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John Evans

High Schools to TikTok: We're Catching Feelings - The New York Times - 1 views

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    "WINTER GARDEN, Fla. - On the wall of a classroom that is home to the West Orange High School TikTok club, large loopy words are scrawled across a whiteboard: "Wanna be TikTok famous? Join TikTok club." It's working. "There's a lot of TikTok-famous kids at our school," said Amanda DiCastro, who is 14 and a freshman. "Probably 20 people have gotten famous off random things." The school is on a quiet palm-tree-lined street in a town just outside Orlando. A hallway by the principal's office is busy with blue plaques honoring the school's A.P. Scholars. Its choir director, Jeffery Redding, won the 2019 Grammy Music Educator Award. Amanda was referring to a different kind of stardom: on TikTok, a social media app where users post short funny videos, usually set to music, that is enjoying a surge in popularity among teenagers around the world and has been downloaded 1.4 billion times, according to SensorTower. "
John Evans

How to Make Math More Emotionally Engaging For Students | MindShift | KQED News - 2 views

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    "Satisfaction and engagement may not be the most common feelings among students studying introductory calculus. According to Jo Boaler, a professor of math education at Stanford, roughly 50 percent of the population feels anxious about math. That emotional discomfort often begins in elementary school, lingering over students' later encounters with algebra and geometry, and tainting the subject with apprehension-or outright loathing. Professor Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, associate professor of education, psychology, and neuroscience at the University of Southern California has explored how emotions are tied to learning. "Emotions are a piece of thinking," she told me; "we think of anything because our emotions push us that way." Even subjects widely considered to be outside the realm of emotion, like math, evoke powerful feelings among those studying it, which can then propel or thwart further learning."
John Evans

What is Computational Thinking? | Robotical - 2 views

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    "The term, Computational Thinking, is being discussed and used a lot in education at the moment, but what does this actually mean and is it something that is worth trying to incorporate into your lessons? Basically, computational thinking is a way of describing the approach that students take to solve problems not just in the classroom, but the outside world too. By introducing and encouraging students to take this approach towards tasks that are set in class, they are developing the skill set to enable them to tackle problems in any domain."
John Evans

Coaching in and out of the classroom: What is the next chapter for edcuation? - 0 views

  • How are we ALL connected?  Why aren't we capitalizing on it?
  • Increasing anytime and anywhere learning. How long until the tools become invisible? The days with the single teacher in front of the class with the book has passed. Teachers are becoming CO-LEARNERS. How can kids get prepared outside of class to go in-depth inside of class. Every child needs to have THEIR OWN personal device
John Evans

Coding, Making, and the Arts: Essential Tools for Students | MindShift - 6 views

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    "ome of the most important subject areas and activities we want students to learn are the very ones that are left out of many schools: the arts, computer programming, and learning to making things by hand."
Phil Taylor

Caine's Arcade Style: Project Based Learning | Today is a Great Day for Learning - 0 views

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    "We have been doing a lot of learning this year that is different than I would have imagined if you would have asked me 17 months ago. My teaching colleague, Gallit Zvi and I embarked on our own journey of discovery to team teach 2 classes of grade 6/7 students. When we started we were nervous but excited to start. We didn't know where it was going to take us because we were constantly learning new things on twitter that we could adapt, collaborate on, and make our own. We did know that we both wanted to jump into a project based model for student learning because we knew we could model a collaborative environment necessary to make it successful for our students. However we didn't know where and how to start. We saw ourselves as guides through unique learning experiences that connect learning in the classroom to their lives outside of the classroom. We were just looking for that sign on which direction we should help guide them towards."
Phil Taylor

Glad You Asked About the Digital Generation | Fluency21 - Committed Sardine Blog - 4 views

  • absolute centrality of digital culture to their students’ lives
  • thinking skills that today’s workers need?
  • The most powerful technology in the classroom was, is, and always will be a classroom teacher.
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  • They’re often accused of being intellectual slackers and anti-social beings who lack even basic social skills. However, many bodies of research point to the contrary
  • The problem is that what they expect and experience in their world outside of school with their games and websites is completely at odds with what they experience in the classroom where everything is controlled by adults.
  • Every generation since the time of Socrates and Plato, including our parents, has looked at the next generation, including ours, and said, “What’s wrong with those kids?” That’s the thing—there’s nothing wrong with these kids. They’re just neurologically different, and that’s why they see the world and engage with it differently than we do.
Phil Taylor

Open Mobile Learning Badges - 4 views

  • Mobile phones open up new learning opportunities outside of traditional educational structures and practices. Powerful mobile tools—applications, handsets, tablets, device add-ons, cloud applications, etc.—already exist, with many more developed each day. These tools expand the ability to collect, collaborate, and create in myriad ways, influencing environmental studies and service, political and civic activism, history, citizen journalism, citizen science, and community volunteerism, just to name a few.
Phil Taylor

How a "Tech Break" Can Help Students Refocus| The Committed Sardine - 1 views

  • The trick is to be disciplined and only take tech breaks at predefined intervals. O
  • there are other effective ways to reset the brain. Rosen lists a bunch: listening to beautiful music, looking at art and practicing yoga. Or going outside for a hike.
Phil Taylor

Reflecting about life online | MediaSmarts - 2 views

  • Internet access is universal, with 99% of students able to access the Internet outside of school.
  • Close to half (49%) of students in Grade 4 have access to their own phone or someone else’s phone on a regular basis
  • online life has become increasingly social, with social networking now an integral component of many online activities.
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  • I think it’s easy, as a parent, to fear new technologies.
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    "I think it's easy, as a parent, to fear new technologies."
John Evans

Why we should be App Smashing! | Inside the classroom, outside the box! - 1 views

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    ""I am not a teacher, but an awakener." Robert Frost 'App Smashing' (I have also heard it called App Synergy) was invented by Gregory Kulowiec. App Smashing is when students create content using a variety of apps for example smashing Tellagami and iMovie to make a video. Intro to App-Smashing from misterkling on Vimeo does a great job of explaining what App Smashing is more in-depth."
Phil Taylor

The dumbest generation? No, Twitter is making kids smarter - The Globe and Mail - 4 views

  • The only way to tell whether kids today are really less coherent or literate than their great-grandparents is to compare student writing across the past century
  • Over the past century, the freshman composition papers had exploded in length and intellectual complexity.
  • Prof. Lunsford’s research has found, 40 per cent of all writing is done outside the classroom – it’s “life writing,” stuff students do socially, or just for fun.
Phil Taylor

Private Rights, the Public Good and Social Media | technology4engagement - 2 views

  •  The Supreme Court “…ruled that teachers must adhere to a higher standard of conduct- both inside and outside the classroom- than people in other occupations.”
  • recommend is not treating social media as a private space
sulmahmud1

Which Educational Games for the Kids Should Be Given child? - 0 views

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    Modern age is the gift of science and technology. Now a day, we are very much depending on thenewly invented gifts of science & technology which provide us different facilities. Our activities has been centerrounded by its gift. In ancient time, we would spent most of our time in playing outside of the house.
John Evans

For Students, the Importance of Doing Work That Matters | MindShift | KQED News - 2 views

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    ""Work that matters" has significance beyond classroom walls; it's work that is created for an authentic audience who might  enjoy it or benefit from it even in a small way. It's work that isn't simply passed to the teacher for a grade, or shared with peers for review. It's work that potentially makes a difference in the world."
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