A growing number of educators are using the microblogging platform Twitter as an easy, low-cost alternative to traditional trainings and conferences.
Via Gust MEES, David Hain, Tom Hood
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Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight,
May 20, 10:15 AM
This article used a lot of catch phrases, but might have some depth. Delete the scoop?
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Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight,
May 10, 7:04 PM
We do need autonomy for teachers and it takes courage for a principal to just let teachers go. Few have it and it is inspiring to read this post. Delete the scoop?
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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) Delete the scoop?
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Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight,
May 13, 6:41 PM
What we see as leaders are often managers. Others are finding a way to convince the world that cliches answer the bell. Delete the scoop?
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Imagine getting all of the key notes of the thought leaders in the conference pushed to you in real time. That is why we love Twitter with our conferences.
We have found twitter to be a great learning augmentation and support tool for conferences and key leanring events. We use a hashtag and then produce a tweetbook post conference and share with attendees. These community notelbooks are great to recap conferences in blog posts, share learning with people unable to attend, and extend the insights from the conferences.