Tech Tuesday: LiveBinders – organize your digital content into a visual portfolio

Introducing Instagram – a photo-sharing tool everyone is talking about.

YouTube – a tool to connect and engage with existing and future learners

Using Evernote with low-level adult literacy students – a success story webinar.

Google Chrome – a web browser with apps and extensions

Tumblr – a blogging platform.

The recording is unavailable but you can view the slides.

OneDrive – Microsoft’s cloud storage option.

Pinterest – a great place to find, share and manage images.

The recording is no longer available but you can view the slides.

Open Badges, a new online standard launched in March 2013 by Mozilla, is open source, free software, which any organization can use to create, issue and verify digital badges to recognize and verify learning.

Many of us are familiar with and likely earned some kind of physical badge in our lifetime. Who can forget all those colourful badges sewn or pinned on a sleeve, jacket or hat of a Girl Guide or Boy Scout? These badges represent the accomplishment of various achievements and are often proudly displayed by the recipients.

Digital badges, originally introduced in games, are also used to recognize achievements and completion of specific tasks, but they are issued and shared digitally.

They are often treated as rewards and recipients seek them to:

Digital badge issuers use digital badges for:

To provide a common system for the issuance, collection, and display of digital badges on multiple instructional sites, Mozilla Foundation developed Mozilla Open Badges – free software and an open technical standard any organization can use to create, issue and verify digital badges.

Many educational institutions and learning management system providers, such as Blackboard and Moodle, quickly partnered with Mozilla to enable online teachers and administrators to issue Open Badges for course and activity completions.