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Jenna Kubricht

First-graders use Twitter to learn typing, reading, writing - chicagotribune.com - 1 views

  • That's because Evan and others in first-grade teacher Jodi Conrad's class use Twitter to send out a weekly newsletters, update the days' activities and give parents reminders about upcoming programs.
  • e the days' ac
  • "These are tools that come standard in life right now,"
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    1st graders using Twitter! If they can do it, We can do it!!!
Jenna Kubricht

HotChalk's Lesson Plans Page - Lesson Plans for Teacher by Teachers - 1 views

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    great website to find lesson plans. It is well organized and very helpful!
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
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • 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.
Michelle Munoz

Learning with 'e's: Child friendly technologies - 0 views

    • Michelle Munoz
       
      We need to use technology with a purpose. 
  • Teachers often use technology to support their own teaching, but may often fail to see the relevance of child-friendly tools as a means to support children’s learning.
  • we contend that child-friendly technologies should be considered as serious learning tools in the formal learning environment of the primary classroom.
Tania Hinojosa

Eduteka - La enseñanza de la CMI mediante el Modelo Big6 - 0 views

  • Etiquetas: CMI Big6 La Enseñanza de la Competencia en el Manejo de la Información (CMI) Mediante el Modelo Big6 Big6 es un modelo pa
  • a desarrollar Competencia en el Manejo de la Información (CMI) mediante un proceso sistemático para la solución de problemas de información y en una serie de habilidades que suministran la estrategia necesaria para satisfacer necesidades de información, todo esto apoyado en el pensamiento crítico.
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
Isabel Fernandez

Mapas para imprimir. Cuéntame - 0 views

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    Great site to find maps to print
Tania Hinojosa

[ MUNDO CULTURAL HISPANO ] - APUNTES DE LINGÚÍSTICA - 0 views

    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Críticas literarias , poesía , redacción , gramática , ortografía y más
anonymous

Recommended hashtags - Hashonomy - Social bookmarking via Twitter - 1 views

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    Sign in with Twitter account. I searched for differentiation.
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...
Mariana Lavin

Students prevent more than 1.5 million pounds of CO2 emissions - 0 views

    • Mariana Lavin
       
      A local cup like this might promote the interest in the students
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    Screenshot: Winning video for the 2012 Green Cup Video ChallengeSo Fresh and So Green This year, during the fifth annual Green Cup Challenge, students from 116 schools in 22 states collectively prevented 1,567,562 pounds of carbon dioxide (CO2) from being released into the atmosphere in just four weeks.
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    Screenshot: Winning video for the 2012 Green Cup Video ChallengeSo Fresh and So Green This year, during the fifth annual Green Cup Challenge, students from 116 schools in 22 states collectively prevented 1,567,562 pounds of carbon dioxide (CO2) from being released into the atmosphere in just four weeks.
Mariana Lavin

In Uzbekistan, a child-friendly preschools engage children - 0 views

    • Mariana Lavin
       
      I had never before wondered what might be happening in education in Uzbekistan
  • In Uzbekistan, a child-friendly preschools engage children
Mariana Lavin

ASCD Inservice: Should We Allow Students to Use Cell Phones in School? - 0 views

    • Mariana Lavin
       
      I like how it relates it to different places besides from school.
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    At our high school, we recently reexamined our electronic use policy. In conversations during the summer, the assistant principals and I agreed that enforcing our current policy of no electronic devices during the school day was inconsistent with societal norms. So in the opening days of this school year, we asked our students to use their cell phones and other devices responsibly.
Tania Hinojosa

Ayudas gráficas - 0 views

    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Reportes de libro , organizar apuntes , conceptos.
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.
Tania Hinojosa

ADE634 « TodaysMeet - 0 views

    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Herramienta para la clase , sin interrumpir la dinñamica
Mariana Rendon

Robert Fisher Teaching Thinking homepage - 0 views

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    A version of this paper is to be published in Arthur J, Grainger T & Wray D (eds) (in press) Learning to teach in primary school, Routledge Falmer 'We need to think better if we are to become better people.'
Mariana Lavin

Community Farm at Sandy Spring Friends School - 0 views

shared by Mariana Lavin on 25 Feb 12 - No Cached
    • Mariana Lavin
       
      Day on and not day off, I love it!
Tania Hinojosa

El.Verbo - 0 views

    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Para tiempos verbales simple y compuestos
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