Difference between revisions of "Book of KSA Projects"

From CNM Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Education Essentials)
(Educational Methods)
Line 44: Line 44:
  
 
[[Category:CNM Cyber Curriculum]][[Category:Lecture notes]]
 
[[Category:CNM Cyber Curriculum]][[Category:Lecture notes]]
 
===Educational Methods===
 
:''Main wikipage: [[Educational Methods]]; [https://youtu.be/gjTMEDHpj3o video (8:23)]''
 
 
:'''[[Educational method]]'''. An established [[procedure]] for one's [[education]]. These procedures are usually based on [[observation]] and direct experience. They can be grouped in several categories: [[narrated instruction]], [[practical instruction]], [[cognitive research]], [[experiential learning]], or any combination of those.<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Learning activity]]'''. Something that a learner does or is offered to do for his or her learning.
 
:*'''[[Learning sequence]]'''. Any [[sequence]] of [[learning activity|learning activiti]]es or [[educational objective]]s that any [[human-learning theory]] or one's intuition suggests.</div>
 
 
:[[File:Narrated-teaching-ksa.png|400px|thumb|[[Narrated instruction]]]]'''[[Learning content delivery]]'''. Any [[educational method]] such as [[narrated instruction]] or [[demonstrating]] that is based on direct delivery of [[learning content]].<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Demonstrating]]'''. Any [[learning content delivery]], in which [[learning content]] is delivered through one or more demonstrations.
 
:*'''[[Job shadowing]]'''. Any combination of (a) [[demonstrating]] of one's routine behavior in the workplace, (b) first-hand explanation of that behavior, and (c) answering questions related to that demonstration that aims to provide the learner or learners with sufficient insight of the work.</div>
 
 
:'''[[Narrated instruction]]'''. Any [[educational method]] that is based on some narration such as [[lecturing]] and [[storytelling]].<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Lecturing]]'''. Any [[narrated instruction]] that is based on one or more [[lecture]]s.
 
:*'''[[Storytelling]]'''. Any [[narrated instruction]] that is based on telling stories related to the subject of learning.</div>
 
 
:[[File:Practical-instruction-ksa.png|400px|thumb|[[Practical instruction]]]]'''[[Practical instruction]]'''. Any [[educational method]] that is based on prescribed practical exercises related to the subject of learning.<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Hands-on training]]'''. Any [[practical instruction]] that is based on completion hands-on assignments according to step-by-step instructions.
 
:*'''[[Guided experiment]]'''. Any [[practical instruction]] that is based on executing some experiments according to step-by-step instructions.</div>
 
 
:'''[[Cognitive research]]'''. Any [[educational method]] that is based on experience that requires cognitive analysis, synthesis, and/or evaluation of the subject of learning.<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Formative assessment]]'''. An [[educational method]] that is based on assessment that is formatted to provide detailed [[feedback]] afterwards, possibly during [[debriefing]] or a [[lessons learned]] session. Learners may also be encouraged to either complete specified assessment activities or obtain specified scores on them.
 
:*'''[[Substantive discussion]]'''. An [[educational method]] that is based on one or more discussions on the matters that go beyond conventionally-formalized concepts, possibly followed by [[debriefing]] or a [[lessons learned]] session.
 
:*'''[[Socratic method]]'''. An [[educational method]] that is based on [[critical thinking]] while answering challenging questions related to the subject of learning.
 
:*'''[[Elicitation technique]]'''. An established [[procedure]] for gathering [[data]] from [[human being]]s. [[Elicitation technique]]s are used in anthropology, cognitive science, counseling, education, knowledge engineering, linguistics, management, philosophy, psychology, and other fields. A person who interacts with human subjects to elicit information from them is called an [[elicitor]]. The most common ''techniques'' include [[interview]]s, [[brainstorming]], [[focus group]]s, [[artifact testing]], [[observation]], and [[questionnaire survey]].
 
</div>
 
 
:'''[[Experiential learning]]''' ([[experiential learning|activity-based learning]], [[Experiential learning|learning by doing]], [[Experiential learning|learning through play]]). Any [[educational method]] that is based on both direct experience and cognitive reflection on that experience. Those methods may include a wide range of techniques from [[observation]]s to [[experiment]]s and [[heuristic]]s, but the following consideration of what was observed and what can be learned is the key. That methodology may also be defined as ''learning through reflection on doing''.<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Project-based learning]]''' ([[problem-based learning]]). An [[educational method]] that is based on experiential working on real-world projects related to the subject of learning.
 
:*'''[[Exploratory research]]'''. An [[educational method]] that is based on completing one or more researches that relate to the subject of learning, but which procedure cannot be fully prescribed and which results cannot be completely estimated.
 
:*'''[[Learning through failure]]'''. A [[heuristic]] to utilize experience for learning.
 
:*'''[[Case-based learning]]'''. An [[educational method]] that is based on usage of decision-forcing cases to put students in the role of people who were faced with difficult decisions at some point in the past. In sharp contrast to many other [[educational method]]s, the [[case method]] requires that instructors refrain from providing their own opinions about the decisions in question. At the same time, instructor's feedback may be provided during the following [[debriefing]] or a [[lessons learned]] session.
 
