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Marijo Emond

Créer des images interactives avec "Images Actives" - 0 views

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    Présentation du logiciel image active
Nathalie Frigon

21st Century Learning Design - 0 views

  • Analyze and 'code' learning activities to see how deeply they integrate 21st century skills Collaborate in designing new learning activities that provide deeper 21st century skills development Examine the impact of these learning activities on students' work Use ICT as part of the process
  • 21st Century Learning Design is based on the way ITL Research studies and measures innovative teaching practices. 21st Century Learning Design asks teachers and school leaders to
  • Teachers review the 21CLD rubrics that define each 21st century skill (e.g. 'problem solving'); Then they analyze and code an existing learning activity (lesson) according to one rubric (for example, does a science project on cell structure score a 2 or a 4 on the "problem solving" rubric?); They review student work done as a response to the lesson and code it; Then they refine the lesson to have a higher score on the problem solving rubric – providing students with more in-depth opportunities to develop this skill. They follow this same process across many different rubrics, lessons and student work products.
Marijo Emond

Les TêtesActiv - YouTube - 0 views

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    vidéos ressources TBI Activ
Nathalie Frigon

How to implement studio teaching? - 0 views

  • approach to teaching and learning that gets students actively engaged in directing their own learning
  • This can, if the instructor desires, lead to discussions (with students) about the nature of knowledge and learning (epistemology). Some studio classes have significant focus on metacognition. Students may keep learning portfolios. Portfolios and other things allow them to analyze their thinking and learning skills and so better develop good habits of the mind that will guide them in the future.
  • Expectations must be clear
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  • The goal of studio teaching is to get students to be active learners
  • Instructors serve as guides or mentors
  • no lecturing at all
  • in response to specific student needs
  • develop a collection of exercises/projects that will provide the focus for learning throughout the semester.
Jean Filion

Analyse de la nature constructiviste d'une activité d'apprentissage collabora... - 1 views

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    Intéressant pour les enseignants de sciences de la classe PECT.
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    Nous examinons un exemple de travail et d'apprentissage collaboratif avec les TIC en sciences afin d'en analyser les caractéristiques et déterminer si elles répondent aux critères d'une activité de nature constructiviste. Nous retenons que le constructivisme met l'élève au cœur de son apprentissage; s'oppose à la transmission de savoirs; requiert une participation active de l'apprenant qui construit et reconstruit, individuellement et collectivement, des savoirs pratiques afin de résoudre un problème ou réaliser un projet. À la lumière de ces critères, nous concluons qu'une activité comme celle du projet TACTICS peut être considérée de nature constructiviste.
Marijo Emond

TEC-VARIETY by Curtis J. Bonk and Elaine Khoo - 0 views

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    "ADDING SOME TEC-VARIETY : 100+ Activities for Motivating and Retaining Learners Online" version PDF du livre numérique : gratuit
Marijo Emond

[Tutoriel iOS] Protéger ses notes et activer le mode nuit sous iOS 9.3 - 0 views

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    Présentation de deux nouveautés: protection des notes par mot de passe et mode Nuit (IOS 9.3)
Nathalie Frigon

Teaching Strategies | CRLT - 1 views

  • General Resources Active learning Inclusive teaching Teaching styles Teaching resources listed by discipline Instructional technology Teaching Settings and Modes Case-based teaching Clinical teaching Discussion-based teaching Experiential learning and field work Group work and teamwork Lab Teaching Large classes and lectures Online teaching Service Learning Teaching with archival, botanical, and museum collections
Nathalie Frigon

Dutice- UV6a - Partie IV.3: Le cognitivisme pédagogique - © UTE - février 2001 - 1 views

  • découverte active par l'élève des principes et des concepts à maîtrise
  • double bénéfice: d'une part, elle permet une maîtrise plus profonde des contenus qui font l'objet de l'apprentissage d'autre part, elle développe chez l'élève certaines démarches de pensée qui lui permettront par la suite d'être plus autonome dans son apprentissage (apprendre à apprendre).
  • pour être efficace, l'apprentissage par découverte doit répondre à certaines conditions. Tout d'abord l'élève doit être préparé à ce type d'apprentissage à travers la capacité à mettre en œuvre certaines stratégies spécifiques telles que: récolter et sélectionner des informations, se poser des questions, identifier les variables pertinentes, tester des hypothèses…Ensuite, il doit être guidé en cours d'apprentissage
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  • étayage
  • scaffolding) pour désigner ce soutien apporté à l'élève en cours d'apprentissage.
  • courant cognitiviste
  • structure des contenu
  • le curriculum en spirale" basé sur le fait que les mêmes notions peuvent être présentées à l'élève à différents moments de sa scolarité pour autant qu'on prenne soin d'utiliser des modalités de représentation adapté
  • tiendra compte de ce que le sujet connaît déjà, des types de stratégies d'apprentissage qu'il privilégiera mais aussi du niveau d'intégration des apprentissages que l'on souhaite atteindre
Marijo Emond

