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Victoria Keller

Process vs. Content: Teaching "How" vs. "What" | Autism, Asperger's & Beyond - 0 views

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    Yapko, D. (2010). Process vs. Content: Teaching "How" vs. "What". Psych Central. Retrieved on July 8, 2012, from http://blogs.psychcentral.com/autism-aspergers/2010/10/process-vs-content-teaching-how-vs-what/
Amy M

constrct-vs-trad.jpg (518×471) - 0 views

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    a chart of traditional classrooms vs. constructivitst classroom
Francisca Capponi

comparing-student-performance-in-different-delivery-methods.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    online vs face to face vs blended
Joan Erickson

Teaching College Courses Online vs Face-to-Face -- THE Journal - 0 views

  • bandwidth limitations and the dominance of text
  • can not use their presence and their classroom skills to get their point across. Nor can they use their oral skills to improvise on the spot to deal with behavior problems or educational opportunities.
  • Directions for every assignment must be spelled out in a logical, self-contained way
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  • especially one that began as a face-to-face course, makes the instructor confront and analyze the material in new and different ways.
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    research on online vs classroom teaching plase read, involves SLN instructors
sherrilattimer

ERIC - Teaching Adults: Is It Different? Myths and Realities., 2002 - 0 views

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    Teaching adults should be different if adults learn differently than children do. Theories or perspectives on adult learning, such as andragogy, make a number of assertions about the characteristics of adults as learners. If there are indeed distinctive characteristics of adults, on which claims for the uniqueness and coherence of adult education are based, then one might expect them to be taken into account in all organized education for adults. However, each of these characteristics is contested. Some question the extent to which these assumptions are characteristic of adults only. The literature promotes learner-centeredness as another distinguishing characteristic of adult education. Research indicates learner centeredness is an expression of a teacher's values, not a teaching method. Adult learners are more concerned with teacher character and appropriate teaching methods; adult students' conceptions of good teaching include a mix of teacher-directed and learner-centered characteristics. Ongoing debates--andragogy vs. pedagogy, teacher directed vs. learner centered--may mean no single theory explains how adult learning differs from children's learning. Appropriate choices about teaching practices should be based on numerous considerations, including context, learner knowledge and characteristics, and teacher beliefs and values. (Contains 22 references) (YLB)
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    This is the link to the abstract page of the pdf file for the article.
Kelly Gorcica

http://www.malts.ed.ac.uk/staff/sian/natives_final.pdf - 0 views

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    Study providing evidence that debunks immigrants vs. natives debate. Interesting treatment of the language constructs.
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    digital native vs digital immigrant- stereotypes associated 
Tina Bianchi

Common Core State Standards Initiative | Myths vs. Facts - 0 views

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    Myths vs. Facts about the new Common Core State Standards
Kelly Gorcica

Are You a Digital Native or a Digital Immigrant? - Big Design Events - 0 views

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    Digital native vs. digital immigrant
Kelly Gorcica

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants - Some Thoughts from the Generation Gap - 0 views

  • describe the generation gap separating today's students (the "Digital Natives") from their teachers (the "Digital Immigrants").
  • Digital Natives are used to receiving information really fast. They like to parallel process and multi-task.
  • Prensky's analogy struck a chord for me. I could easily identify with the 12-year-old boy who moves with his family to the "new world," quickly assimilates into the new culture, and learns to speak without an accent.
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  • Prensky argues that the gap between Digital Natives and Digital Immigrants is the fundamental cause of the alleged "decline of education in the US," and he contends that our current educational system has not been designed to serve today's students
  • Digital Immigrants are attempting to teach the Digital Natives with methods that are no longer valid;
  • I find it hard to believe that neurological structures could change to such a dramatic extent from one generation to the next.
  • we may be doing them a disservice to de-emphasize "legacy" content such as reading, writing, and logical thinking, or to say that the methodologies we have used in the past are no longer relevant.
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    digital natives vs digital immigrants
Hedy Lowenheim

Teacher-Centered vs. Student-Centered Pedagogy - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher E... - 1 views

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    "Last week, I had my first peer-to-peer teacher observation as a new assistant professor. After teaching at the college level for 10 years, I felt my teaching and pedagogy were sound, so I wasn't too concerned about being observed by a colleague. In a debriefing after the observed session, my colleague noted that the class seemed to be "teacher-centered." This was not offered as a critique, but simply as a statement. The statement, however, surprised me. I had always seen myself as a "student-centered" type of teacher. Since I teach composition, which is typically a student-centered discipline, I was confused. I wondered if we'd been in the same classroom and witnessed the same interactions or if we were using the same definitions of those often-used terms."
Hedy Lowenheim

» Blackboard vs. Moodle Mary Huffman: ETAP640 reflections blog - 0 views

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    It reminds me of how I always hear mechanics complain about how poorly designed cars are, and how hard to work on. Why aren't the people who have to do the maintenance and work, consulted for the design? It makes me wonder how these platforms are created, and why they turn out to be something we have to fight with and make work, rather than something that really suits our needs. Professor Pickett had mentioned there's something about each LMS that she finds undesirable, I'd be interested to hear comparisons.
Catherine Strattner

Online vs. Face-to-Face Throwdown: Good Teaching Transcends Course Format - Faculty Foc... - 0 views

  • And yet, despite the differences between online teaching and face-to-face teaching, Shibley says the two have a lot more in common than originally believed because, in the end, effective teaching transcends course format.
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    Love this short article about the differences in online and f2f teaching.
Amy M

How courage can help students learn and achieve - 0 views

  • "On some important outcomes (including achievement in literacy and numeracy) courage was as effective an approach as confidence. On other outcomes, confidence was more effective, however, courage was a very close second. So, while we already knew that confidence is linked to positive educational outcomes, this study is significant because it shows that courage is also an educationally effective response - particularly in the face of fear and anxiety.
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    Confidence vs. courage
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