If at some point in the fairly near future just about every high school kid is going to have a device that connects to the Internet, how much longer can we ask them to stuff it in their lockers at the beginning of the day?
How are we going to have to rethink the idea that we have to provide our kids a connection? Can we even somewhat get our brains around the idea of letting them use their own?
At what point do we get out of the business of troubleshooting and fixing technology? Isn’t “fixing your own stuff” a 21st Century skill?
How are we helping our teachers understand the potentials of phones and all of these shifts in general?
This is the same experience I have had in building my PLN as an educator. While once I was the only one I knew who read ASCD books for fun, now I am humbled and amazed by the intelligence and diversity on Twitter that pushes me to rethink my own ideals and beliefs and exposes me to new ideas.
using technology to change
learning is an exponentially harder nut to crack. It means asking teachers to
rethink their classrooms and the way they do their work. I
if we have the courage and the vision to take it on,
here’s the payoff: students experiencing excitement and engagement as they
build personalized, global learning networks that they will have for the rest
of their lives
The opportunity we now have is to use technology to move from an event-based learning model that we know to be ineffective, to a more distributed and contextualized environment that elegantly spans the continuum from formal learning to performance support. And this is not science fiction - we have the tools we need now. Even if we didn't, we should be preparing our thinking for this capability."
"The simplest addition of technology to my 5th grade Language Arts classroom made the greatest difference in the level of engagement of my students, especially in our non-fiction unit, in which we rely heavily on paper articles. Even though the material is true, real life, and exciting, I still found my 5th graders, who are bombarded with technology outside of the classroom, bored to tears when I passed out an article for them to read and mark up with a pencil. "
"Here are thirty free writing ideas that connect to the holidays or to winter. I want to mention ahead of time that teachers need to be careful with the Establishment Clause. Some of these mention specific holidays and I think it's critical that teachers respect the diversity of beliefs found among students. They are meant to be ideas and not prompts; meaning they are optional visual writing ideas that kids can choose if they want to use them. "
"Check out the visual writing idea for the first week of school. This set comes with both a curriculum and a set of visual ideas (as .png). Simply click on the icon above and it should download. Click on the .zip file (most likely in your Download folder of your computer) and everything should work. The resource is Creative Commons, meaning you can print, display or distribute it as you wish.
"
"This article has been making its rounds in social media. I tend to agree with the idea that heavily-decorated, cutesy classrooms are distracting. I've never been a fan of a barrage of brightly-colored signs, Garfield posters and motivational phrases.
However, I also see a real danger in district-mandated use of wall space. Here, the issue is less about bright and cutesy and more about things like word walls and anchor charts designed to create visual cues for learning. I see the point to it, but often this creates a text dump that students have to navigate (rather than having a simple notebook or website with tutorials they can access). It starts to feel like an encyclopedia had vomited on the walls.
"
"While there are some very creative web tools out there, ThingLink is one of my favorites. It has earned this status by passing several of my key benchmark-tests for the classroom:
It is dependable and accessible.
Students need not fear that their work will be lost as it automatically saves.
It is relatively easy to learn and use.
Rarely does a lesson become more about "ThingLink" than the topic about which students are trying to express their knowledge.
For new users, ThingLink allows you to upload a picture and active links to a variety of media, essentially making an image touchable as illustrated below."
We must help them understand why anyone might want to solve this problem or answer this question. We must remind them of the
connection between today's smaller question and the larger issues.
faith in their ability to succeed, if we ask about their attitudes
and their values as well as about their ability to understand, if we act excited, and if we ask them both to understand abstract
concepts and to see the relevance of those concepts to people's lives. We must appeal directly to their curiosity.
teaching students to understand, analyze, synthesize, evaluate
evidence, and so forth.
specific
abstract reasoning capacities.
ess telling and more asking.
bring models of knowledge with them to our classes, preconceptions that have
a profound influence on what they think they learn and how they react to what we tell them.
Relatively few people have fixed styles of learning
in which they can learn from only one kind of experience, but many people do have learning personalities in which they often
express preference for one approach or another.
If we provide that diversity, we can speak to different personalities while encouraging
everyone to expand their preferences, and to consider the joys of learning in new ways.
feel comfortable,
uneasiness, the tension that stems from intellectual excitement, curiosity,
challenge, and intense concern with a particular question, the tension that emerges primarily from the questions that we ask,
the challenges that we issue,
provisions an
author must make are the ones that lead a student to rectify incorrect responses.
work collaboratively in solving
important problems.
Think about uncovering it so your students can better understand it.
sustained, substantial, and positive influence on the way they think, act, or feel)
solve
create
a sense of control over their own education;
work will be considered fairly and honestly
try, fail, and receive
feedback from expert learners
Good Practice Emphasizes Time on Task
paradigms of reality are students likely to bring with them that I
will want them to challenge
challenge students to rethink their assumptions and examine their mental models of reality?