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in title, tags, annotations or urlBenefits of Project-Based Learning - DEP_pbl_research.pdf - 0 views
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complex, challenging, and sometimes even messy problems that closely resemble real life
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active inquiry and higher-level thinking
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engage students, cut absenteeism, boost cooperative learning skills, and improve academic performance
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Archived: What Are Promising Ways to Assess Student Learning? - 0 views
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New forms of student assessment are designed to demonstrate what students are learning and what they can do with their knowledge. Known variously as "alternative" or "more authentic" measures, these assessments require students to "perform" in some way--by writing, demonstrating, explaining, or constructing a project or experiment--so they are also called "performance-based" tests.
Rubrics as Effective Learning and Assessment Tools Laura Baker - 1 views
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measurable criteria that can be counted or marked as present or not present in the work that is being evaluated.
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This allows the rubric to be used as an ongoing dialog between the teacher and student and allows the student to know when each criterion has been met and then make improvements as needed. (Lockett, 2001)
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Although allowing student involvement in creating rubrics is time consuming, by allowing students a voice in creating their own rubric, the students have more ownership over their own learning and evaluation.
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Salman Khan on Liberating the Classroom for Creativity (Big Thinkers Series) | Edutopia - 0 views
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online lectures can happen at home and project-based learning can happen during school.
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-We learn from our peers - students look at resources or videos, then when they connect with each other, this is when they really get it. -Lecture is taken out of the classroom so that students are free to actually communicate with each other. This increases the potential of what can happen in class. -You need to core toolkit in order to go into the project. These projects help students to internalize the material.
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Project-Based Learning Summer Camp | Edutopia - 0 views
Project-Based Learning | Edutopia - 0 views
ThinkQuest : Website Development Tools - 0 views
News & Events » Marlboro College - 0 views
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Embodied Learning is not the same as, but shares sympathies with Experiential Learning, Project-based learning, Situated Cognition, Embedded Cognition, Monism, Physicalism, Phenomenology and Somatics.
Tech Valley High School - 0 views
Project Zero - 0 views
Differences Between Online and Classroom Teaching - 0 views
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Online teachers must often have all class material prepared and ready for students before the course ever begins.
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In online classes, teachers are not required to be in class at any particular time, but must make themselves available to student questions on a consistent basis throughout each day to insure that students have a consistent resource for learning
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Instructors who conduct classes online have to be more aware of certain teaching techniques and learning outcomes. For example, online teaching classes available through public high school systems as well as postsecondary institutions emphasize the need to facilitate student communication. Because learners aren't communicating in a classroom setting, they need to be able to conduct ongoing dialogue with peers and professors. Teachers may wish to assign group projects or set participation quotas to provide distance-education students with the same sense of community and learning support that classroom-based students experience.
Using Audio Feedback to Promote Teaching Presence - Spectrum Newsletter Spring 2009 - 0 views
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Social presence is defined as, “The ability of participants in the community of inquiry to project their personal characteristics into the community, thereby presenting themselves to the other participants as ‘real people’
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Social presence is the pathway whereby cognitive presence is developed.
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As faculty and students cultivate social presence in a course through meaningful dialogue, deepened analysis and application of course concepts can take place.
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Quest to Learn | Institute of Play - 6 views
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One of our colleagues in this program, Rebecca Grodner, is an English teacher at this school. I was fascinated when she mentioned that the school's philosophy was to reframe failure as iteration. I have made that my personal instructional mantra. She developed the Design Inquiry Cycle and shared this tool for inquiry-based learning in the UAlbany Knilt Wiki. This is the link, http://tccl.rit.albany.edu/knilt/index.php/Lesson_3:_The_Design_Inquiry_Cycle. I plan on using and adaptation of this model in my course's writing module.
