher Education Online Teaching/Learning Resources.
National Education Association. (24)
- How
People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School. Free,
346-page, online book in HTML format by John D. Bransford, Ann
L. Brown and Rodney R. Cocking. (12)
- What Do You Want to Use Technology for?
Collection of links to teaching/learning activities using
technology created by the University of Maryland University
College. (12)
Laws and Legislation
Student Support Services
- AskStudent: The Online Student Portal.
Website that offers online students information on college life, security, hacking, careers and more.
(57)
- Colleges.com Website with links to
various kinds of colleges, searchable by program and degree, undergraduate and graduate, as
well as information on financial aid, careers and travel.
(57)
- Education Planner. Self-proclaimed "one-step career and college planning site." Includes
the categories of discovering, preparing, selecting, applying, deciding and paying.
(57)
- Guide to Online Education. Website
that features "simple-to-navigate, concise, yet in-depth, research, advice and ’how-to’
s ections to answer online learners’ questions."
(57)
- Serving Students
Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP), 5/1/07. Entire issue is devoted to a look at the state of
online student services, for both new and prospective students, distant or traditional.
(56)
- Hotmath. Website created by math teachers that
offers free help with solving math problems included in more than 150 current textbooks. Additional
services include personal tutoring, using graphing calculators and more.
(53)
- Cybercounseling
and Cyberlearning: An Encore. Complete online book
edited by John W. Bloom and Garry R. Walz, March 2004, offering
information related to the counseling side of e-learning. Follow-up
to an earlier volume, Cyberccounseling and Cyberlearning:
Strategies and Resources for the Millennium, 2000, which
is not available online.
(46)
- LOBO.
Library tutorial created by North Carolina State University
that provides a step-by-step guide to the research process.
Designed for NCSU undergrads, but very useful to all students.
(46)
- College
Results Online. Interactive tool with overall graduation
rates at four-year institutions. (43)
- New
York Life Education Planner. Extensive Website
offering information on selecting a career, applying to a school,
and paying for a postsecondary education. (43)
- Online
Academic and Student Support Services, With an Update on Student
Portals. Best Educational E-Practices (BEEP),
1/1/05. Entire issue looks at the latest in online support services,
including an update on the all-inclusive student portal concept.
(42)
- Rate
Your Campus.com. Website created by FinancialAid.com
to allow high school students to see what college life is really
like at schools whose students have completed an opinion survey.
(36)
- Math Courses/Tutorials. Examples are Cool Math Sites and the student-produced
Math for Morons Like Us, both of which can
be adapted for student use at all levels. (26)
- Writing Courses/Tutorials. Included are Paradigm
Online Writing Assistant (POWA); Purdue University
Online Writing Lab (OWL); and Darling's Guide
to Grammar & Writing. (26)
The contents of BEEP were developed under a grant from the U. S. Department of Education (DOE). However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the DOE, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.
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