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On the day I visited the Richmond Maritime Festival at Steveston, I saw the young girl (on the right) taking her kayaking lesson. Her tutor is on the left.
The scene is not visually spectacular but I like it. It makes me reflecting on mentoring type of learning process.
I still think the old-fashioned mentoring kind of learning is most effective (not cost effective though). It is better than classroom (one to many) or online learning (many to many). Of course it is important that you have a good mentor!
I have met with a few of the Flickr contacts who have been so kind in sharing experience and knowledge with me. They are like my mentors. I am so grateful to them. If I have made any improvement in the first year after joining Flickr, I am indebted to them.
Thanks so much for your comments!
In 1998 I went to the Online Learning conference in Los Angeles. Every attendee got one of these laser points. The keynote speaker gets up and is immediately hit with a thousand points of light. He must have anticipated it because he was wearing protective goggles.
After 25 years the logo is almost worn off, but it still works. This was Taffy's favorite toy and she chased this light many miles.
Picture is 3 inches wide.
Social distancing is taking a toll on many local business (mine included), but I am impressed by many for adapting and taking on new approaches for maintaining services.
Here we see my daughter participating in a 'live online ballet class' courtesy of Glenbrook Ballet Theatre (a highlight of her week might I add!).
"Alright, I've just watched this online tutorial and guess I'm good to go. Now hold still!"
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This photo is my entry to a monthly #bc_outatime photo contest held by Brickcentral on Instagram.
week 13 of my free embroidery class is now on my blog,
karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2020/06/embroider-o...
Course work for Master of Arts @ UTS.
Design a visual representation of my Personal Learning Environment (PLE).
It's basically all of those tools that we utilise in our everyday life for learning and feeding our brains!
week nine of my free embroidery class is now on my blog
karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2020/05/embroider-o...
my hand embroidered wrapping cloth is finished. Creating this has been a true labour of love.
karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2020/07/an-embroide...
To me a wrapping cloth is not functional, it is symbolic of my desire to wrap up and protect my children.
This piece measures approximately 33 x 35 inches.
these samples, this work was hosted in a different sketchbook initially. But....there was a mishap...oops...a disaster of epic proportions actually. These images are my attempts at rescuing what was rescuable!
From the Institute for Higher Education Policy, the seven categories are:
- institutional support
- faculty support
- student support
- course design
- course structure
- assessment
- evaluation
Found this in:
Chao, I. T., Saj, T., & Hamilton, D. (2010). Using collaborative course development to achieve online course quality standards. International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 11(3), 106-126. www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/912/1644 (thanks, Natalie G from Guelph for adding this to her annotated bibliography)
As for the notes themselves, I'm working on using this new retinal display iPad for visual notes. The super high resolution takes some getting used to. For example, see the tiny text? No, me either but that's the size that I'm used to drawing/writing. I have more control at that size. The larger, thicker stroke feels somehow clumsy, awkward not as nice.
Oh well, as always, need more practice.
week seven of my free embroidery class is now live on my blog
karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2020/04/embroider-o...