
14:29
Drexel, Philadelphia, USA

14:33
Thanks for breaking the ice Nikol! Others?

14:42
Learning Equality. I'm based in Dallas, TX.

14:49
Catholic University of America, Washington, DC

14:53
Rachel,Macau

14:55
Drexel, Philadelphia, USA

15:26
Bochum, Germany

15:34
Depends what the meaning of "at" is. I'm physically at home.

15:40
But that's how we can join! I'm thankful

18:06
Similar happened for books (as computers) alone as I understand …

19:38
…. it seems, with the common message being, that the surrounding social/educational facilitators are crucial to computers or books to help learning …

22:09
Where do actions/behaviors fit?

23:37
less than 10

25:42
🤯

30:33
Cool!

31:24
What's that choice reference re student vs family and culture?

31:50
I think it was: Iyengar, S. S., & Lepper, M. R. (1999). Rethinking the value of choice: a cultural perspective on intrinsic motivation. Journal of personality and social psychology, 76(3), 349.

32:03
Thanks, Erik!

34:58
Here's a link in case other's are interested:https://www0.gsb.columbia.edu/mygsb/faculty/research/pubfiles/883/883b.pdf

46:18
question (for later) re kizilcec & cohen: The self-regulation prompt seemed odd ... Assuming good self-regulation is to attend more to answering questions, engaging in active learning, than watching lectures … is the surprise of that result not that it didn't work for some, but that it *did work* for some?

47:09
This is amazing!! If I may ask, where is the content coming from? Is it aligned to the local curriculum? or is it the teacher providing instruction over the phone?

57:10
How do we navigate situations where student choice and student learning outcomes are not well aligned -- e.g., they chose one of working alone or in a group but they actually learn better in the other?

57:55
What about where dogs ARE food?

01:04:18
Might be interesting to see that 1995 reference updated. Tech has surely changed!

01:08:02
Great presentation, Amy! Thank you!

01:08:29
Thanks for the presentation Amy!

01:08:55
thank you so much! this was wonderful

01:12:18
It is always exciting to listen to you. Thanks a lot!

01:13:06
Fantastic, thank you!!

01:13:24
You mentioned this in the multiple versions approach, but in general how can we avoid disadvantaging people who might get located in a culture, but benefit more from a different approach? relatedly, do you think there might be potential for looking at all these differences to inspire better approaches including in WEIRD?

01:16:42
For scalability to gazillions of local cultures, won't indigenous authoring and localization be essential? I have a nice example by a former student in Ghana.

01:17:02
thank you, you have such great insights!

01:18:38
What are your thoughts on another variation on the honor choice idea: Tell students about the research that suggests learning may be better by doing X than Y (perhaps with appropriate caveats about validity, generalizability) and then allow students to chose for themselves?

01:18:56
do you think something like trying out each other's versions could be used additionally to promote intercultural awareness among students?

01:24:06
thank you!

01:24:15
Thank you! So spot on!