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Tania Hinojosa

Evaluating Information: An Information Literacy Challenge | American Association of Sch... - 1 views

  • The student who is information literate evaluates information critically and competently”
  • Definition of Evaluation
  • o evaluate is to judge the quality of an idea
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  • critical thinking as including evaluation among several other higher-order thinking processes (Cromwell 1992; Ennis 1989; Paul 1992)
  • rom least to most sophisticated, knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation (Bloom et al. 1956).
  • a person browsing the Web for entertainment will probably be less likely to evaluate displayed information than a consumer searching for car-buying information.
  • Evaluation is defined as the making of judgments about the value, for some purpose, of ideas, works, solutions, methods, material, etc. It involves the use of criteria as well as standards for appraising the extent to which particulars are accurate, effective, economical, or satisfying
  • two major strands of research usually labeled “metacognition.” One concerns knowledge about thinking, whereas the other concerns regulation of thinking and learning
  • reader’s purpose
  • he cognitive strategies chosen and level of engagement depend largely upon this goa
  • At the end of an evaluative episode, a decision or judgment often occurs
  • lack of motivation may decrease evaluation accuracy.
  • that some people by nature are more likely to evaluate; that people criticize most ideas as a matter of course; and, conversely, that people must be selective about the ideas they choose to criticize. It seems most likely that the strength of critical disposition varies among individuals, but also that it varies within the same individual from situation to situation.
  • Signals are the specific thoughts that launch the evaluation process, a recognition that something may be wrong with the information
  • feeling[s]” of “vague puzzlement”
  • Bloom’s Taxonomy
  • an act of searching, hunting, inquiring, to find material that will resolve the doubt, settle and dispose of the perplexity”
  • logic and reasoning skills.
  • The bridge between deliberation and decision (the next component of the evaluation process) is a synthesis of partial conclusions
  • “reflection”
  • Contextual Factors
  • The importance of context
  • Western cultures tend to encourage critical thinking and argumentation while Eastern cultures may discourage criticism of other people and their ideas
  • less time spent deliberating will lead to lower-quality decisions
  • Problem structure. An important aspect of the evaluation process is the type of problem involved
  • human beings are, in fact, more gullible than they are suspicious”
  • Processing depth
  • Summary of contextual factors
  • the user must decide consciously or unconsciously what kind of problem is under study before evaluation can proceed
  • Influences to Evaluation
  • found that individuals in their studies accepted misinformation without question. Students unsure of the correct answer on a true-false examination are more likely to mark a false item as true than they are to mark a true item as false
  • four sections suggest factors that may contribute to an understanding of gullibility and simultaneously demonstrate some common problems with the evaluation process.
  • The Development Continuum
  • he ability to evaluate increases with age
  • Education
  • school-aged children do not find inconsistencies well if they are not primed to seek them
  • Flavell postulates that a major difference between children and mature thinkers involves goals
  • . The research discussed in this section supports the conclusion that children are more vulnerable to evaluation problems than adults. Reasons for this vulnerability almost certainly include lack of education and prior knowledge and a natural tendency to believe what they see and what they are told by authority figures.
  • The Epistemology Continuum
  • Epistemology is a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of knowledge and the sources of knowledge
  • the beliefs that people hold about how we come to know what we know.
  • ssumptions when they assert that reflective judgment “cannot be applied if the individual fails to recognize that a problem exists and that this recognition itself is predicated on other assumptions about knowledge” (
  • “an individual’s epistemological assumptions directly affect which criteria he or she will consider when evaluating two or more systems” (King
  • The Affect Continuum
  • effect of mood and emotions on thinking in the areas of impression formation, judgment, and reasoning. Because it is a similar cognitive proce
  • es indicate that under tightly controlled, narrowly defined conditions, negative moods promote better reasoning than positive moods. Negative-mood subjects appear more careful and analytic (Bless and Fiedler 1995), more consistent (Fiedler 1988), and have better recal
  • n the other hand, happy-mood people do not differentiate well between strong and weak arguments
  • A person who is feeling happy will be more likely than at other times to reduce the load on working memory: to reduce the complexity of decision situations and the difficulty of tasks, by adopting the simplest strategy possible, considering the fewest number of alternatives possible, and doing little or no checking of information, hypotheses, and tentative conclus
  • wledge may hamper the evaluation process, as when people ignore new information conflicting with belie
  • he Prior Knowledge Continuum
  • Students should be brought to the understanding that while it is impossible to have domain knowledge about all topics, it is important to build knowledge in selected areas to help with important decisions and projects.
  • Research projects should culminate in the production of different types of media.
  • There is no better way to practice evaluation than to perform research regularly and intensely.
  • f evidence
  • They should also switch sides and argue opposite positions
  • Ensure that cause is clear. Research shows that people evaluate more effectively if causes are revealed, where available (Anderson 1982). Students should practice formal argumentation, which involves the evaluation
  • In a daily 15-minute exercise, children should find problems such as inconsistency or exaggeration in a short piece of curriculum-relevant text
  • When a skill is introduced, or when students seem to be having inordinate difficulty, teachers and school library media specialists can reduce cognitive load by breaking the skill down into smaller parts (Markman 1981), and by beginning new skills in familiar contexts (Flavell 1981). For example, in distinguishing between fact and opinion, students can first seek cue words like “I think . . .” and “I feel .
  • It is not possible to evaluate all information. Teach students to respond to signals and doubts that occur as they read. Also, provide examples of specific situations that often involve misinformation, such as fake Web sites.
  • boratively implemented by both school library media specialists and teach
  • valuation strategies one or several at a time over a span of years. Evaluation is much too difficult a process to be taught in one unit. The library media specialist may be the only professional in the school who can assure that this ability is developed in all students over the course of their schooli
  • on evaluation is important to the individual, to the educational establishment, and to society. For individuals, evaluation is a crucial life skill and a basis for lifelong learning. It is required in decision making and imparts a feeling of self-esteem through control. Evaluation is important to the educational establishment, because critical thinking is arguably one of the most important of all educational outcomes for students (Engeldinger 1991). Finally, society must critically evaluate information to establish a public demand for high information quality.
  • Evaluation consists of a number of component processes, including metacognition, goals, personal disposition, signals (which initialize an evaluative episode), deliberation, and decision. Research sho
  • What role does the library media specialist play in this process? The purpose of this article is to describe some of the challenges of evaluating information and to propose answers to these questions.
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    steps to critical thinking and evaluation
Debora Gomez

Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. - 0 views

  • There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education?
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
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  • Curriculum Based on the Big6 Skills Approach
  • Approach
  • Approach
  • technology
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • technology
  • ERIC Identifier: ED465377 Publication Date: 2002-09-00 Author: Eisenberg, Michael B. - Johnson, Doug Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology Syracuse NY. Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education? Clearly not. In too many schools, teachers and students still use computers only as the equivalent of expensive flash cards, electronic worksheets, or as little more than a typewriter. The productivity side of computer use in the general content area curriculum is neglected or grossly underdeveloped (Moursund, 1995). Recent publications by educational associations are advocating for a more meaningful use of technology in schools (ISTE, 2000). Educational technologists are clearly describing what students should know and be able to do with technology. They are advocating integrating computer skills into the content areas, proclaiming that computer skills should not be taught in isolation and that separate "computer classes" do not really help students learn to apply computer skills in meaningful ways. There is increasing recognition that the end result of computer literacy is not knowing how to operate computers, but to use technology as a tool for organization, communication, research, and problem solving. This is an important shift in approach and emphasis. Moving f
  • Moving from teaching isolated technology skills to an integrated approach
  • Moving from teaching isolated technology skills to an integrated approach
  • ERIC Identifier: ED465377 Publication Date: 2002-09-00 Author: Eisenberg, Michael B. - Johnson, Doug Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology Syracuse NY. Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education? Clearly not. In too many schools, teachers and students still use computers only as the equivalent of expensive flash cards, electronic worksheets, or as little more than a typewriter. The productivity side of computer use in the general content area curriculum is neglected or grossly underdeveloped (Moursund, 1995). Recent publications by educational associations are advocating for a more meaningful use of technology in schools (ISTE, 2000). Educational technologists are clearly describing what students should know and be able to do with technology. They are advocating integrating computer skills into the content areas, proclaiming that computer skills should not be taught in isolation and that separate "computer classes" do not really help students learn to apply computer skills in meaningful ways. There is increasing recognition that the end result of computer literacy is not knowing how to operate computers, but to use technology as a tool for organization, communication, research, and problem solving. This is an important shift in approach and emphasis. Moving f
  • Moving from teaching isolated tech
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  •  
    Introduction to infolit & basis of Big 6
Lisa Keeler

