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Scooped by Lynnette Van Dyke onto college and career ready |
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From
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March 1, 6:55 PM
Encourage Students to Observe, Reflect and Question
The interactive Primary Source Analysis Tool from the Library of Congress allows users to choose the format of their document, artifact or other source from a pull-down menu and, depending on that choice, offers a series of contextual prompts for closer reading and analysis. Students can use the tool to record their responses to a primary source, and if they need guidance, they can use the sample questions. In addition, they can go back and forth between the columns; there is no correct order to analyze the source. Click Here to Access Free Tool
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From
www.mathrecap.com
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Today, 10:11 AM
Skip Fennell, Jon Wray, and Beth Kobett (who was absent for this presentation) are the leads on the Elementary Mathematics Specialists & Teacher Leaders Project. As the name implies, the focus ... Via Mel Riddile
Mel Riddile's curator insight,
Today, 9:55 AM
Math Resources:
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From
blogs.edweek.org
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Today, 8:39 AM
The American Educational Research Association is joining the ranks of open-access research with a new journal, AERA Open, expected to begin publishing early next year.
Lynnette Van Dyke's insight:
AERA To Add Open-Access Research Journal Posted: 22 May 2013 11:29 AM PDT The American Educational Research Association is joining the ranks of open-access research with a new journal, AERA Open, expected to begin publishing early next year. It does not yet have an editor. "Scientific societies are rethinking how to widen access to knowledge," said Felice Levine, AERA'a executive director, in a statement on the journal. "We are eager to experiment with change that is valuable and sustainable." Open access may help to get study findings to educators faster, thus making them more relevant to policy and practice decisions. The new AERA journal also will incorporate access to supplemental information for articles, including: measurement instruments and protocols, video and audio recordings, and interactive data tables. Open access is looking more and more like the future of research publishing; one study found 17 percent of the 1.66 million articles published in 2011 were published in this way. Earlier this spring, AERA voiced support but also some concerns about President Obama's policy directive requiring all federal agencies that spend at least $100 million on research and development (including both the Institute of Education Sciences and the National Science Foundation) and to make plans to disseminate the results of that research publicly. And the bipartisan Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act floating in Congress would require open access for all federally funded research. "Professors, teachers, and students need access to the newest research findings in order to keep the United States in the forefront as the leader of scientific research and development globally," said Rosanne Aversa, a librarian at Curry College in Milton, Mass., wrote in response to the President's open-access initiative. "As more and more high-quality, cutting-edge research is published in electronic versions only, we risk restricting this knowledge to a limited few who are affiliated with institutions that can afford subscriptions to expensive databases if we do not publish publicly." While open access definitely makes it cheaper and easier for educators to keep up with current research, it might also make publishing harder on the researchers themselves during tight budget times. Like most open-access journals, AERA Open will follow a different publishing model from subscription-based journals, charging researchers fees of $400-$700 for each article accepted, with fees waived for researchers in nations with low-income economies. "I think open access is a terrific idea—in theory," said Matthew Gibson, director of digital programs at the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, in a separate comment submitted on the President's open-access initiative. "Where it runs aground is where digital projects/publications have a mandate both to be open access AND self-sustaining (i.e. have a business model that can support daily and expanded operating costs). I don't know what the answer is but perhaps forcing all digital programs into granting open access to their final product has unfortunate consequences as far as making sure that the content produced today will still be available tomorrow." So, here's a question to education researchers out there: What do you think of open-access publishing? Would you be willing to pay fees for publication in AERA Open in order to get your findings to more educators faster? - Sarah D. Sparks
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From
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May 20, 5:10 PM
Interactive tools and multimedia content are prompting teachers to take on more of a coaching or guiding role in the classroom. Delete the scoop?
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A group called Blue Engine that places recent college graduates as full-time teaching assistants in a few public high schools is showing promising results. Delete the scoop?
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Lynnette Van Dyke's insight:
House and Senate Panels Talk ESEA Renewal
Senate Education Committee Chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA) plans to move forward with Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) reauthorization in early June, encouraging educators who had been wondering when and whether his committee would take action on the long-overdue update to the nation’s main federal education law. However, the effort is likely be a partisan affair without Republican support. Beginning in January, Harkin regularly met with Senator Lamar Alexander (TN), the panel’s top Republican, to discuss specifics of the law. Unfortunately, their talks ground to a halt over the fundamental issue of student performance targets. Harkin would prefer to require states to set student achievement goals, as some states now do under the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waivers. Alexander views such a requirement as too much federal intrusion. Meanwhile, a recent hearing before the House education committee that was billed as a forum on federal education accountability turned into a discussion about the priorities for reauthorizing ESEA and revealed that the partisan divide that ruled House committee action last year continues to do so today. Committee Chairman John Kline (R-MN) promised that the committee would address the law’s rewrite “in the coming months,” possibly moving a bill to the House floor by the end of summer. The committee’s ranking Democrat, Representative George Miller (CA), also expressed some optimism, but questions from other committee members indicate that they will, once again, struggle with a range of opposing priorities, from equity to college and career readiness to parental choice. Delete the scoop?
