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Showing posts with label elearning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elearning. Show all posts

Monday, October 6, 2008

E-learning in Medical education

The use of elearning in medical education: a review of the current situation -- Choules 83 (978): 212 -- Postgraduate Medical Journal

Computers are increasingly used in medical education. Electronic learning (elearning) is moving from textbooks in electronic format (that are increasingly enhanced by the use of multimedia adjuncts) to a truly interactive medium that can be delivered to meet the educational needs of students and postgraduate learners. Computer technology can present reliable, reusable content in a format that is convenient to the learner. It can be used to transcend geographical boundaries and time zones. It is a valuable tool to add to the medical teacher’s toolkit, but like all tools it must be used appropriately. This article endeavours to review the current "state of the art2 in use of elearning and its role in medical education alongside non-electronic methods—a combination that is currently referred to as "blended" learning.

Read the full article on BMJ health intelligence.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Everyday things i do, put here concisely.

eLearn: Feature Article

Ten Web 2.0 Things You Can Do in Ten Minutes to Be a More Successful E-learning Professional

The following list was inspired by eLearn Magazine Editor-in-Chief Lisa Neal's blog post "
Ten Things You Can Do in Ten Minutes To Be a More Successful e-learning Professional." We'd like to offer the "Web 2.0 Edition" of Lisa's list:

  1. Listen to a conference presentation. When you run across conference presentations while reading your RSS feeds (EDUCAUSE Connect is a prime source, as is OLDaily), save the conference site as a bookmark and revisit it to hear a presentation.
  2. Record a 10-minute presentation about something you are working on or learning about, either as audio (use Odeo) or video (use Ustream), and post it on your blog.
  3. Do a search on the title of your most recent post or on the title of the most recent thing you've read or thought about. Don't just use Google search, use Google Blog Search and Google Image Search, Amazon, del.icio.us, Technorati, Slideshare, or Youtube. Scan the results and if you find something interesting, save it in del.icio.us to read later.
  4. Write a blog post or article describing something you've learned recently. It can be something you've read or culled from a meeting, conference notes (which you just capture on the fly using a text editor), or a link you've posted to del.icio.us. The trick here is to keep your writing activity to less than 10 minutes—make a point quickly and then click "submit."
  5. Tidy your e-portfolio. For example, upload your slides to Slideshare and audio recordings to Odeo and embed the code in your presentation page. Or write a description and link to your latest publication. Or update your project list.
  6. Create a slide on Zoho. Just do one slide at a time; find an image using the Creative Commons licensed content on Flickr and a short bit of text from a source or yourself. Add this to your stick of prepared slides you use for your next talk or class.
  7. Find a blogger you currently read in your RSS reader and go to their website. Follow all the links to other blogs in their blogroll or feedroll, or which are referenced in their posts. Well, maybe not all the links, or it will take hours, not ten minutes.
  8. Write a comment on a blog post, article, or book written by an e-learning researcher or practitioner.
  9. Go to a website like Engadget, Metafilter, Digg, Mixx, Mashable, or Hotlinks and skip through the items. These sites produce much too much content to follow diligently, but are great for browsing and serendipitous discovery. If you find something interesting, write a short blog post about it or at least a comment.
  10. Catch up on one of your online games with a colleague—Scrabulous on Facebook or Backgammon on Yahoo. Or make a Lolcat. Or watch a Youtube video.

Personalized Learning environment.

Giving Electronic Learning A Personal Touch

This is a link to an interesting vision for a totally personalized learning environment.

All students need to have freedom to choose their methods of learning. Give them access to all the functionalities you can technologically provide and then help him/her find a method which suits him/her best. The advent of Joomla, Wikis, Wordpress, Drupal et al signals effective ways of increasing personalization of e-learning and bringing down the costs of creating a GOOD, Working e-learning system.

Hope it sparks you as much as it did me :)

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Edutools for medical education

Edheads - Virtual Hip Surgery - Total Hip Replacement Surgery - THR

Follow this link and perform virtual surgery.
A great tool with immense potential in medical education..
Virtual Hip Replacement :

Take on the role of the Surgeon throughout a hip replacement surgery!




Wednesday, October 1, 2008

My baby steps with moodle :)

The best open source LMS in the netiverse " Moodle "
Easy to create and easy to use.
Online support available.
and its FREE!!