Bill and Sheila's Information Literacy Place - 0 views

    • Lisa Keeler
       
      I like Bill and Sheila for creating this great site for infolit!
  • These pages are produced by Sheila Webber, who teaches at Sheffield University, and Bill Johnston, who teaches at Strathclyde University (see who we are and what these pages are for, below). New on 3 September 2006. I am giving these pages an overhaul! The Definitions and models and Standards and position papers were updated today (3 Sept 2006), with new content added and links checked. I also did some content updating of the Resources and the Our views and publications pages, and corrected the links both for those and the Learning and Teaching Resources page. I removed a couple of the old sections (Events and People). The remaining sections were last updated in 2003, but I do intend to overhaul them too. For events, news, reports etc. I recommend looking on my Information Literacy weblog which normally has about 5 entries added a week. Standards & position statements Organisations & resources Definitions and models of IL Learning and teaching resources Research into information literacy IL in schools Conference papers on information literacy Our publications & presentations etc. Relationship between librarians and faculty Information literacy and society
Pedro Aparicio

Educational Technology Guy: 10 Important Skills Students need for the Future - 2 views

    • Pedro Aparicio
       
      Some of the future work skills for the year 2020. I think I'm trying to deal with two of these skills right now: new-media literacy and virtual collaboration.
  • Here are the skills:Sense-making. The ability to determine the deeper meaning or significance of what is being expressedSocial intelligence. The ability to connect to others in a deep and direct way, to sense and stimulate reactions and desired interactionsNovel and adaptive thinking. Proficiency at thinking and coming up with solutions and responses beyond that which is rote or rule-basedCross-cultural competency. The ability to operate in different cultural settingsComputational thinking. The ability to translate vast amounts of data into abstract concepts and to understand data-based reasoningNew-media literacy. The ability to critically assess and develop content that uses new media forms and to leverage these media for persuasive communicationTransdisciplinarity. Literacy in and ability to understand concepts across multiple disciplinesDesign mind-set. Ability to represent and develop tasks and work processes for desired outcomesCognitive load management. The ability to discriminate and filter information for importance and to understand how to maximize cognitive functioning using a variety of tools and techniquesVirtual collaboration. The ability to work productively, drive engagement and demonstrate presence as a member of a virtual team
Kate Spilseth

Learning and Teaching Information Technology Computers Skills in Context - 0 views

  • There is increasing recognition that the end result of computer literacy is not knowing how to operate computers, but to use technology as a tool for organization, communication, research, and problem solving. This is an important shift in approach and emphasis. 
  • Successful integrated information skills programs are designed around collaborative projects jointly planned and taught by teachers and library media professionals. Information technology skills instruction can and should be imbedded in such a curriculum. Library media specialists, computer teachers, and classroom teachers need to work together to develop units and lessons that will include both technology skills, information skills, and content-area curriculum outcomes. 
  • Students need to be able to use computers and other technologies flexibly, creatively and purposefully. All learners should be able to recognize what they need to accomplish, determine whether a computer will help them to do so, and then be able to use the computer as part of the process of accomplishing their task. Individual computer skills take on a new meaning when they are integrated within this type of information problem-solving process, and students develop true "information technology literacy" because they have genuinely applied various information technology skills as part of the learning process. 
  •  
    How to appropriately use computer skills and integrate technology into education
Tania Hinojosa