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ThinkQuest : Library - 0 views
Virtual Instructional Designer - 0 views
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Description: The Virtual Instructional Designer (VID) is a Learning Anytime Anywhere Partnership (LAAP) grant-funded project to create a Web-based performance tool for post-secondary faculty designing Web-based distance courses. The purpose of the VID is to provide 24/7 desktop access for faculty to instructional design assistance on the process of developing online instruction or courses. Note, must provide an email address to gain access.
SFUSD: How Can You Teach Me If You Don't Know Me? - 0 views
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. No matter what age, we are more likely to listen to someone if we feel we are listened to. And, I believe we are more likely to seek to understand if we feel understood.
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Taking a page from a school project based learning activity known as Community Mapping, Koh and ISA teachers travelled by public transportation to meet ten student volunteers in their neighborhoods, which included Bayview and the Mission as well as Potrero Hill.
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Students reported how much they liked seeing their teachers outside of the classroom. Teachers said that they realized just how easy it can be to keep their students at arms’ length during the school day, and with the real experiences of just spending one day out in their world, that distance is closing.
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Assessment Design and Cheating Risk in Online Instruction - 0 views
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It would be a mistake to minimize the problem of cheating in f2f classes. Four stylized facts emerge from a survey of the literature on cheating in f2f undergraduate courses. First, cheating by college students is considered widespread (McCabe and Drinan 1999). For example, estimates from five studies of college students reporting having cheated at least once during their college career range from 65% to 100% (Stearns 2001), and Whitley (1998) reports an average of 70% from a review of forty-six studies. Second, cheating by college students is becoming more rather than less of a problem. Estimates from five studies of the percentage of college students cheating at least once in their college career have been steadily rising over the period 1940 to 2000 (Jensen, Arnett et al. 2002). A study administered in 1964 and replicated in 1994 focused on the incidence of serious cheating behaviors (McCabe, Trevion et al. 2001). This study reported that the incidence of serious cheating on written assignments was unchanged at 65-66%, but the incidence of serious cheating on exams increased from 39% to 64%. Third, the format of assessment is correlated with cheating. Whitley (1998) reviewed 107 studies of cheating by students over the span of their college courses (published since 1970), and reported that from 10 studies a mean estimate of 47% for cheating by plagiarism, from 37 studies a mean estimate of 43% for cheating on exams, and from 13 studies a mean estimate of 41% for cheating on homework. Fourth, student characteristics of age and GPA are negatively correlated with cheating. Whitley (1998) reviewed 107 studies on college cheating (published since 1970), and found 16 studies reporting a small negative correlation between GPA and cheating and 10 studies reporting a negative correlation between age and cheating.
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In the growing literature about online instruction there are two opposing views on the integrity of assessments. One view is that cheating is as equally likely to occur in the f2f format as in the online format of instruction.
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The alternative view is that proctored exams are the only way to protect the integrity of grades by guaranteeing both that a substitute is not taking the exam and that students are not working together on an exam.
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STUDENT SELF-EVALUATION: WHAT RESEARCH SAYS AND WHAT PRACTICE SHOWS - 1 views
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Self-evaluation is defined as students judging the quality of their work, based on evidence and explicit criteria, for the purpose of doing better work in the future.
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enhanced self-efficacy and increased intrinsic motivation
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Do students self-evaluate fairly? Many teachers, parents, and students believe that if students have a chance to mark their own work they will take advantage, giving themselves higher scores regardless of the quality of their performance. We have found that students, especially older ones, may do this if left to their own devices. But, when students are taught systematic self-evaluation procedures, the accuracy of their judgment improves. Contrary to the beliefs of many students, parents, and teachers, students' propensity to inflate grades decreases when teachers share assessment responsibility and control (Ross, et al., 2000). When students participate in the identification of the criteria that will be used to judge classroom production and use these criteria to judge their work, they get a better understanding of what is expected. The result is the gap between their judgments and the teacher's is reduced. And, by focusing on evidence, discrepancies between teacher and self-evaluation can be negotiated in a productive way.
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