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Danielle Melia

EBSCOhost: Training for faculty who teach online - 0 views

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    The development and progress of distance education through online technologies has grown over the past ten years. Though community colleges across the United States have seen the largest increase, are its faculty members prepared to teach online? The following study examines strategies administrators may use to train faculty who teach online courses at the community college level.
Lisa Martin

Online Schooling Grows, Setting Off a Debate - 0 views

  • Half a million American children take classes online, with a significant group, like the Weldies, getting all their schooling from virtual public schools.
    • Lisa Martin
       
      I didn't realize this many children in America were already taking online classes.
  • Florida Virtual School, the largest Internet public school in the country, more than 50,000 students are taking courses this year
  • About 90,000 children get their education from one of 185 such schools nationwide.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • full-time online charter school like the Wisconsin Virtual Academy
  • opposition from some educators, who say elementary students may be too young for Internet learning, and from teachers, unions and school boards, partly because they divert state payments from the online student's home district.
    • Lisa Martin
       
      My charter school faces the same opposition.
  • Legally, they are considered public school students, not home-schoolers, because their online schools are taxpayer-financed and subject to federal testing requirements.
  • They are publicly financed, mostly elementary and middle schools.
  • ''That's what I love most about this curriculum,'' Mrs. Weldie said. ''There's no reason for Isabel to practice counting if she can already add.''
    • Lisa Martin
       
      True individualization of instruction.
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    This article discuss fully online public elementary schools and the opposition from school districts.
Danielle Melia

EBSCOhost: Evaluation of Synchronous Online Tutoring for Students at Risk of Reading F... - 0 views

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    Evaluation of Synchronous Online Tutoring for Students at Risk of Reading Failure This study examined the effects of online reading instruction for at-risk fourth-grade students in Philadelphia. The authors used a multiple baseline design to assess the extent to which the students increased their oral reading rate given systematic supplemental online reading instruction. Tutoring consisted of 4 sessions per week with 50-min lessons of instruction delivered over Adobe ConnectTM. Analysis of the multiple baseline across participants revealed gains in oral reading fluency for all participants when placed into the synchronous online tutoring program. Participating students and tutors reported an awareness of increased reading skills and value of synchronous online instruction. Teachers and parents generally reported that students demonstrated increased reading skills after receiving instruction.
Maria Guadron

EBSCOhost: Nudging toward Inquiry: Build a Culture of Questioning--Add Learning Pizazz... - 0 views

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    "The article presents ways to prepare and put some pizzazz into the science fair. Such ways include the need to provide examples of science fair projects to students, one that is not so good and the other one that is good. It notes that a question contest be conducted in a library and awards be given not only to the best project but also to the best question."
Julie DelPapa

Unity in the Elementary School classroom:building community - 0 views

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    study about elementary class community and how it relates to learning
Maria Guadron

EBSCOhost: Evaluation of a collaborative multimedia conflict resolution curriculum - 0 views

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    "This article describes the development and evaluation of STARstreams, a pilot effort to utilize videos and online discussions in a conflict resolution curriculum that acknowledges the inherent socio-personal aspects of conflict. " - 5th and 6th graders
Joan McCabe

Learning Styles and Student Perceptions of the Use of Interactive Online Tu... - 0 views

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    Study done on learning modalities and learning styles and their affect if any on perceived learning and participation in the online learning environment as supplemented to an f2f class. Describes online interactive multimedia resources as appealing to different learning styles.
alexandra m. pickett

ETAP640amp2012: How am I doing it in this course? And how are you doing it? - 0 views

  • That brings me to my first question for Alex: Was our reaction typical? In other words, do students normally begin the course feeling the way we were feeling? 
  • Were the VoiceThread introductions and the “opening” of the course two weeks prior to the actual start date a means for getting some specific information about who we would be as your students? Also, did you use this information to make any alterations to the course?
    • alexandra m. pickett
       
      Opening the course 2 weeks before is a good practice on a number of fronts... one it gives the early birds something to do, it helps students work through technical difficulties prior to the start of the course, it helps students decide if the course is for them AND it gives me some preliminary view of the students who may be part of the class community that term. It also really helps me prep by knowing what the background is of the students, what their expectations are, and what their disciplines are. I can begin to collect and tag resources based on the interests, expectations, and disciplines of the students.
Tina Bianchi

Peace Education and Paulo Freire's Method: Towards the Democratisation of Teaching and... - 0 views

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    This article explores the application of Paulo Freire's methodological concerns.
Tina Bianchi

Empowering Homeless Children Through School Counseling - 0 views

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    Discusses the roles schools play in ensuring that all students, including those who are homeless, have access to public education.
Danielle Melia

EBSCOhost: The Relationship between Flexible and Self-Regulated Learning in Open and D... - 0 views

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    Flexibility in learning provides a student room for volitional control and an array of strategies and encourages persistence in the face of difficulties. Autonomy in and control over one's learning process can be seen as a condition for self-regulated learning. There are a number of categories and dimensions for flexible learning; following professional publications, time, location, lesson content, pedagogy method, learning style, organization, and course requirements are all elements to consider. Using these categories and the dimensions of flexible learning, we developed and validated a questionnaire for an open and distance learning setting. This article reports on the results from a study investigating the relationship between flexible learning and self-regulated learning strategies. The results show the positive effects of flexible learning and its three factors, time management, teacher contact, and content, on self-regulated learning strategies (cognitive, metacognitive, and resource-based). Groups that have high flexibility in learning indicate that they use more learning strategies than groups with low flexibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Tina Bianchi

The Relationship of Social Presence and Interaction in Online Classes - 0 views

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    A study of social presence in online courses
Danielle Melia

EBSCOhost: Improving instruction as a team - 0 views

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    The writer discusses an innovative teacher certification program offered through Voyager Expanded Learning and the University of North Texas that models a new way of teaching and learning with technology at the core. With online curriculum, differentiated instruction, project-based learning, and team learning at its heart, the program aims to improve the quality of instruction by providing a model of learning that was not available when the majority of current classroom teachers received training.
Diana Cary

EBSCOhost: The importance of course design, feedback, and facilitation: student percep... - 0 views

  • Students felt critical thinking was positively influenced when an instructor designed an organized course with clear goals and relevant assignments, provided direct feedback that was encouraging, timely, and specific, and actively facilitated discussions that kept everyone focused and participating at a meaningful level.
Diana Cary

EBSCOhost: Teacher's Role in Students-Centered English Intensive Reading Class in Chin... - 0 views

  • new students-centered pattern by which students are the main body of the class and the owner of their learning
  • the roles of the teacher, instead of as a controller and a dominant, should be played fully as a manager and an organizer
Daniel Hacker

EBSCOhost: Ditch the calculators - 0 views

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    Many teachers as well as students insist, ``Why shouldn't we use calculators? They'll always be around, and we'll never do long division in real life.'' This may be true. It's also true of most math. Not many of us need to figure the circumference of a circle or factor a quadratic equation for any practical reason. But that's not the sole purpose of teaching math. We teach it for thinking and discipline, both of which expand the mind and increase the student's ability to function as a contributing individual in society: the ultimate goals of education.
abeukema

Experience the world like a hawk, rat or bee in 3D game - tech - 06 December 2013 - New... - 0 views

  • Schmidt-Morand is especially curious about horses' vision: since their eyes are at the side of their head, they can see what's in front of them, beside them and behind them. Although it would be difficult to recreate this on a screen, it could be possible in a virtual reality room. "It's impossible for me to imagine what this view would even look like," says Schmidt-Morand.
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