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  • Peer Response #3

    Your Blog Post 3 – EDCI337 about the mental health toolkit was really good. You explained clearly how open ended tasks can actually make students feel stuck if they don’t have a clear starting point. It makes sense that someone might just pick random ideas to get it over with if the work feels too…

  • Peer Response #4

    Your #Blog 4 about using videos for learning economics was great. You explained clearly how watching a video on money demand helps students interact with the material and understand tricky graphs better. It makes sense that students would feel more engaged when they can pause and draw out the graphs themselves instead of just listening…

  • Peer Response #3

    Your Blog 3 – EDCI 335 about the “average” student in economics was great. You explained clearly how fast lectures with hard graphs can leave people behind when they assume everyone learns at the same speed. It makes sense that students would feel more confident if the class was actually built for different ways of…

  • Post 4

    Designing Interaction with Video Image by Julia Bogdanova Interaction is an important part of learning in digital environments because it helps students stay engaged with the material and encourages deeper understanding. In online learning environments, students can sometimes feel disconnected from instructors, classmates and the course material. Research on digital learning suggests that meaningful interaction…

  • Peer Response #2 – Kaede

    Your Blog Post #2 about open pedagogies and learning design was great. You explained clearly how this approach focuses on students as active creators instead of just people receiving information. It makes sense that students would feel more motivated and connected when they are sharing their work and reflecting publicly. I also appreciated that you…

  • Blog Post #3

    Inclusive Design Image by Getty Images This week really made me rethink what accessibility actually means. Before this I mostly saw inclusion as fixing something after a problem came up. If a student needed extra time or a different format then you adjust it. I did not really think about how the original design itself…

  • Blog #2 Inquiry Based Learning

    Inquiry based learning is a way of learning where students understand things by exploring questions, solving problems, or working through real situations instead of just being given information in order. It connects to constructivism because it focuses on learners doing the thinking themselves. Instead of memorizing facts, learners try things out, see what happens, and…

  • Welcome and Introduction

    Before proceeding with this first blog post, we expect you to consider your privacy preferences carefully and that you have considered the following options: First tasks you might explore with your new blog: Do consider creating categories for each course that you take should you wish to document your learning (or from professional learning activities…