851 resultados para College stories.
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Myerscough College, a land-based further and higher education college in the north west, is one of the approximately 160 further education colleges in England to take additional connections to Jisc’s Janet network. Ian Brown, director of IT and MIS at the college, talks to us about why they’ve taken an extra four connections.
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During 2008–2010, the Transforming Curriculum Delivery through Technology Programme investigated the potential for technology to support more flexible and creative models of curriculum delivery. This publication captures outcomes from individual projects and summarises the key points emerging from the programme.
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These stories are based on a selection of regional pilot projects that were completed for the Distributed e-Learning Programme between 2005 and 2007. As part of this HEFCEfunded programme, JISC commissioned 21 projects around the use of technology to support lifelong learning in a regional context.
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Case study on how three projects at Blackburn College are helping students and staff to engage with digital technologies and enhance learning and teaching and the broader student digital experience.
Case study: Encouraging use of mobile and interactive technologies in the iZone at Redbridge College
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Case study on how learners at Redbridge College are using interactive technologies in the iZone to enhance their digital experience.
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Case study on how a digital learning fellow at Prospects College for Advanced Technology has developed a digital learning strategy that focuses on vocational training and work-based learning.
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Case study about East Berkshire College and how they are encouraging the use of mobile devices to empower student learning and prepare students for the workplace.
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Stories are helping us learn more about the livelihoods of the fishers and farmers with whom we work in eastern India. We are engaged with these communities in processes and activities aimed at improving their lives and promoting changes in government policy and service delivery in aquaculture and fisheries. Stories are told in several languages by women and men who fish and farm, about their lives, their livelihoods and significant changes they have experienced. We also record stories as narrated to us by colleague-informants. The written and spoken word, photographs, drawings and films – all are used to document the stories of people’s lives, sometimes prompted by questions as simple as “What do people talk about in the village?” Through the power of language, stories can be an entry point into livelihoods programming, monitoring and evaluation, conflict transformation and ultimately a way of giving life to a rights-based approach to development. (PDF contains 10 pages).
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Eterio Pajares, Raquel Merino y José Miguel Santamaría (eds.)