Information Literacy - 0 views

  • In today’s technology-rich environment, physical access to information has never been easier. Intellectual access however, can be denied to the student who does not possess the cognitive strategies for selecting, retrieving, analyzing, evaluating, synthesizing, creating, and communicating.
  • The accepted definition of literacy has evolved from being able to read and write to the expanded and more elaborate ability to address the practices and outcomes of education in the Information Age. Literacy is referred to in different terms: math literacy, reading literacy, media literacy, print literacy, visual literacy, cultural literacy, computer literacy. Each literacy prescribes a particular process by which that content area can be more easily negotiated. But there is one -- Information Literacy -- under which all the other literacies reside because it is a tool of empowerment. Students who possess information literacy have a heightened capacity for doing meaningful, relevant work. "Regardless of where information literacy skills are employed, they are applicable in any school, play, or work situation."
  • From linear to hypermedia learning - Students move back and forth between information sources in an interactive and non-sequential way. From direct instruction
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  • to construction and discovery - Instead of absorbing knowledge as it’s delivered by a teacher, the student constructs new knowledge. He learns by doing.
  • From teacher-centered to learner-centered. - Focus is on the learner, not the delivery-person. Instead of transmitting information, the teacher now creates and structures what happens in the classroom.
  • From absorbing pre-selected facts to discovering relevant information - This demands higher-order thinking skills such as analysis and synthesis. From school-based to life-based learning - A learner’s knowledge base is constantly revised through life experiences, and schools can prepare students for this eventuality. From uniform instruction to customized learning - Students find personal paths to learning. From learning as torture to learning as fun - The student is motivated to learn, and feels more responsible for his progress. From teacher as transmitter to teacher as facilitator.
  • When technology is responsibly and effectively used in the classroom, students learn faster and in more depth.
  •  
    Learning how to use the information we find and how to apply this to education.
Michelle Munoz

Media and Information Literacy - 0 views

    • Lisa Keeler
       
      Powerful message and worth remembering
  • Empowerment of people through information and media literacy is an important prerequisite for fostering equitable access to information and knowledge, and building inclusive knowledge societies. Information and media literacy enables people to interpret and make informed judgments as users of information and media, as well as to become skillful creators and producers of information and media messages in their own right.
  • A particular focus will be on training teachers to sensitize them to the importance of information and media literacy in the education process, enable them to integrate information and media literacy into their teaching and provide them with appropriate pedagogical methods and curricula.
jennifer lee byrnes

Education Week Teacher: Cultivating Student Leadership - 0 views

  • "Leadership is the wise use of power. Power is the capacity to translate intention into reality and sustain it.
  • One way to have power is by feeling a strong sense of self-efficacy—a strong belief that you can accomplish your goals.
  • helping them learn to categorize information instead of just listing data.
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  • We can help our students gain the capacity to tackle unforeseen problems by emphasizing comprehension
  • We can also introduce students to what community organizers call "relational power" when we use cooperative learning activities and invite as much participatory democracy in the classroom as possible.
  • we can build relationships with students so we can learn their self-interests, hopes, and dreams, and be better prepared to more explicitly connect lessons to them. We can praise effort and specific actions more than intelligence. And we can encourage cooperative learning.
  • Good leaders also teach others.
  • "We learn 10% of what we read, 20% of what we hear, 30% of what we see, 50% of what we see and hear, 70% of what we say or write...[and] 90% of what we teach.”
  • Teaching others not only requires students to reread and return to learned material but it also enhances self-confidence and provides good modeling for peers.
  • When peers teach one another, they develop respect for each others’ judgment and expertise.
  • We can also develop student leadership by creating opportunities for students to take collective action to improve their community
  •  
    This is an interesting article about instilling leadership skills into your students.
anonymous

Preparing Students to Learn Without Us - 4 views

    • anonymous
       
      Useful for 21stC skills & concepts and BYOD
    • veronica occelli
       
      I don't know if blogging is part of our students lives, but I certainly want to find out
    • Lisa Keeler
       
      Blogging is a fantastic tool for students who are creating a record of a project, particularly the Personal Project. Easy to share with supervisors, teachers and friends, easy to record ideas on the go - and best of all, no paper!
  • personalizing learning means allowing students to choose their own paths through the curriculum
  • t means connecting our expectations to students' passions and interests as learner
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  • most schools and teachers have been slow to discover its potential through the use of the social web, interactive games, and mobile devices.
  •  
    Great to use for 21st Century Skills & Concepts and the BYOD initiative
  •  
    I don't think blogging is part of their social lives, but academically they like it. I've used it several times for projects, to share ideas, to recommend websites and they really know how to use it and take advantage of it.
  •  
    I just read this article and the whole personalized education makes a lot of sense.. it goes beyond diferentiation
Michelle Munoz

