21st C Learning
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Beyond Technology: Preparing the students of today for the challenges of tomorrow
Curated by Cheryl Frose
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Digital Fluency

Moving from being skilled and literate to fluent in the 21st century
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IT 4 DL Differentiation in Distributed Learning LA 4 DL K12 PBL 4 Distributed Learning
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The 21st Century Digital Presentations in Education E-Learning and Online Teaching Connectivism iGeneration - 21st Century Education Leadership in Distance Education
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Competency Instructional System

Competency Instructional System | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Cheryl Frose's insight:

LOTS of links, articles and how-tos toi competency based instructions

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Authentic Education - Great web links on Essential Questions

Authentic Education - Great web links on Essential Questions | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Cheryl Frose's insight:

Great links to a variety of questioning strategy resources. Essential questions rock.

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Competency Works

Competency Works | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Competency Works – Learning from the Cutting Edge
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Building Capacity for Creative Thinking

Building Capacity for Creative Thinking | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

It’s not overtly taught in many teacher-prep programs, but learning how to think creatively is key not only to student success, but teacher longevity as well. Teachers encounter situations every day that require creative thinking.

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Get the most from 21CIF: Lots to see inside!

Get the most from 21CIF: Lots to see inside! | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

You've arrived at the tip of the iceberg. There's a tremendous amount of free content, helpful resources and ideas on this site for improving the array of 21st Century Skills we call information fluency (others call it information literacy). To help you find what you need, here are a few tips for effectively using this site.


Via Dennis T OConnor
Dennis T OConnor's curator insight, April 5, 3:36 PM

It may be ironic that it takes significant search skills to find the wealth of information about informaiton fluency packed into the 21CIF website. To open doors to content, this page will introduce you to hyperlinked content that will help you to teach students how to locate, evaluate, and ethically use digital information. 


Curious?  Give it a click!

Sandra Carswell's curator insight, April 8, 9:59 PM

Useful for information literacy lessons and self-paced modules for students. 

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30 Bite-Sized Writing Tips for Better eLearning Content

One of the many skills that eLearning designers need is the ability to write clear and engaging content.

 

It's a fact that eLearning should be a carefully planned and created to fully succeed in meeting the needs of your learners.

The writing in an eLearning course needs to stand on its own without an instructor. Instead of being used to support the instructor’s lesson, the writing is the star of the show. It must be engaging and clear, almost a combination of the best of technical and marketing writing to interest the e-learner in the material and impart information.

 

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The 7 steps of creativity

The 7 steps of creativity | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
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Faculty Focus: Student Persistence in Online Courses: Understanding the Key Factors

Who should be taking online courses?  Are online courses equally appropriate for all students? Can any content be taught in an online format or do some kinds of material lend themselves to mastery in an electronic environment?  Who should be teaching these courses?  These are all good questions that institutions offering online courses—and instructors teaching them—should consider.

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And So Test Prep Season Begins

And So Test Prep Season Begins | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

So with the final term underway at our elementary school, the grade 3 and 6 teachers are starting to prep for the test. Our superintendent @cdsmeaton has always told us that the PATs should not affect our teaching practice. “I am a staunch believer”, he tells us, “that a focus on excellent teaching will lead to excellent results, no matter how it’s measured.” I tell them the same thing. But it doesn’t quite play out that way in the mind of the individual teacher. PATs, existing as they are, leave teachers with a strong sense of responsibility to prepare their students to write them; and as long as the tests are administered in such a way that has very little to do with the type of learning teachers are being called upon to engage in, there will be a bit of an exit from engaging learning around this time every year.

Heres what I’m getting at:

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Self-Directed Learning Well Explained and 27 Actions

Self-Directed Learning Well Explained and 27 Actions | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

TeachThought.com has a series of posts about self-directed learning by Terry Heick and the staff, well worth a read! “

 

“Learning is most effective when it’s personalised; it means something to the learner. That happens when people feel they are participants and investors in their own learning, shaping what and how they learn, and able to articulate its value to them.” — Leadbeater, Charles

 


Via Gust MEES, Jim Lerman
Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight, March 25, 2:16 PM

It is interesting how few classroom teachers and administrators are aware of what self-directed learning is. SDL is an imperative for our children.

Avery's curator insight, March 25, 11:56 PM

My Thoughts:

You can't teach someone how to learn. You can give them helpful tips and advice, but a single structure for education is not going to work for everyone. It's so much harder for people to learn their true potential, to reach their goals, when they're only shown a single path to them. You show them the path through the forest, but what if there's a rock face nearby that also leads up to where they want to go, and what if they happen to be a fantastic rock climber? It just makes more sense to show someone a map if you can, instead of directing them towards only one path.

Official AndreasCY's curator insight, March 30, 2:58 PM

“Learning is most effective when it’s personalised; it means something to the learner. That happens when people feel they are participants and investors in their own learning, shaping what and how they learn, and able to articulate its value to them.” — Leadbeater, Charles

 

Famous Self-Taughts (Autodidacts): Leonardo Da Vinci, William Blake, Herb Rits (in addition to Virginia Woolf, Mark Twain, John D. Rockefeller, and many others)

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SuperCounselor Recommends: The They-Never-Mentioned-This-in-Grad-School Guide to the Most Essential Counseling Tools

SuperCounselor Recommends: The They-Never-Mentioned-This-in-Grad-School Guide to the Most Essential Counseling Tools | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Guest blogging today is our old friend, SuperCounselor, who scolded me mercilessly about not posting more frequently graciously offered to cover for me while I try to keep up with everything that's...