 
</div>
 
  
 
===Learning Environments===
 
===Learning Environments===

Revision as of 02:01, 30 April 2020

The Introduction to Education (hereinafter, the Session) is the learning session that has been created to introduce its participants to education and related topics. The Session consists of five lessons, each of which is made of three to six lectios. At CNM Cyber, a lectio is a lesson part. Every lectio includes a presentation and a one question, either a quiz or survey.

The official version of the Session is published at CNM Cert. The Session materials are also published at CNM Tube, CNM Wiki, and various channels for marketing and convenience purposes.

The Session belongs to the Career-Overview Sessions of the CNM Cyber Orientation.


Summaries

Predecessor

The predecessor session is Introduction to Careers.

Outline

Introduction to Careers
# Lessons Lectios
1 Education Essentials
2 Educational Methods
3 Learning Environments
4 Educational Credentials
5 Educational Service Providers

Successor

The successor session is Introduction to CNM Cyber.

See also

Learning Environments

Main wikipage: Learning Environments; video (9:54)
Learning environment. The circumstances, objects, and conditions by which the learner is surrounded.
Educational format (study mode or mode of study). The layout of one's education. This layout include organization of roles, functions, technology, and other arrangements for the educational process.
Learning tool. Any tool helpful in learning. Those tools may include (a) printed materials such as books, textbooks, handouts, articles, study guides, technical documentation; (b) audio materials such as audio files, collections, or natural experiences; (c) graphic materials such as illustrations, charts, real objects, photographs; (d) audiovisual materials such as video files, collections, natural and/or multimedia experiences; (e) special software such as managed learning environments, MOOCs, document collaboration systems, learning games, etc.
Learning arrangement. A particular way in which learning tools, educational formats, educational methods, elicitation and other techniques are put together to facilitate one's learning. The arrangements may include learning games, competitions, role plays, simulations, field trips, and other settings arranged to stimulate one's observations and direct experiences.

Educational Credentials

Main wikipage: Educational Credentials; video (8:38)
Educational credential. A credential that confirms one's education. Some educational institutions offer educational programs especially in creative arts and the medical field that combine credentialing of academic achievements and professional experience.
Academic credential. An educational credential that is issued by an educational institution or credentialing organization to certify specific academic achievements traditionally related to someone's knowledge.
  • High school diploma. An academic credential that certifies that someone has been graduated from a high school.
  • GED (General Equivalency Diploma). A credential that certifies that someone has successfully passed the test that covers United States or Canadian high school-level academic skills.
  • Diploma. A certificate or deed issued by an educational institution, such as college or university, that testifies that the recipient has completed a particular course of study.
  • Associate degree (or associate's degree). An undergraduate academic degree awarded by colleges and universities upon completion of a course of study intended to usually last two years or more.
  • Bachelor's degree. An undergraduate academic degree awarded by colleges and universities upon completion of a course of study lasting three to seven years depending on institution and academic discipline.
  • Master's degree. A graduate academic degree awarded by colleges and universities upon completion of a course of study lasting one to three years beyond the coursework required by a Bachelor's degree.
  • PhD (Doctor of Philosophy, also known as PhD degree or Ph.D.). The highest, terminal academic degree awarded by universities in most countries. The requirements to earn a PhD regularly include comprehensive examinations and work on thesis or dissertation based on extensive research.
  • Professional degree. A degree that prepares someone to work in a particular profession, often meeting the academic requirements for licensure or accreditation.
  • Credentialism (academic inflation). The process of the devaluation of educational qualifications because of the needs of educational institutions to increase revenues and cut expenses, on one side, and increasing demands, on the other side. This process further provokes credential creep.

Educational Service Providers

Main wikipage: Educational Service Providers; video (5:29)
Educational institution. An enterprise, usually an organization or its constituent part, that exists to provide the public with education.
Educational service provider. An enterprise, usually an organization or its constituent part, that provides anyone or anyones with education regardless of what this enterprise generally does. The providers include both educational institution and enterprises that are not in any educational business.

The successor session is Welcome to CNM.

Preview presentations

Video

The video preview presentation, 1:37 minutes, is published at https://youtu.be/LrUmDbuDfFc. Here is its full text:

In this session we will talk about educational essentials, what is education, formal training, compulsory education. We will start by education objectives, we will take a look at Bloom`s taxonomy of education objectives, we will discuss different domains of them, the effectiveness of them.

We will touch educational methods including narrated instruction, practical instruction, cognitive research and experiential learning. Then we will go to learning environments. We will touch educational formats, leaning tools including, learning management systems and document collaboration system which are widely used right now.

Then we will go to learning arrangements such as internships, apprenticeships, elicitation techniques, anything which can be created with elicitation techniques. We will touch education credentials including academic credentials and we will end with academic service providers.

Hopefully we will be ready to go to carrier price services.

Web

See also