Helping your child learn to read - A parent's guide - 0 views

  • Reading aloud to children is the best way to get them interested in reading
  • pending time w
  • ith word games, stories, and books will help your child to
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  • gather information and learn about the world
  • learn how stories and books work – that they have beginnings, endings, characters, and themes
  • build a rich vocabulary by reading and talking about new words
  • earn how to listen and how to think
  • learn the sounds of language and language patterns
  • fall in love with books
  • Tip 1 –  Talk to Your Child
  • Oral language is the foundation for reading
  • Tip 2 –  Make Reading Fun
  • Children love routine, and reading is something that you and your child can look forward to every day.
  • If your child sees you reading, especially for pleasure or information, he or she will understand that reading is a worthwhile activity.
  • Discussing a story or a book with your child helps your child understand it and connect it to his or her own experience of life.
  • As your child learns to read, listen to him or her read aloud. Reading to you gives your child a chance to practise and to improve his or her reading skills.
  • remember that your reactions are important.
  • listen without interrupting.
  • your child needs to know that you value his or her efforts.
Lee Ann Seifert

AT&T Knowledge Network Explorer : Nuts and Bolts of Big6 : Using the Big6 - 0 views

  • The Big6TM is an information literacy curriculum, an information problem-solving process, and a set of skills which provide a strategy for effectively and efficiently meeting information needs
  • It can be used whenever students are in a situation, academic or personal, which requires information to solve a problem, make a decision or complete a task. Using a multi-level approach, students can develop competency in information problem-solving and decision-making that will carry forward into lifelong, useable skills.
  •  
    Using the Big 6!!! 
  •  
    OMG! We are teaching children so many skills, Its amazing how schools and teachers are constantly finding techniques, tools, ways to educate, that we should improve so much as humanbeings, forgeting about war and money and working on improving ourselves and how we live and we take care of the world and we care for each other!
Kate Spilseth

Information Literacy and Lifelong Learning - 0 views

  • SHIFTS IN TEACHING AND LEARNING In an information literate environment, students engage in active, self-directed learning activities, and teachers facilitate students' engagement through a more adventurous style of instructional delivery. Students involved in information literate activities:  --seek a rich range of information sources;  --communicate an understanding of content;  --pose questions about the content being learned;  --use the environment, people, and tools for learning;  --reflect on their own learning;  --assess their own learning; and  --take responsibility for their own learning. These students feel good about themselves as learners, and they leave school feeling passionate about some content.
  • tudents and teachers make decisions about appropriate sources of information and how to access them
  • Information literacy thrives in a resource-based learning environment. In such an environment, s
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  • Information-literate citizens know how to use information to their best advantage at work and in everyday life.
  •  
    How to use information literacy to encourage life long learning
imelda Morales

5 Ways to Integrate Technology Into Your Child's Education - 2 views

  • Technology allows parents and teachers to provide the right amount of discipline for each student individually, and to supplement where necessary. It also allows students to learn at their own pace, which can help keep them interested and excited about the material.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      Facilitate Self-paced Learning
  • Take learning out of and beyond the classroom. Children learn in a multimodal manner -– they want to be able to touch and hear and see things up close. Netbooks or laptops that feature tools like a camera, writing stylus and audio recording capabilities help to encourage a multimodal approach to learning. The more learning modes (auditory, visual, and experiential) that are exercised, the more likely the material they are learning is likely to stay with them long-term.
    • imelda Morales
       
      this is a  student need not an option that is still waiting for consideration from the early childhood educators
Kristen Heusinger

National Forum on Information Literacy | 21st Century Skills - 0 views

  • The mission of the  National Forum on Information Literacy is to promote and mainstream information literacy at home and abroad.  In doing so, we provide programmatic research and workforce development training activities to a broad spectrum of constituencies in the following areas (1) education and learning, (2) business and economic interests, (3) health and wellness, and (4) government and citizenship.
  •  
    National Forum that help promote information literacy. I learned that there is a digital learning day February 1st. 
Debora Gomez

Health Information Literacy and Competencies of Information Age Students: Results From ... - 0 views