Socio-constructivisme, base théorique des pédagogies actives et collaborative... - 0 views

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    tableau comparatif : Piaget et Vygotsky ( et autre...) sur un site: webzine du social learning et de l'innovation pédagogique.
Marijo Emond

Gesturing to Learn | District Administration Magazine - 0 views

  • For special education students, playing virtual guitars helps with fine-motor skills. Autistic students, tasked with navigating a virtual raft down a virtual river with their classmates, practice cooperation, social skills and overcoming obstacles.
  • helps English language learners who struggle with reading
  • teachers reporting that students are more interested in lessons and that their comprehension has improved
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  • “When they started using these technologies, they started telling in detail to their parents the activities that they accomplished in school,”
  • autism spectrum, who struggle with social skills. The students create avatars, digital versions of themselves, and then articulate a story about one of their social challenges—and their plans for coping with it in the future.
  • In one of the videos, 10-year-old Trevar Grisham, a high-functioning student on the autism spectrum, discusses his tendency to lose focus in class. “I am responsible for hearing the directions and paying attention and doing my work,” Trevar said while making a video last year as a fourth-grader. “To be sure this happens, I will do a better job of concentrating when the teacher is teaching.”
  • “This is a great way to get the child to really pay attention and to get that social-skills training. It’s just been phenomenal.
  • At Weller Elementary, where Popa works, teachers incorporate the technology into lessons in math, reading, social studies, science, music and physical education. For example, as students simulate playing darts, they count their tosses and hits, then calculate fractions, percentages and decimals. In physical education, students barely realize they’re exercising as they mimic digital dancers.
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    Exemples d'utilisation de la kinect en classe
Nathalie Frigon

UNESCO Office in Bangkok: Innovative Teaching and Learning (ITL) research: A global loo... - 0 views

  • To address this gap, the 3-year ITL (Innovative Teaching and Learning) Research project was designed to study teaching practices that support students’ learning of 21st century skills and the system of supports that can help teachers to adopt those practices. The research was carried out in a uniquely diverse set of seven countries:  Austr
  • The learning activities make a difference
  • ICT has great potential for supporting innovative pedagogies, but it is not a magic ingredient.
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  • Important school-level supports tend to be present in schools with higher concentrations of innovative teaching.
  • Coherent systemic support is also essential
  • The methods and findings from this research have resulted in a new professional development program called 21CLD (21st Century Learning Design). This hands-on program offers an accessible set of research-grounded definitions, rubrics and examples to help teachers recognize and strengthen the 21st century learning opportunities that their lessons offer to students. For each skill, the program expands the depth of these opportunities – not just can students work together, but are they really building the skills they need to collaborate substantively and successfully with other people? 21CLD also helps build a common language among teachers within a school, and provides a framework for the collaboration and other supports that can begin to bridge the gap between the rhetoric of 21st century learning and the real skills students will need for success in this changing world.
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    Comment aligner les programmes, les moyens, l'intégration TIC et les modèles dans un développement professionnel continu?
Nathalie Frigon

How Do We Know When Students Are Engaged? | Edutopia - 0 views

  • You see students individually or in small groups... Reading critically (with pen in hand) Writing to learn, creating, planning, problem solving, discussing, debating, and asking questions) Performing/presenting, inquiring, exploring, explaining, evaluating, and experimenting) Interacting with other students, gesturing and moving
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    Comment peut-on reconnaitre un élève actif?
Marijo Emond

Flipped Classroom A New Learning Revolution - 0 views

  • Flipped Classroom is an inverted method of instruction where teaching and learning take place online outside of the class while  homework is done in the classroom
  • Flipped Classroom shifts the learning responsibility and ownership  from the teacher's hands  into the students'.  Students tend to perform better when they control when, where and how they learn. Teachers no longer dispense knowledge but rather guide and direct while students are the real active learners  Teachers create animated videos and interactive lessons and lectures and students access them at home in advance of class even. In this way all students can re-watch the video tutorials whenever they want. Classroom time can be geared towards data collection, collaboration, and application. Class becomes a place for students to work through problems, advance concepts, and engage in collaborative learning. Flipped Classroom also "allows teachers to reflect on and develop quality and engaging learning opportunities and options for internalization, creation, and application of content rather than just fluff or time filling assignments."
  • A direct and concrete example of Flipped Classroom concept is the popular Khan Academy. This website  has completely reshaped home instruction via providing more than 2800 free videos and tutorials available in 16 languages and covering a wide range of topics such as Math, Physics, Geometry, cosmology, microeconomics and many more
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