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John Evans

From Android to iOS: 10 Most-Asked Questions - 2 views

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    "If you were an Android user and is now switching to iOS instead, this is the post for you. Here are 10 questions that you might think of asking and the quick answers to those concerns. If you are new to the world of smartphones and you want to try iOS first, you might also be able to learn a new thing or two here."
Phil Taylor

10 questions to ask when choosing education technology | eSchool News | eSchool News - 3 views

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    "10 questions to ask when choosing education technology"
John Evans

How to Add Questions for Students to YouTube Videos | Jonathan Wylie | Education Techno... - 10 views

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    "With the popularity of flipped classrooms showing no sign of waning, a new crop of web tools for teachers are emerging to help support instruction. In this post, I take a look at three ways that teachers can add questions to a YouTube video for their students to answer when watching a video at home or on their own."
Phil Taylor

- Create a Culture of Questioning and Inquiry - 7 views

  • shift from a culture of compliance, to a culture of questioning in your classroom
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    " shift from a culture of compliance, to a culture of questioning in your classroom"
John Evans

20 Questions To Guide Inquiry-Based Learning - 5 views

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    "Recently we took at look at the phases of inquiry-based learning through a framework, and even apps that were conducive to inquiry-based learning on the iPad. During our research for the phases framework, we stumbled across the following breakdown of the inquiry process for learning on 21stcenturyhsie.weebly.com (who offer the references that appear below the graphic). Most helpfully, it offers 20 questions that can guide student research at any stage, including:"
Phil Taylor

Digital literacy is about asking the right questions - ICT and Computing in E... - 0 views

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    "Digital Literacy Is About Asking The Right Questions"
John Evans

8 ways teachers can talk less and get kids talking more | The Cornerstone - 1 views

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    "On Twitter, I recently shared an excellent article by Justin Tarte called 5 Questions Every Teacher Should Ask Him/Herself. The first reflection question Justin recommends is: Who is doing a majority of the talking in your classroom? It's the person who is doing the majority of the talking that tends to do the most learning, so what is the teacher/student talking ratio in your classroom? If you find yourself always talking more than your students, try and figure out some ways to empower your students so they are more involved in the learning."
John Evans

4 Key Questions About iPad Classroom Management | Class Tech Tips - 0 views

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    "Here is a great new presentation on SlideShare that outlines the four key questions schools should ask as they prepare to launch an iPad program. Click below to go through each slide and hear advice for making the best choices for your school."
John Evans

Free Technology for Teachers: ReadWorks Now Offers Poems and Question Sets for K-12 Cla... - 1 views

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    "ReadWorks is a free service that I have been recommending for about a year now. It provides teachers with hundreds of lesson plans and more than two thousand reading non-fiction and fiction passages aligned to Common Core standards. Recently, ReadWorks expanded again. The latest expansion includes poems and question sets. The collection is organized by grade level. In the collection you will find poems by Frost, Dickinson, Stevenson, and other notable poets. "
John Evans

Getting To Know Students? Ask The Right Questions - 2 views

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    Teaching is more like marketing than we'd care to admit. Getting to know students is a matter of asking the right questions.
John Evans

The education question we should be asking - 5 views

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    ""While we're at it, maybe we should just design classrooms without windows. And, hey, I'll bet kids would really perform better if they spent their days in isolation." My friend was reacting (facetiously, of course) to a new study that found kindergartners scored better on a test of recall if their classroom's walls were completely bare. A room filled with posters, maps, and the kids' own art constituted a "distraction." The study, published last month in Psychological Science [1] and picked up by Science World Report, the Boston Globe, and other media outlets, looked at a whopping total of 24 children. A research assistant read to them about a topic such as plate tectonics or insects, then administered a paper-and-pencil test to see how many facts they remembered. On average, kids in the decorated rooms were "off task" 39 percent of the time and had a "learning score" of 42 percent. The respective numbers for those in the bare rooms were 28 percent and 55 percent. Now if you regularly read education studies, you won't be surprised to learn that the authors of this one never questioned, or even bothered to defend, the value of the science lessons they used - whether they were developmentally appropriate or presented effectively, whether they involved anything more than reading a list of facts or were likely to hold any interest for 5-year-olds. Nor did the researchers vouch for the quality of the assessment. Whatever raises kids' scores (on any test, and of any material) was simply assumed to be a good thing, and anything that lowers scores is bad."
John Evans

9 Effective Questions to Help Students Develop A Growth Mindset ~ Educational Technolog... - 4 views

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    "When it comes to high quality education blog posts. Dr Jackie Gerstein is one of my favourite authors. I always find her articles very insightful and full of new ideas and thoughts to learn from. I have shared several of her works in the past and most notably her popular visual on The Educators with a Growth Mindset. However, today I am sharing with you another of her recent works entitled "Growth Mindset: Personal Accountability and Reflection". This is basically a series of questions Jackie developed based on her teaching experience in order to help students "develop and enhance their growth mindsets through personal accountability and reflection". You might want to have a look and share it with your own students ."
mjt7280

150 Questions to Write or Talk About - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This teaching and learning blog from the NYTimes has questions for students along with links to related NYTimes articles. 
Nigel Coutts

What questions shall we ask? - 0 views

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    Inspired by a quote from Patrick Rothfuss' King Killer Chronicles, this article considers the sort of questions we need to ask our students and how we can guide them towards asking creative questions.
John Evans

The Daring Librarian: Questions About Coloring & Makerspace - 1 views

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    "I get questions ALL the time from our dear PLN & blog readers! Mostly through Twitter and sometime through email. Let's answer this one I got this morning about my recent coloring & makerspace blog posts!"
John Evans

Free Technology for Teachers: 7 Tools for Adding Questions and Notes to Videos - 2 views

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    "Short videos from YouTube and other sources can be quite helpful in introducing topics to students and or reinforcing concepts that you have taught. Watching the video can be enough for some students, it's better if we can call students' attention to specific sections of videos while they are watching them. The following tools allow you to add comments and questions to videos that you share with your students."
Nigel Coutts

A curriculum built on the fundamental questions of our disciplines - The Learner's Way - 1 views

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    As we make plans for how we will engage our students in their learning the decisions we make become fundamental to how they will grow to understand the purposes of learning. How our learners approach the curriculum and the disciplines is fundamental to the outcomes we may achieve for them. One path will set them up to view learning as the acquisition of information the other to see it as a process of asking and exploring questions of significance through the many unique lenses.
John Evans

Giving Students Think Time | Edutopia - 1 views

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    How long do you think teachers pause, on average, after asking a question? Several studies from the 1970s on have looked into the effect that the amount of time teachers pause after asking a question has on learners. In visiting many classrooms in the United States and other parts of the world, I've found that, with few exceptions, these studies are still accurate. For example, according to work done by Mary Budd Rowe in 1972 and Robert J. Stahl in 1994, pausing for three or more seconds showed a noticeable positive impact on learning. Yet the average length that teachers pause was found to be 0.9 seconds. Wow.
Nigel Coutts

Contemplating questions of work life balance - The Learner's Way - 0 views

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    Oddly lately I have been pondering how schools responds to the question of a work life balance. Let me try to explain my thinking. I am still trying to clarify my thinking here, so please bear with me. What does it mean to achieve work life balance, and should we want to?
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