Share Canvas Version Links
Share this canvas version with your team via IM message (eg Skype, Yahoo or gTalk)
Edit Canvas Settings
Canvas Title: * | |
Your Email: | |
Access: | Edit link / Readonly link (Access limits possible in Canvanizer 2.0) |
How to edit your canvas
- To add a note please click 'Insert' in any canvas segment or double click in any segment.
- Color: Use the color picker to show note connections.
- For earlier versions of your canvas: click Canvas History (right side).
- Share: To share the canvas with your team click Share Canvas (right side).
- Export: See Import/Export in the footer (PDF & image export available in the 2.0
- Check your email inbox for a mail called "Canvas links" for all further access info!
- Security: Restriction of access to this canvas to invited members only is possible with Canvanizer 2.0
- There is also a FAQ: Canvanizer FAQ
- Enjoy canvanizing :-)
Strengths ? Insert
What do the All Aspects of the Industry Mean for Educators?All Aspects of the Industry is a set of guidelines designed to prepare students to enter industry. It does not promote training for a specific career but instead, it gives a framework for students to learn how an industry operates. This encourages students to explore the different roles available within an industry and teachers to incorporate more experiential educational activities through three avenues: content, context and method. |
Weaknesses ? Insert
ContentThe content of AAI is the nine aspects: planning, management, finance, technical and production skills, underlying principles of technology, labor issues, community issues, health, safety and environmental issues and personal work habits. These aspects work together to demonstrate how an industry functions and also what happens to each of them if one or two is changed. For example, social networking is affecting the underlying principles of technology and that, in turn, has an effect on the other eight aspects. More at https://essayhelpontime.com/do-my-essay/ |
||||
Opportunities ? Insert
ContextWithout context, AAI is very abstract. Placing the aspects within the context of a specific industry provides students a starting point from which to learn these transferable skills. Students interested in construction will be more interested in learning about financial aspects when considering the costs involved in a construction project than if presented with a generic tally sheet. Students taking a class in food service would be more interested in learning how to manage their station or the dining room than to studying textbook differences in management style. |
Threats ? Insert
MethodPassive teaching methods, such as lectures, do not work well with AAI. AAI seeks to provide students with experience in different aspects of industry, which is better suited to more active teaching methods. Project based learning and exploring case studies are ideal for providing students both a context and the content. |
||||
|
|||||
Insert Brainstorm Mode |