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cc licensed ( BY ) flickr photo shared by kewl Sometimes I wish that I had more great ideas.
I assume you are one of the millions that are as inspired as I am by “Caine’s Arcade,” the endearing story of a boy who created his dream from the ground up – out of cardboard. Every time I watch these videos, I flash back to my own childhood,...
Facebook is a social utility that connects people with friends and others who work, study and live around them.
flickr image via Scarto In teaching and learning, whether we’re jumping off a cliff, or jumping off a curb, the important thing is that we’re jumping off something.
Via Karen Rockhold
To understand what is going on in Finland, its perhaps important to start not with a snapshot of their test scores and existing education structures but with a historical perspective.
At 17 years old, Nikhil Goyal is shaking up America’s education system. Goyal is a senior at Syosset High School, a public school in New York.
This past week, major news publications featured the voices of two young people who clearly articulate the need of the educational systems to change to better meet their needs - educationally, per...
So much have been written about Bloom’s taxonomy; one click in a search engine will flood your page with hundreds of articles all of which revolve around this taxonomy. Only few are those who have tried to customize it to fit in the 21st century educational paradigm.
Via Andrea Zeitz
Cultures of Thinking: Six Principles
1. Skills are not sufficient; we must also have the disposition to use them. Possessing thinking skills and abilities alone is insufficient for good thinking. One must also have the disposition to use those abilities. This means schools must develop students’ inclination to think and awareness of occasions for thinking as well as their thinking skills and abilities. Having a disposition toward thinking enhances the likelihood that one can effectively use one’s abilities in new situations. 2. The development of thinking and understanding is fundamentally a social endeavor, taking place in a cultural context and occurring within the constant interplay between the group and the individual. Social situations that provide experience in communicating oneĘĽs own thinking as well as opportunities to understand othersĘĽ thinking enhance individual thinking. 3. The culture of the classroom teaches. It not only sets a tone for learning, but also determines what gets learned. The messages sent through the culture of the classroom communicate to students what it means to think and learn well. These messages are a curriculum in themselves, teaching students how to learn and ways of thinking. 4. As educators, we must strive to make students thinking visible. It is only by making thinking visible that we can begin to understand both what and how our students are learning. Under normal conditions, a studentĘĽs thinking is invisible to other students, the teacher, and even to him/herself, because people often think with little awareness of how they think. By using structures, routines, probing questions, and documentation we can make studentsĘĽ thinking more visible toward fostering better thinking and learning. 5. Good thinking utilizes a variety of resources and is facilitated by the use of external tools to “download” or “distribute” oneĘĽs thinking. Papers, logs, computers, conversation, and various means of recording and keeping track of ideas and thoughts free the mind up to engage in new and deeper thinking. 6. For classrooms to be cultures of thinking for students, schools must be cultures of thinking for teachers. The development of a professional community in which deep and rich discussions of teaching, learning, and thinking are a fundamental part of teachersĘĽ ongoing experience provides the foundation for nurturing studentsĘĽ thinking and learning.
I watch my niece finish up an assignment for science class when she said something that is heart breaking for educators. Very sad commentary on how kids view much of what they do in school. How do we change this? Can we? As I reflect on what I know about my kids, it seems things changed once they had a goal that wasn't just "to graduate". If the goal is diffuse and nebulous, then it seems you would be more likely to get responses such as these (UNLESS it was an area of interest OR the teacher was amazingly inspiring). My 19 year old went from being a 16 year old skateboarder who spent most of the time in class listening to headphones to a college kid posting Richard Feynman -The Law of Gravitation on FB. I never saw it coming. He is very engaged now. And NOT because of a future job, but because he is now "turned on" to physics.
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we are often forced to ask students to put their learning on hold … if not stop it all together while they compete for resources. That is a topic for next year. STOP Today’s lesson is on page 43. Turn to that page and do only questions 4 and 5.
Via Jesse Soininen
Kidnap the Teacher: Fundraiser
This was written by George Couros who is Division principal of Innovative Teaching and Learning for Parkland School Division in Alberta, Canada. He is suspiciously well dressed and has the healthiest head of hair I've ever seen.
Core Strategies for Innovation and Reform in Learning
This piece comes to us courtesy of New Haven Independent. When students showed up for report card night at High School in the Community, they didn't get the usual B, C, or D.
Via Jem Muldoon
What’s the Big Idea? What do elementary pedagogy and artificial intelligence have in common? Leaders in both fields have abandoned the study of the trees for that of the forest. From preschool through high school, progressive educators have long advocated for project-based learning as against old-school rote memorization. The goal is transferability of knowledge, as opposed to narrow, domain-based learning. Young children, for example, master the principles of addition faster, and can apply them more broadly, by grouping real-world objects than by manipulating numbers on paper.
A similar shift is happening in the field of artificial intelligence. Scientists are significantly improving machine-thinking by reverse-engineering human cognition. According to Ray Kurzweil, a pioneer in voice recognition technology and the author of How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed, the future of artificial intelligence is in pattern recognition. The basic algorithms of human thought, Kurzweil says, just aren’t that complicated. From an observation about the weather to a sophisticated joke, cognition at every level operates according to a few simple principles. Researchers have gotten lost, he says, in the diversity and complexity of individual neurons and are missing the bigger picture. View the Video: Ray Kurzweil on project-based education Read more...
Via Lynnette Van Dyke
It is important to review the original research. That being said, we need to think about the implications of homework for all students, especially for students with SLD.
Via susan koceski
The evolution of education continues at a staggering pace. This disrupter has the power to: 1. Bring about massive educational change. 2. Engage large groups of students and educators. 3. Create educational environments in the real and virtual world. 4. Design and execute dynamic and interactive learning. 5. Continue the educational evolution and add to the movement. Stay hopeful!
Many teachers use Bloom's Taxonomy and Bloom's Revised Taxonomy in developing and structuring their teaching & learning experiences. Bloom's Digital taxonomy is an attempt to marry Bloom's revised taxonomy and the key verbs to digital approaches and tools.
Via JackieGerstein Ed.D.
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