A Year in Review

Wednesday, 12.15.2010, 7:28 AM

Zulama's top three takeaways from 2010:

1) In the digital age, students are equipped more now than ever to take responsibility and control of their own learning.

The "teacher knows best" paradigm is evolving. Students can look up the facts online, on their phones, on their tablets. Rather than requiring students to memorize facts, we need to encourage them to think and reflect. Our most effective teachers facilitate student learning by allowing (and encouraging) students to use readily-available, and many times free, tools such as: 

 

2) Collaboration is becoming more and more important for learning.

The Zulama online application is designed to support and encourage rich experiences, with more features to come. We are creating an on-line community, a conversation, a media publisher, and a data publisher where teachers, scientists, researchers, and students can share their knowledge, ideas, research, and goals. Giving students the ability to connect with like-minded students not only in their school, but worldwide, opens opportunities to make meaningful connections and learn more collaboratively than what is possible individually. 

3) Motivation is key!

. . . especially for successful online learning! We start by offering engaging, interactive, and interesting course topics. Our authors utilize a variety of media and digital tools to make their content relevant and meaningful to students. Many of our courses combine online resources with offline project-based, hands-on learning. In the works for 2011 is a revolutionary point-based grading system, based on achievements and accumulating tokens and badges, similar to how many video games are scored.

That summarizes (some of) what we learned in 2010, . . . what's next?

Our motto gives a glimpse into what you can expect to see from Zulama in 2011:

Contact Us

Schools, parents, and students: contact us to enroll.

Teachers, authors, and content providers: contact us to bring your curriculum to high-schoolers everywhere.

Recommended Sites/Resources

Friends of Zulama

A very interesting interview with Don Marinelli, Executive Producer at the Carnegie Mellon University Entertainment Technology Center.

Chris Klug's website (Chris is the author of many Zulama Video Game Academy courses)

Zulama's international partner, iCarnegie.

Advisory Board member Carol Jago's website—an excellent literacy resource.

Video Game Academy Resources

Recommended reading from the Video Game Academy: The Art of Game Design: A Book of Lenses, by Jesse Schell.

Information about the National High School Game Academy, a 3-week summer experience for high schoolers at the Carnegie Mellon University Entertainment Technology Center.

Gamestar Mechanic, a game that teaches kids how to make games.

Guidelines/Resources for Zulama Authors, Teachers, and Students

Great parenting resources from WQED Pittsburgh.

An excellent resource for teachers looking for primary sources.  The Center on Congress at Indiana University 

iNACOL National Standards for Quality Online Teaching, Courses, and Programs

A digital archive of free C-SPAN videos.

Free documentary films.

Free science simulations from PHeT.

Lots of free resources and tech ideas mostly for teachers in Zulama can be found on this website

A community for teachers and students interested in global education.

Free books: Open Library, Project Gutenberg  

Thousands of primary source documents available from the U.S. National Archives. Plus activities.

The Teacher Vodcasting Network: a social ning for teachers using vodcasting in the classroom.

Project Red is researching how education can be transformed using technology.

General Interest

A blog entry entitled Literacy for a New Generation written by Zulama's Chief Business Development Officer, Amit Shah.

A cable TV station dedicated to producing thoughtful, informative and entertaining programs that are available world wide.

Consortium for School Networking (CoSN)

Society for Applied Learning Technology

Blogs We Read

TeachPaperless is a blog meant to help teachers create and maintain SocialTech-integrated Paperless Classrooms. The community regularly posts and comments on all aspects of paperless, digital, and technological culture as it relates to education. 

Steve Wheeler's Learning with e's—Learning Technology and All Things Digital

Zulama's Social Media Links

CrunchBase

Facebook

LinkedIn

Twitter: ZulamaLearn


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