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John Evans

Gazette » Changing Society: Why Teachers Need to Embrace Technology - 5 views

  • Most teachers still embrace a textbook based style of learning within the classroom. The student is forced to retain, recite, and regurgitate knowledge taught by the lecturer. In my humblest opinion, students are controlled to be mindless robots while the teacher becomes the controller of the hoard. There is no engagement of critical thinking or higher learning. The students are not required to think for themselves. Many teachers of this old school of thought are suppressing the promotion of learning and creativity. Students need active engagement. Technology links students to an exciting, innovative educational experience.
John Evans

The ethics of blogging «Ideas and Thoughts from an EdTech - 10 views

  •  
    The reader comments are very informative. The best part about blogging in my opinion.
Brandi Graham

How Does Technology Affect Kids' Friendships? - NYTimes.com - 6 views

  • whether the quality of their interactions is being diminished without the intimacy and emotional give and take of regular, extended face-to-face time.
  • whether the quality of their interactions is being diminished without the intimacy and emotional give and take of regular, extended face-to-face time.
    • Brandi Graham
       
      Interesting thought. I see many people on facebook with hundreds of friends, but they probably have spoken to many of those people once or twice face to face. Social networking has redefined the term "friend" to a certain degree.
  •  
    Anti Social Networking??
John Evans

One thought at a time: Who Are You Calling A Sheep? - 7 views

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    Do you want to be a leader or a follower?
John Evans

YouTube - Rafe Esquith: Lighting Their Fires - 1 views

  • Rafe Esquith is the only teacher to have been awarded the President's Medal of the Arts and is the author of the bestseller, Teach Like Your Hair's On Fire. Rafe Esquith teaches in Los Angeles, and his super-successful, inspirational teaching methods have helped thousands of children maximize their potential. His new book is Lighting Their Fires: Raising Extraordinary Children, a book that enlarges on his themes and shows us how to make our kids not just great students but thoughtful and honorable citizens.
Phil Taylor

Think you know the best way to study? Better test yourself. « The Invisible Gorilla - 0 views

  • the Illusion of Knowledge—they thought they had a deeper understanding of the material than they actually did.
  • Only by testing whether you can produce the answers yourself can you verify what you know.
Phil Taylor

If you want to innovate like Da Vinci, education is overrated | TechRepublic - 2 views

  • He did it by observing harder than anyone else. He closely observed the laws of nature. He examined the mechanics of animals, especially birds. He looked at the ways people move, interact, and express themselves. He watched the ways people work and thought of mechanical devices that could improve and streamline important tasks.
Phil Taylor

Home - mahara.org - 1 views

  • Mahara is an open source e-portfolio system with a flexible display framework. Mahara, meaning 'think' or 'thought' in Te Reo Māori, is user centred environment with a permissions framework that enables different views of an e-portfolio to be easily managed. Mahara also features a weblog, resume builder and social networking system, connecting users and creating online learner communities.
John Evans

Free Technology for Teachers: Free Technology For Teachers: Mind Meister - Very Intuitive Mind Mapping - 0 views

  • Mind Meister's basic account is free and has all of the features that a teacher or student would ever need. With the free account users can collaborate with others, share via email or embedding, and download or export files. One of the features I really like is the ability to add active links to websites. The linking feature is a good one for students trying to organize their thoughts for a research paper. The intuitive piece of Mind Meister is in the creation aspects. To add a new topic or "idea box" users simply click the green "add" button. To remove an item click the "delete" button. Organizing the items with Mind Meister is a simple matter of dragging them to the position you want them in. Changing the size and type of text is as easy as changing the size and type of text in a word document.
  • Applications for EducationMind Meister could be used by students to record and organize their ideas and resources for research papers. The ability to add active links to websites helps students keep track of their resources and how those resources will be used in their paper. Mind Meister is a collaborative tool so it's very useful for students who are working on a group project or presentation. The embedding codes provided by Mind Meister make it possible for users to include their mind maps as a part of a wiki, blog, or website
John Evans

Jessica Gross: Embracing the Twitter Classroom - 0 views

  • Rheingold points to five reasons for teaching students social media: Developing students' literacy in our new online environment is as crucial as developing their abilities to read and write. Communication is moving toward social media. We can either help students thrive in this environment or leave them flailing. Many students bring their computers to class. Why not work with this trend instead of fighting or ignoring it? Social media is just that: social. Students who use Twitter for class are "learning collaborative skills that are particularly important today." There is only so much class time. Rheingold makes mini-lectures on video that students comment on between classes, allowing more time to engage the issues through in-class discussion. Shy students who hold back in class often speak up online. "If you can extend the discussion to an online message board, you enable students who may not jump into the discussion," he said, to "make a thoughtful contribution."
anonymous

Changing- Shifting a School Culture- Train of Thought by Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano - 0 views

  • Gable uses a powerful analogy when she compares playing basketball barefoot with teaching without technology. You COULD play without shoes, but why would you want to, when there is a tool that would allow you to grow, expand, soar higher and further than without it? The sport of Basketball is NOT about the shoes… Teaching and learning is not about technology!
Phil Taylor

(Linda Stone's Thoughts on Attention and Specifically, Continuous Partial Attention ) - 4 views

  • We're often doing things that are automatic, that require very little cognitive processing
  • It is an always-on, anywhere, anytime, any place behavior that involves an artificial sense of constant crisis. We are always in high alert when we pay continuous partial attention.
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