  • This study aimed to measure the proficiency of college-age health information consumers in finding and evaluating electronic health information; to assess their ability to discriminate between peer-reviewed scholarly resources and opinion pieces or sales pitches; and to examine the extent to which they are aware of their level of health information competency.
  • health information resources,
  • 55% of Americans with Internet access seek health information online
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  • A sample of 400 college-age students was selected because this cohort is the first Information Age generation that has been exposed, for up to one-half of their lives, to the Internet.
  • How proficient are university students at searching for and evaluating health-related information? How well do they understand the difference between peer-reviewed scholarly resources and opinion pieces or sales pitches? How aware are they of their own level of health information competencies?
  • Today, health consumers are actively seeking information and using it to make health decisions
  • Individuals with less education and exposure to information-related activities are expected to have even lower health information competencies than our study participants
  •  
    Develop health information competencies
Isabel Fernandez

Neal-Schuman Publishers » NEW BOOK GIVES READERS THE TOOLS THEY NEED TO EVALU... - 0 views

  • Literacy in the 21st century is worlds away from past processes of defining and interpreting information. The new age of digital technology is redefining the ways we find, evaluate and process concepts. Information literacy—how we identify, locate, and evaluate information—is a crucial skill in all disciplines and levels of education.
  •  
    Summary of a book that gives tools on how to evaluate and understand information through a digital lens
Michelle Munoz

Digital Kindergarten: 1:1 iPad use in Full Day Kindergarten - 1 views

  • The iPad is far superior to the workbooks- instant, self correcting, gives immediate feedback, kids progress at own levels and can be working at differentiated levels.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      "Bookless" classrooms
    • imelda Morales
       
      I love this post! thanks Michelle! I do believe that technology has to be part of the early years classrooms..but it has to be brought in in a way that it is not a treat. Kids need to see them as learning and exploration tool just like they see legos, blocks and books.
  • Other curriculum areas we use the iPad in are science (as a journal to record our observations) to check the weather, Social Studies- we tweet other kindergarten classrooms and find them on maps and the globe and learn about their lives; comparing similarities and discussing differences and even collaborating on play projects.
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    Wow! Super aplicada Miss Michelle, you are finding amazing things for us in the ECC! I do believe that ads are a wonderful tool althought, will they or could they replace workbooks, puzzles, boardgames, books, manual activities???
Stephanie Cummings

The Global Classroom Project: Building a Global Classroom | The Edublogger - 0 views

  • We set out to help teachers improve their classroom practice, through collaborating and sharing expertise with teachers around the world …
  • We wanted our students to have regular opportunities to share, learn and collaborate with children around the world, helping them to discover our common humanity …
  • We set out to create a community which fosters global dialogue and discussion between teachers and students …
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  • We have succeeded in creating a true educational community, where teachers support each-other’s learning. find new friends, and make global connections which transform their teaching and learning spaces in unexpected and empowering ways.
Miss Anna

Earlychildhood NEWS - Article Reading Center - 1 views

  • The danger, however, is that computers will be used only to reinforce the national trend toward earlier and more academic skill acquisition, and that other important developmental needs will be ignored. Further, there is a danger that developmental needs not met through technology will be ignored or radically compromised: physical play, outdoor exploration of the community and of nature; art, music and dance; learning specific social skills and moral values, and experiencing diversity in a myriad of ways.
  • To fully integrate computers into the curriculum teachers should take the goals of the curriculum and find ways these can be implemented.
Michelle Munoz

What Should Parents Know About Information Literacy? - 0 views

  • Make informed decisions. Information literacy will help your children acquire relevant information and filter out biased or unreliable information
  •   Encourage, support, and guide your children in exploring their interests. Point them to various resources—such as printed materials, videos, and computers—that they can use to find out about the things that interest them and to communicate their ideas and feelings.
  • Use "The Big Six" to help your children with their homework. Help them (1) determine what is expected from their homework assignments, (2) identify the resources they will need to complete the tasks, (3) locate and access the needed resources, (4) read or use the available information, (5) apply the information to the tasks, and (6) evaluate the quality of their final product. In addition to helping your children master subject-area content, "The Big Six" helps them develop information problem-solving skills
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