Skip to main content

Home/ BBN School/ Group items tagged personalized learning

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Megan Haddadi

The Possibilities of Online Learning - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Sadly, many online classes are Web-based correspondence courses where students complete worksheets and take tests. The offerings and content mirror traditional curriculums
  • My colleagues and I have demonstrated that online environments focused on collaboration and action, rather than reading and test-taking, can be more social, creative, substantial and personally meaningful than traditional classes
  • The computer’s real power lies in how it allows kids to learn and do new things in new ways unimaginable just a few years ago
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Done well, online learning could supplement classroom instruction, offer experiences otherwise impossible, support 24/7 learning and break down barriers of geography, wealth or culture.
  •  
    "My colleagues and I have demonstrated that online environments focused on collaboration and action, rather than reading and test-taking, can be more social, creative, substantial and personally meaningful than traditional classes"
Demetri Orlando

Are You Ready to Join the Slow Education Movement? - 0 views

  •  ✓ We create learning environments that are carefully crafted, receptive, still, intuitive, unhurried, patient, reflective, quality-over-quantity and engaging. ✓ We develop curriculum that has greater depth than breadth. ✓ We make sure our curriculum takes into account local culture and celebrates the uniqueness of our local community. ✓ We don’t isolate skills development but let students grow their skills as they engage with important content. ✓ We construct learning environments that foster questioning, creativity and innovation, such as the maker movement and project/problem based learning. ✓ We find the courage to have serious discussions about abolishing standardized testing, classroom marks and grading, and the use of “birth year” as our primary criterion for sorting students. ✓ We lobby our governments for funds to assure true equality in education for all children. ✓ We discontinue the ranking of teachers and schools.  ✓ We replace our egg-carton grades with flexible, personalized learning that takes into account when students are ready to engage in and acquire important skills. ✓ We make time for teacher collaboration a top priority.
Demetri Orlando

Personal Learning Environments for Inquiry in K12 - 0 views

  •  
    free online webinars for K12 teachers spanning topics that relate to Personal Learning Networks
Megan Haddadi

Simulations Helping New Teachers Hone Skills - 0 views

  • The student-teacher faces a rowdy class. “We’re not going to have that kind of behavior in here,” she says. “It’s too loud in here to move on.” The students don’t pay much attention. A boy in the back row, wearing a sleeveless T-shirt, slumps his shoulders. Another student waves his hand aimlessly. “Nah, just stretching,” he replies, when the teacher asks if he needs something. Scenes such as that aren’t uncommon in urban classrooms, but in this case there is one critical difference: These students are avatars—computer-generated characters whose movements and speech are controlled by a professional actor. Each of the five characters—all with distinct abilities, personalities, and psychological profiles, and even names like “Maria” and “Marcus”—were created as part of the TeachME initiative at the University of Central Florida, in Orlando. There, teacher-candidates can practice in a virtual classroom before ever entering a real one. Real-time classroom simulations like TeachME, supporters say, offer promise for a host of teacher-training applications. Through them, candidates could learn to work with different groups of students, or practice a discrete skill such as classroom management. Most of all, such simulations give teachers in training the ability to experiment—and make mistakes—without the worry of doing harm to an actual child’s learning. “It allows the teacher to fail in a safe environment,” said Lisa Dieker, a professor of education at the University of Central Florida and one of the designers of TeachME. “Real kids, trust me, will remember in May what you said to them in August. You can’t reset children.”
  •  
    video simulation helps new teachers learn classroom management skills
Demetri Orlando

Can't Keep Up with Professional Development? Build Your Personal Learning Network (it's... - 0 views

  •  
    Nice intro to PLNs
Demetri Orlando

No Defending Illiterate Educators « My Island View - 1 views

  • I am sure someone told Gutenberg that they would never read his printed text because they loved the feel and smell of hand written scrolls.
  • To be information literate, a person must be able to recognize when information is needed and has the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information.
  • Digital literacy is the ability to locate, organize, understand, evaluate and analyze information using digital technology.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • educators need to model learning. Not being media literate in the 21st Century is a very POOR model.
  • A teacher’s content expertise is a small rival to the internet. Teaching and guiding kids to harness that content should be the goal.
  • It is a professional responsibility! Media Literacy requires people enter a world that gives up a great deal of control. Many educators are not prepared for that.
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page