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jennifer lee byrnes

Ten ideas for interactive teaching - 0 views

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    By Jenna Zwang, Assistant Editor Read more by Jenna Zwang While lecturing tends to be the easiest form of instruction, studies show that students absorb the least amount of information that way. Interactive teaching methods are an effective way to connect with a generation of students used to consistent stimulation-and education professor Kevin Yee has some advice for how teachers can make their lessons more interactive.
Gretchen Dillon

The future of teaching: Difference engine: Let the games begin | The Economist - 0 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      the case for interactive textbooks
  • Using tools for highlighting and annotating virtual flash-cards, students can select information within the text and store it for later revision. Searching public databases, direct from within the textbook, is also possible. At school, students can sync with their teachers’ computers, to hand in their quiz results and homework for marking.
  • Done properly, interactive textbooks offer not only video tutorials, more personalised instruction, just-in-time hints and homework help, but also instant access to assessment tools, teaching resources and the ability to network socially with students elsewhere.
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  • if software is to be used as a teaching aid (called “blended learning” in pedagogical circles), then it should seek to balance the need for correct answers with the freedom to take risks and break rules. “If you’re not prepared to be wrong,” Dr Robinson preaches, “you’ll never come up with anything original.”
Tania Hinojosa

Creating a Classroom Newspaper - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

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    FEATURED RESOURCES Printing Press: In this online interactive tool, your students can choose the "newspaper" option to help them complete their newspaper section. Newspaper Story Format: Your students will find completing their newspaper article a snap by first filling out this useful handout that helps them identify each key element of an authentic newspaper article.
Michelle Munoz

Digital Texts and the Future of Education: Why Books? (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  • Mobility offers the ability to engage learners of all ages with anywhere, anytime access.
  • The presence of socially connected, multitasking students in the classroom urges educators to move away from an "information-dissemination" role toward a more interactive, collaborative process in which they guide learners in the skill of evaluating and assessing available information.
  • creating innovative and interactive learning activities that fully engage learners in experiences they perceive to be both interesting and relevant to their interests and future.
Kristen Heusinger

Interesting Ways | edte.ch - 0 views

  • Use Devices Use the iPad in the Classroom Use Your Interactive Whiteboard in the Classroom Use an iPod Touch in the Classroom Ideas for Class Blog Posts Use Mobile Phones in the Classroom
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    multiple ideas for each device. super interesting to think about which work for my classroom and what could work for other grade levels
Mariana Perez Galan

A Tech-Happy Professor Reboots After Hearing His Teaching Advice Isn't Working - Techno... - 0 views

  • Mr. Wesch is not swearing off technology—he still believes you can teach well with YouTube and Twitter. But at a time when using more interactive tools to replace the lecture appears to be gaining widespread acceptance, he has a new message. It doesn't matter what method you use if you do not first focus on one intangible factor: the bond between professor and student.
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    Its very important to always remember that we are the teachers, our job is to guide children to use technology in a positive way. We have to learn how find advantages as well as disadvantages of using internet and technology in our classrooms this way we can plan ahead when something goes bad.  
Mariana Perez Galan

Promethean World - Learner Response Systems : ActivEngage - 0 views

  • Using Promethean’s award-winning software ActivInspire or Promethean ActivOffice, display a question on the interactive display or ask it verbally, and students will respond using the virtual device on their computers or handheld devices. Assign full quizzes of varying difficulty with ActivEngage’s Self-Paced Learning functionality to encourage students to work at their own pace and comprehension level. Gain instant insight into student comprehension and progress with an intuitive, integrated application that makes the most of existing classroom technology.
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    This can be an excellent tool for school know that we are allowing children to use their their computers and ipads. 
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
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.
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    Great to use for 21st Century Skills & Concepts and the BYOD initiative
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    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.
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    I just read this article and the whole personalized education makes a lot of sense.. it goes beyond diferentiation
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.
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    Learning how to use the information we find and how to apply this to education.
Kate Spilseth

The Educational Experiences That Change a Life - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    The Educational Experiences That Change a Life - education outside school
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
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    Develop health information competencies
Michelle Munoz

Using Google Forms for Student Engagement and Learning (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  • One of the primary benefits of using Google Forms is its ability to help instructors assess — in real time — how well students understand learning materials and to uncover student misconceptions, which helps instructors steer students to higher-level understanding.
  • increased interactivity between students and between the instructor and students.
  • downside of using Google Forms can be less time to cover course material because class time is used to respond to Google Forms questions and discuss students' answers.
Ruth Santiago

Future Perfect » Poor Tradeoffs - 0 views

    • Ruth Santiago
       
      It is interesting how visually unappealing and not entirely helpful this design is.
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