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Taking a Learner-Centered Approach in Online Courses - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  • Know that students have a variety of learning styles. student-centered instruction is not a panacea; some students will, in fact, simply work better with a faculty-centered instruction approach. But the times they are, indeed, changing, and by placing more of the learning process on the students you offer students more options to explore and expand their own learning capabilities.
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    Taking a Learner-Centered Approach in Online Courses
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Topics | Media Education Lab - 0 views

  • case study videos, Schoolhouse-Rock style music videos, as well as our readings, activities and lesson plans
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    Information on Fair Use
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ETAP640amp2013: How am I doing it in this course? And how are you doing it? - 0 views

  • They feel that focusing on these areas of difference rather than learning styles would lead to better teaching and increased learning.
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Differentiating Instruction: Meeting Students Where They Are, Teaching Today, Glencoe O... - 0 views

  • Break assignments into smaller, more manageable parts that include structured directions for each part.
    • lkryder
       
      I see this as critical and that is why I have 1 week modules for my course where the students have more opportunity to - iterative opportunities - to practice and receive feedback on our core concept of analysis of works of art. Smaller chunks and tighter feedback loops have made it possible to create many ways for students to succeed, rather than have them struggle for longer periods of time on the same thing over and over again.
  • Use a variety of assessment strategies, including performance-based and open-ended assessment. Balance teacher-assigned and student-selected projects. Offer students a choice of projects that reflect a variety of learning styles and interests. Make assessment an ongoing, interactive process.
  • Establish stations for inquiry-based, independent learning activities.
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  • Provide access to a variety of materials which target different learning preferences and reading abilities.
  • Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that students learn best when they make connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences, and that the greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance. This point differs for students who are working below grade level and for those who are gifted in a given area.
  • Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that students learn best when they make connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences, and that the greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance. This point differs for students who are working below grade level and for those who are gifted in a given area.
  • Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that students learn best when they make connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences, and that the greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance. This point differs for students who are working below grade level and for those who are gifted in a given area.
  • Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that students learn best when they make connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences, and that the greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance. This point differs for students who are working below grade level and for those who are gifted in a given area.
  • Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that students learn best when they make connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences, and that the greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance. This point differs for students who are working below grade level and for those who are gifted in a given area.
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Size Matters: How Much Reading to Assign (and other imponderables) - Center for Teachin... - 1 views

    • dkiesel
       
      Getting carried away reading other students links and exploring websites assigned for class takes a lot of time. The measurement of what becomes important to the student changes as the student exp[lore. The teacher on the other hand is stagnent with assigned expectations.
  • Similarly, assigning four different articles in one week might mean than they aren’t getting as much as they could out of any of them. Less can be more.
  • Novices and experts. Many of the above points relate to the fact that we read as experts while our students are still novices and are really learning how to read appropriately to build up their expertise.
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  • Keep those calendars in mind.
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    How many assignments are resonable to expect of students to complete
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JP:LCT - Instructor Beliefs Self-Assessment - 0 views

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    thisis a interesting survey to take to see if you are a learner centered teacher.
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Student success in higher education - 0 views

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    Offering early and continual feedback and formative and summative assessment of student progress. In particular, faculty should employ assessment tools that assess students' understanding of course content and learning styles early in the term, and create incentives for students to engage with faculty early and often during the course.
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Writers on writing - 0 views

  • I write to teach myself what I already know. Duane Alan Hahn
  • When once the itch of literature comes over a man, nothing can cure it but the scratching of a pen.  Samuel Lover
  • We do not write because we want to; we write because we have to. Somerset Maugham
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  • Writing is its own reward. Henry Miller
  • Writing is the best way to talk without being interrupted. Jules Renard
  • The first step to becoming a better writer is believing your own experience is worth writing about. Pet
  • The only time I know that something is true is the moment I discover it in the act of writing. Jean Malaquais
  • We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in retrospection. Anais Nin
  • Writing energy is like anything else. The more you put in, the more you get out
  • The skill of writing is to create a context in which other people can think. Edwin Schlossberg
  • Resist the temptation to try to use dazzling style to conceal weakness of substance. Stanley Schmidt
  • Writing is thinking on paper. William Zinsser
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John Dewey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • School and Society (1900), The Child and the Curriculum (1902), Democracy and Education (1916) and Experience and Education (1938). Throughout these writings, several recurrent themes ring true; Dewey continually argues that education and learning are social and interactive processes, and thus the school itself is a social institution through which social reform can and should take place.
  • addition, he bel
  • addition, he be
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  • ieved that students thrive in an environment where they are allowed to experience and interact with the curriculum, and all students should have the opportunity to take part in their own learning.
  • life means to give him command of himself; it means so to train him that he will have the full and ready use of all his capacities” (1897, p. 6).[23] In addition to helping students realize their full potential, Dewey goes on to acknowledge that education and schooling are instrumental in creating social change and reform
  • According to Dewey, the teacher should not be one to stand at the front of the room doling out bits of information to be absorbed by passive students. Instead, the teacher’s role should be that of facilitator and guide.
  • The teacher is not in the school to impose certain ideas or to form certain habits in the child, but is there as a member of the community to select the influences which shall affect the child and to assist him in properly responding to these influences (p. 9)
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    john dewey wikipedia page
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In Defense of the Sage on the Stage: Escaping from the 'Sorcery' of Learnin...: Univers... - 0 views

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    I found this article in the UAlbany library - if the link doesn't work, do a search for "In Defense of the Sage on the Stage" by Marianne Jennings. It's a fascinating article, a long read, but passionate in its insistence that we have gone too far in our efforts to make everything student-centered. Jennings makes the argument that there IS still room for the "brilliant lecturer."
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    "In Defense of the Sage on the Stage" - Marianne Jennings ... a fascinating argument!
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