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Sheri Edwards

5 Excellent Web Tools For Giving Students Narrative Feedback - 0 views

  • Diigo as a social bookmarking
  • tool for meaningful narrative feedback
  • Students can bookmark and annotate websites
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  • teachers can comment on this content.
    • Sheri Edwards
       
      Students can read each paragraph and then add a note summarizing the main idea. Check and comment for student understanding. Students can highlight for own research, then write a private note IN THEIR OWN WORDS as a draft for their project. Teach can comment on their choice and content.
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    Diigo is one
Sheri Edwards

Beyond Rigor - Hybrid Pedagogy - 1 views

  • What is rigorous, then, is not process but our curious examination of the (unforeseen, unexpected) results and their effectiveness.
  • Engaged: Meaningful work
  • Critical: We can’t be afraid to critique our own circumstances, our own context.
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  • Dynamic
  • Better that we model our passion to know something thoroughly than to merely transmit content or knowledge.
  • Curious: A rigorous curiosity underpins the most fruitful work scholars do.
  • attentive and alive, responsive
  • Derivative
  • a resolution to the inquiry
  • a series of iterative experiments.
  • Cormier suggests rhizomatic education — constructing and negotiating community knowledge through a series of interdependent nodes — as a pedagogical solution within quickly changing fields of information. In other words, by connecting to each other, no matter our expertise or station, knowledge grows.
  • We may provide the content, but this is no different today than scattering LEGOs on a table: what happens next is not up to us
  • from a traditional model of schooling to one more compatible with the realities of the digital landscape. Experimentation, inquiry, and play are both the research tools we must use to create online and hybrid classrooms, and also the methodologies best employed within those classrooms.
  • Testing and canonical content are less vital to the new media landscape than interactivity, play, and relevant application.
  • that students “show up,” be curious, collaborate, and contribute.
  • The digital has reminded us that learning happens unexpectedly, and so should our approach to learning be unexpectant. We must return play to education, to pedagogy, and to all scholarly practice.
  • Field Notes for 21st Century Literacies: This book was produced by graduate students in a course with Cathy N. Davidson. The text of the work is itself rigorous, but what we find most intensely rigorous is the way the reader is brought into the book’s ongoing creation through simultaneous publishing on communal platforms like Rap Genius, HASTAC, GitHub, and Google Docs.
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    "The digital has reminded us that learning happens unexpectedly"
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