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From
edudemic.com
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May 20, 4:03 PM
A year-long report is out and it details how teachers and students are taking to blended learning - what's working and what's not. Via Bryan Hartsig, Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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Will new Republican efforts against on the Common Core State Standards destroy the bipartisanship that got them approved in more than 45 states? Via DT Hernandez, Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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Links to CC-related material from Booklist and its related sites, blogs, and newsletters. Via Mary Clark, Kim Muncie, Les Howard
Mary Clark's curator insight,
May 5, 5:04 PM
Useful information, especially for library staff analyzing their existing collection for books for teachers to use with CCSS lessons. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.middleweb.com
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May 20, 4:00 PM
The Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) has released a draft accommodations manual that provides the types of accommodations that may be applied to support students with ... Via Darren Burris, Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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Here's five PD essentials to support teachers in transitioning to close reading and the Common Core. Via ratzelster, Les Howard
ratzelster's curator insight,
May 6, 5:49 PM
These are fantastic PD workshop trainer tips. I think my fav was "Teachers don't want abstract theory. They want ideas they can use in the classroom. Model the strategies, don't just talk about them". Right on. It's not that I don't think we want theories.....I think we don't want a solely theories kind of training.
CTL- VBCPS's curator insight,
May 14, 10:21 AM
This supports our favorite quote- If you are not modeling what you are teaching, then you are teaching something else!
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From
catlintucker.com
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May 20, 3:58 PM
My students are constructing digital portfolios as a culminating celebration of their work that will be published and shared with a wider audience than the traditional paper portfolios constructed in the past. Via Darren Burris, Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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From
www.freep.com
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May 20, 3:58 PM
Because the federal government has incentivized adoption of the core standards with grant money, through its Race to the Top program and waivers from some provisions of No Child Left Behind, right-wing ideologues claim common core is a federal... Via Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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"Teenagers are revealing more about themselves on social media than ever before, but they’re also taking more steps to protect their privacy online, according to “Teens, Social Media, and Privacy,” a May 21 report issued by Pew Internet, part of the Pew Research Center, and Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. The report also found Twitter use among teens—especially African Americans—is rising, while teens’ fondness for Facebook is on the decline." Via EDTC@UTB Delete the scoop?
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The Common Core State Standards are inexorably coming to the 46 states and the District of Columbia, which have approved them. We've heard pros and cons of them in previous posts but here's a broader look at what they may mean for public education. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.edweek.org
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May 20, 5:09 PM
This special report, part of Education Week’s ongoing series on virtual education, examines examines how technological trends are changing teaching and learning. Delete the scoop?
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From
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May 20, 5:05 PM
All that time cutting paper and tracing shapes helps young pupils master math later on, according to new research. Via Jamie Steiner, Ed.D. Delete the scoop?
