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Debora Gomez

Teacher Reviews New Student Participation App - 0 views

Many of us have experienced a class with no students participation but we can offer an intresting way to get students involved

http:__www.edutopia.org_blog_gosoapbox-classroom-participation-matt-hurst ADE634

started by Debora Gomez on 21 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
Gretchen Dillon

You Don't Have to Be A Technology Whiz But You Do Need to Be Fearless - 0 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      *encouragement to react to new technology in the classroom fearlessly
  • Being a 21th century teacher means we have to equip our students with the know-how of technology, there simply is no excuse to not fulfill our job.  Our students learn from us, even the way we react to change, so think of your approach as the newest thing is shown to you.  Will you model how to be fearless?
Lisa Stewart

Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators - Critical Evaluation Surveys and Resources - Kathy... - 0 views

    • Lisa Stewart
       
      Very useful. pre-made PDF quizzes designed to help teachers understand their students' understanding of Information Literacy. Excellent for the classroom or library! 
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
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.
veronica occelli

Social Bookmarking with students: Quality not quantity! | The Edublogger - 1 views

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    Remarks the importance of teacher`s presence when using technology in the classroom. We can't assume they know everything.
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    Students still need the human contact!
Cynthia Castro

Core Strategies for Innovation and Reform in Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Edutopia is dedicated to transforming the learning process by helping educators implement the strategies below
    • Cynthia Castro
       
      empower
    • Cynthia Castro
       
      which
  • Integrated Studies
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • Project Learning
  • Teacher Development
  • ands-on approach to learning core subject
  • Technology Integration
  • tudents to think critically, access and analyze information, creatively problem solve, work collaboratively, and communicate with clarity and impact
  • Social and Emotional Learning
  • Comprehensive Assessment
  • ssment should mea
  • sure the full range of student ability
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    basics for understanding edutopia
Lisa Keeler

Super Teacher Tools - 0 views

  • Our Flash Jeopardy Review Game tool is by far the most popular tool on the site. With this tool you can create a custom jeopardy review game for use in classrooms, training sessions, or anywhere else a fun, team based review game is appropriate. You can even download the Jeopardy Flash Player file to use games that you have created offline without an Internet connection!
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    Good Review Tool
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.
Kate Spilseth

Story Starters | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    Creative story starters for students K-6
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
  • ...61 more annotations...
  • 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
Mariana Rendon

Virtual Information Inquiry: Big 6 and Super 3 - 0 views

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    The Super Three for Early Childhood
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    For the ECC teachers...
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.
Mariana Perez Galan

Scholastic Phonics Inventory | A Breakthrough Computer-based Reading Assessment Tool to... - 0 views

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    WE NEED THIS AT ASF!!!
Mariana Lavin

http://www.kmel-journal.org/ojs/index.php/online-publication/article/viewFile/127/105 - 0 views

    • Mariana Lavin
       
      It is very specific, but it might be of help to first grade teachers
Gretchen Dillon

Developing Research and Information Literacy - 1 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      a great article discussing information literacy with young readers
  • Research and information literacy is something students work on throughout their school career. It's a collection of skills that, when combined, means that a learner is able to find, understand, evaluate and use information. Interest in information literacy grew out of a need to create learners for the 21st century. Here you'll find information about two ways to begin to develop information literacy in your child.
  • Parents and teachers can help children develop research and information literacy by sharing their love of learning. Encourage their curiosity about the world and desire to find out more. At the same time, help them become wise consumers of the information they find. These are skills that will last a lifetime.
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