Via Mary Perfitt-Nelson
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Instructional design: from “packaging” to “scaffolding”

Instructional design: from “packaging” to “scaffolding” | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

In my recent posts, The changing role of L&D: from “packaging” to “scaffolding” plus “social capability building” and  Towards the Connected L&D Department I wrote about the need to move from a focus on “packaging” training to “scaffolding” learning,  and I said I would talk more about what “scaffolding” looks like. For me, this is the key way for workplace learning professionals to move the learning industry into the future. In this post I’m going to look at “instructional scaffolding” but in subsequent posts, I will consider “scaffolding performance support &teamcollaboration” in the workplace  as well as “scaffolding professional learning“.

 

The concept of instuctional design is well known. It usually refers to the process of extracting knowledge from Subject Matter Experts, and presenting this content in a logical order for individuals to study. It also involves putting together formative quizzes and summative assessments to test understanding, and presenting this all in the form of courses, workshops, programmes etc. In many cases it is about “packaging” everything up  and delivering this “instructional parcel” to individuals.


Via Susan Bainbridge
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How to Fuel Students’ Learning Through Their Interests | MindShift

How to Fuel Students’ Learning Through Their Interests | MindShift | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

For David Preston, the term “open source learning” — a variation on inquiry learning orpassion-based learning –  is about helping students choose their own learning path, an approach that already has some well-known champions among educators.

“When I think of ‘open source,’ it isn’t about software, but thermodynamic systems,” said Preston, who currently teaches at Ernest Righetti High School in Santa Maria, Calif. “You’re not just exchanging heat, but you’re switching environment and structure.”

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The Question

The Question | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

Good questions are at the heart of good inquiry. They should be higher-order, rich, worthy, essential and/or fertile. They are often open-ended (have no right or wrong answer) but are backed by subsidiary questions which are usually closed. Get the initial question right and the rest of the inquiry flows well.

Young children and those new to inquiry will need help in framing the initial question or problem. The ultimate aim is for them to be able to frame their own questions for inquiry but initially they will need teacher guidance to do this.

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Learning - Schools | Digital Nation | FRONTLINE | PBS

Learning - Schools | Digital Nation | FRONTLINE | PBS | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

Netiquette

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Learners Should Be Developing Their Own Essential Questions

Learners Should Be Developing Their Own Essential Questions | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

Having essential questions drive curriculum and learning has become core to many educators' instructional practices...Although essential questions are powerful advance organizers and curriculum drivers, the problem is that the essential questions are typically developed by the educator not the learners.  The educator may find these questions interesting and engaging, but that does not insure that students will find them as such...

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Moving Beyond Points and Badges: Gamification 2.0 - Gamification Co

Moving Beyond Points and Badges: Gamification 2.0 - Gamification Co | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Gamification has been an extremely popular trend lately but will gamification always going to be just about points and badges? The answer is an emphatic no.
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Understand These 10 Principles of Good Design Before You Start Your Next eLearning Project

Understand These 10 Principles of Good Design Before You Start Your Next eLearning Project | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
If you are a novice to eLearning, it is wise to know a few key principles about eLearning design.
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Brainy Approaches to Learning Infographic | Students at the Center

Brainy Approaches to Learning Infographic | Students at the Center | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Tom Perran's curator insight, March 30, 3:45 PM

This infographic provides the rationale for creating instructional activities centered on the needs of the learner.

Ajaan Rob Hatfield's curator insight, April 1, 12:47 AM

Thank you sharing.

Antonia Rudenstine's curator insight, April 3, 8:09 AM

This infographic goes along with a paper on the mind and learning...it's a great visual summary. The paper is linked at the bottom of the graphic.

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The Qualities of Leadership Required in Distance Education-research paper

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Is Curriculum Thwarting Transformation?

Is Curriculum Thwarting Transformation? | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

My province is currently taking a very close look at curriculum. The reason for this is to ensure that the Program of Study remains responsive and relevant to students as our world continues to change.  Policy makers are committed to designing ”Engaging curriculum that inspires every student, every day.”  They are also calling upon teachers to include learning experiences that build important 21st century competencies such as those I have outline in earlier posts. “These competencies enable students to understand their world, engage fully in their education, relate well to others, manage their lives wisely, and contribute positively to their communities...

Cheryl Frose's insight:

An Alberta perspective: Identifies the number of learner outcomes in each curriulum at each grade level (K - 6) and then factors in the hours of instruction...

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Rescooped by Cheryl Frose from The 21st Century
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12 Most Must Learn SMetiquette Lessons

12 Most Must Learn SMetiquette Lessons | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
Social media professional Mallie Hart gets down to business with the 12 Most Must Learn SMetiquette Lessons.

Via Susan Bainbridge
Elahe Amani's curator insight, March 26, 12:15 PM

A good read for social media professionals ..

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Could there actually be one "C" to rule them all?!

Could there actually be one "C" to rule them all?! | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it

...I am more and more convinced that a single “C” – CONTROL – may prove the bedrock for the development of all those other “Cs.” For in the giving of control, I believe we provide student learners with more opportunities to practice the skills organically and authentically than if we assign them work organized into the seven “Cs.” Through the autonomy of control – motivated by the control of choice – we naturally invest ourselves in those seven “Cs.” When we feel in control, we learn to take control, and we develop our capacities to maintain good control...


Via Tibshirani, kathyvsr
Tibshirani's curator insight, March 21, 6:38 AM

C is for control!

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Practical Steps: How to Help Students Succeed in eLearning

Practical Steps: How to Help Students Succeed in eLearning | 21st C Learning | Scoop.it
eLearning offers students the opportunity to find the right mix of educational tools to help our employees maximize the learning experience.

Via Verena Roberts
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If students designed their own schools...

From the website

 

"The best small town in America experiments with self-directed learning at its public high school. A group of students gets to create their own school-within-a-school and they learn only what they want to learn. Does it work? Charles Tsai finds out by spending a week with the Independent Project."


Via Jim Lerman
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