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Vocabulary at the Core: Teaching the Common Core State Standards, by Amy Benjamin and John T. Crow, is the definitive guide for every teacher engage... Via Mel Riddile, Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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From
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May 20, 4:03 PM
Response: Ways To Develop Creative Thinking In The Common CoreBy Larry Ferlazzo on May 5, 2013 11:05 PM
Mary Jo Groeneveld asked: What are some tools teachers can use to address new common core standards while developing creative thinking? Teachers are in a constant vice grip of time with too much curriculum to cover with unrealistic differentiation expectations for ever increasing numbers of students. They have a hard time justifying the time needed to move away from focused cognition. Do you have a collection of quick techniques, "tools" that teachers can insert easily, thus successfully into their structured, fast paced test and retest and report data regimen? Today, three author educators -- Amy Benjamin, Ben Curran, and Heather Wolpert-Gawron -- have contributed guest responses to Mary Jo's question. Readers might also find these resources helpful: Response: Best Ways to Prepare Our Students for CCSS in Language Arts Response: 'How on Earth Will I Implement' Common Core for Language Arts? Response: Ways To Try Using The CCSS With English Language Learners Response: Several Ways We Can Help Students Develop Their Creativity Response From Amy Benjamin
First, let's thumbnail the Common Core. Its literacy standards cluster around three main ideas: 1) Text-based answers to reading comprehension questions, 2) Source-based writing, and 3) Academic vocabulary. Where is there room, then, for creative thinking? Although the Common Core decidedly calls for less narrative writing, it certainly does not eliminate the classroom staples of having students write stories, either fiction or memoir. At the elementary level, we are working toward a 50/50 balance between informational and narrative writing; at the secondary level, English language arts classes retain the narrative writing component for about 20% of the writing curriculum. And the few secondary teachers who have always used creative writing as a means for learning content outside of English class, there's no reason for them to discontinue that practice. Excellent teachers in all subject areas have long recognized the value of having students process, extend, and remember facts and figures by creative language activities such as skits, creative writing, and word play. Academic vocabulary, foundational to both comprehension and production of academic text, offers lots of opportunities for creative thinking. Here are three tools for accelerating language acquisition: 1. Word games: Word games are great for generating language profusion, flexibility, and the repeated exposure that is so necessary moving words from receptive ("I know it when I hear or read it.") to productive ("I use it in my own speech and writing.") On my website you can find (free) classroom-ready puzzles that recruit the words from the Academic Word List (Coxhead). 3. Metaphorical thinking: "It is the greatest thing by far to be a master of metaphor." So said Aristotle in his Poetics (350 B.C.E.). Metaphor-making is the embodiment of creative thinking, as a metaphor is, by definition, a new combination, a new perspective that ingeniously brings together the salient elements of two disparate things. We can ask students to explain, in speech or writing, their understandings of newly learned concepts and definitions by devising a metaphor and then explaining its aptness. Creative and analytical thinking are not mutually exclusive. We should work to make them mutually supportive to engage the whole brains of our students.
Ben Curran is a K-5 instructional coach at a charter school in Detroit, Michigan. He is also co-founder of Engaging Educators, co-author of Learning in the 21st Century. Follow him on Twitter @engaginged:
There is one writing anchor standard that jumps out as well suited for developing students' creative thinking--anchor standard six: "Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing and to interact and collaborate with others." Several tools exist that would enable students to not only meet this standard, but express themselves in creative ways. Two of my favorites are blogs and wikis. Both are easy to use and free. With blogging, students are able to easily write the persuasive, informational, and narrative pieces called for by the standards. However, the added element of a potential global audience can be highly motivational. For students younger than 13, I love what KidBlog.org has to offer. For students old enough for a gmail account, Blogger is a very user-friendly option. (Check out this post for more details about blogging with students.) Here's where the creative thinking comes in: student bloggers should be challenged to design a blog that will appeal to their audience. This involves visual design and content. Asking "What makes a blog attractive to readers?" can push students to think carefully about the writing their publishing and thus raise the quality of their work. Wikis, websites that are easy to create collaboratively, allow for creative thinking, as well. A site such as wikispaces allows educators to create student accounts. Within no time, students will be building their own web pages, which can integrate video and images along with text and other plug-ins. I've enjoyed great success having students as young as fourth grade build wikis that serve as electronic portfolios for all of their digital projects. Wikis also can be used collaboratively, with multiple students building pages together. Both blogs and wikis not only provide an avenue for student creativity, but they enable students to meet Common Core Standards as well.
Heather Wolpert-Gawron is a middle school teacher in San Gabriel, CA and author of 'Tween Crayons and Curfews:Tips for Middle School Teachers:
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Empower students with a critical skill at the heart of the CCSS: Reading complex texts closely to analyze textual details and deepen understanding Via Darren Burris, Mary Clark, Les Howard
Kim Muncie's curator insight,
May 6, 9:36 AM
Reading units grades 6-12 with great non-fiction texts! Delete the scoop?
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3 Reasons that the CCSS Should Make Content Teachers Rejoice » Teaching the Core | Teaching the Core http://t.co/TGgEpEspj2 Via Mary Clark, Les Howard
Mary Clark's curator insight,
April 11, 3:34 PM
I take issue with Dave's statement that he's not a CCSS expert. His blog provides excellent examples of how to implement standards, as well as thoughtful analysis of the standards, all with enough humor to make your reading enjoyable. Delete the scoop?
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From
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May 20, 3:58 PM
MLive.com Via Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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15 Wrong Ways to Implement the Common Core http://t.co/XQMPJs7Ecy via @coolcatteacher Via Les Howard Delete the scoop?
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