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Not Just Group Work -- Productive Group Work! | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "caffolding Culture How are you building a culture of collaboration in your classroom? Teachers should not forget the importance of scaffolding the skills needed for students to work in groups. Paired with a good collaboration rubric, where students know what is expected of them in terms of behavior, teachers need to scaffold skills such consensus building, effective communication, and the ability to critique. Educators need to explicitly teach and assess collaboration, a critical 21st century skill, if they want their group work to be productive."
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Melbourne Museum: Melbourne Museum - 0 views

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    This is one of our stops during the Australia trip.  New technologies enable museums to create learning experiences for teenagers where they can authentically research, create, communicate and collaborate. Museum Victoria is using 21st century communication technologies to support students to investigate the past, both online and onsite. This session will outline how two programs developed by Museum Victoria, Making History and 600 million years in 60 seconds, are transforming museum learning for 21st century learners. The new programs enable teenagers to collaborate with their peers, communicate their ideas, create new digital media and make sense of the world around them. 600 million years in 60 seconds is an onsite education program at Melbourne Museum where exhibition objects are the learning focus and ICT tools are used by students to communicate their understanding of key concepts. Making History is an online resource where experts share historical knowledge and experience as well as an online gallery that can host student generated digital histories.
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Teampedia - 1 views

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    collaboration and team activities
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Lindenwood University - Our Grades Were Broken: Overcoming Barriers and Challenges to I... - 0 views

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    Abstract The purpose of this study was to describe the barriers and challenges school leaders face as they implement a standards-based grading (SBG) system.  The researchers used a multiple case study methodology to investigate how key school leaders described their implementation journey at three schools that differed in size, demographics, and location.  Purposeful sampling was used to identify key administrators at three different schools who were in the process of implementing a SBG system.  Data were collected primarily via semi-structured interviews.  In the analysis, researchers used three phases: horizontalization, thematizing, and textural-structural synthesis.  Each of the three schools had very different implementation stories.  Barriers in the process included: student information and grading systems, parents/community members, the tradition of grading and fear of the unknown, and the implementation dip.  This study suggests that implementation of SBG must be purposeful and well communicated.  That is, in order to enhance the likelihood of success, an intentional plan with a reasonable timeline, ongoing professional development and collaboration, and effective two-way communication about the purpose of grading is needed.  Also maintaining A-through-F final grades-even as they simultaneously implement more progressive assessment and reporting strategies-is often seen as a necessary concession.  Finally, the authors explicate SBG's relationship to competency-based education and professional learning communities (PLCs).
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Challenging the Model of 1:1 with BYOD | Edutopia - 0 views

  • They committed to twice-a-month planning sessions with their technology integrationist, who would also co-teaching with them twice a month.
  • collaborative, co-teaching model
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Core Strategies for Innovation and Reform in Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Wow - for Mt. Abe transformation, this is a must read.
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Changed but Still Critical - Part One of Two - Home - Doug Johnson's Blue Sku... - 0 views

  • 1.  Social learning spaces
  • the best school libraries are not just surviving, but thriving, in this new digital information
  • but not without seriously re-purposing their physical spaces.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Comfort and aesthetics are increasingly important
  • “learning groups” in which participants collaboratively construct personal meaning
  • content studied is the most important factor in college students being successful.3
  • school libraries also fit the description of a “third place”-
  • specially before and after school. Allowing gaming, research on topics of personal
  • learning ‘commons” i
  • the place, either physical or virtual, that is the hub of the school where exemplary teaching and learning are show cased; where all professional development, teaching and learning experimentation and action research happens; and where various specialists of the school have offices, physical or virtual.5
  • schools with good library programs are more successful than those without, v

VTed - 0 views

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Why Teachers Should Join Twitter…What I have Learned as a Twitter Newbie « ad... - 0 views

  • There is a community of networking and collaboration among educators from the U.S. and all over the world that I have missed out on. 
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http://flpbs.fmhi.usf.edu/pdfs/SystemsCoaching.pdf - 0 views

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    From Judy Carr's session
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