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John Evans

Designing a School Makerspace | Edutopia - 4 views

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    A makerspace is not solely a science lab, woodshop, computer lab or art room, but it may contain elements found in all of these familiar spaces. Therefore, it must be designed to accommodate a wide range of activities, tools and materials. Diversity and cross-pollination of activities are critical to the design, making and exploration process, and they are what set makerspaces and STEAM labs apart from single-use spaces. A possible range of activities might include: Cardboard construction Prototyping Woodworking Electronics Robotics Digital fabrication Building bicycles and kinetic machines Textiles and sewing
John Evans

Summer Reading List: 5 Books on Professional Development | Edutopia - 2 views

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    "The summer is almost here. If you are like most educators, this is when you find the time to read your "teacher books" and learn about all those exciting strategies and resources that will give your classroom a fresh look in the fall. Here are five books that are worth a look."
John Evans

Tissue Paper Hot Air Balloon Construction and Launching - Learning is Messy - 1 views

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    "Tissue paper hot air balloons are one of those powerful STEM learning experiences that lend themselves so well to being cross-curricular."
John Evans

You Want Ideas? We Have Ideas! « Cooperative Catalyst - 3 views

  • November 22, 2010 has been declared a Day of National Blogging for Real Education Reform, promoted by AASA andASCD. ASCD has gathered 10 articles, in advance of Monday’s Day of National Blogging, in The New Faces of Ed Reformthat discuss reforming education with teachers as leaders and partners in meaningful, lasting change.
John Evans

The Way of the Wiki: Building Online Creativity and Cooperation | Edutopia - 0 views

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    A simple, cheap technology with a funny name will become an even more powerful portal into creative teaching and learning this year. Educators, if you haven't already, meet the wiki.
Darren Kuropatwa

Stephen Downes: The Role of the Educator - 10 views

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    "As each part of the teaching task becomes more complex, and as we as educators seek to reach more specialized populations in more difficult circumstances, the need to understand, and where necessary unbundle, the varied roles of the educator becomes more pressing. A narrow focus on the idea of the teacher as "the purveyor of an education" is unhelpful and misleading."
John Evans

Tutorials - Cooperative Library Instruction Project - 3 views

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    Digital literacy resources available under a CC license, a mixed bag of stuff
Phil Taylor

Please Stop Thinking About Tomorrow : Stager-to-Go - 1 views

  • Suggestions for school improvement: smaller classes a curriculum related to real life better teacher education teachers make room in the curriculum for the folk-tales of children’s ancestors parents encouraged to visit the school more intimate contact with people outside of school and cooperating with the entire neighborhood
Phil Taylor

This is Bullshit « Cooperative Catalyst - 5 views

  • we need to move students up the education chain
  • “The school becomes not a factory but an incubator.”
John Evans

Response: Different Ways Of 'Learning By Doing' - Classroom Q&A With Larry Ferlazzo - E... - 1 views

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    "This week's question is: What are the differences between Project-Based, Problem-Based and Inquiry Learning? Thinker, educator, writer John Dewey suggested that we learned best by doing. Educators today are trying to implement that philosophy through a number of instructional strategies, including project based, problem based and inquiry learning. This series will explore the differences between the three of them."
John Evans

The 6 Drivers of Inquiry-Based Learning - Cooper on Curriculum - 3 views

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    "As an administrator, whenever I walk into a teacher's classroom, one of the first things I almost always subconsciously look for is whether or not the students are engaged in inquiry. However, telling a teacher, "Your students need to engage in more inquiry," is comparable to letting a comedian know she needs to be funnier or asking a pizzaiolo to make a better dough. And, vague directives in the absence of explicit instruction typically generate anxiety. To avoid these anxieties, and for progress to actually take place, we need to drill down to the nitty gritty and be as explicit as possible. In other words, we need to be explicit about being explicit and leverage specific strategies to comfortably move forward for the benefit of our students. With these thoughts in mind, I've been obsessing over inquiry's common denominators - the strategies or drivers we should always consider when implementing an inquiry-based lesson. That being said, here are the six drivers of inquiry-based learning. And, while I don't think every lesson or activity must have all six, I do believe that once we (and our students) become comfortable with an inquiry approach, all drivers will naturally find a way into learning experiences on a regular, if not daily, basis."
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