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Megan Haddadi

It's Time to Get Serious About Creativity in the Classroom | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Jim Moulton's take on creativity in the classroom
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.
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    "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

20 Students Who Totally Nailed It - 1 views

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    pretty funny and creative responses by students when they have no idea what the "correct" answer is.
Demetri Orlando

How to apply a design thinking, HCD, UX or any creative process from scratch - Digital ... - 0 views

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    Great article on various approaches to design thinking
Demetri Orlando

EdTechTeacher | Inspire Student Creativity with Chromebooks - from Greg Kulowiec - 0 views

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    SoundTrap, Explain Everything, and WeVideo
Megan Haddadi

Unleashing Creativity: Greg Kulowiec App Smashing - from Beth Holland | Leading Change ... - 0 views

  • The general concept between App Smashing is merging content from a variety of apps. Greg likes the word App Smash, but Lisa Johnson (@techchef4u) calls it App Synergy
Megan Haddadi

Students as Contributors: The Digital Learning Farm | November Learning - 0 views

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    Alan November writes about six creative ways that your students can make valuable contributions to their learning community: tutorial designers, official scribes, researchers, collaborative coordinators, contributing to society, and curriculum reviewers.
Megan Haddadi

A love of learning - Boston.com - 0 views

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    A small, independent K-6 school in Massachusetts focuses on collaborative learning with students working at group tables rather than desks, and teachers acting as facilitators rather than lecturers. There is no homework at Anova, the Massachusetts School for Science, Creativity and Leadership, where there are rules against repetition and busywork. "We're about progressive education," said Courtney Dickinson, the school's founder.
Demetri Orlando

Idea to retire: Technology alone can improve student learning | Brookings Institution - 0 views

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    "teachers should take on new roles and approaches to using technology that transform the learning experiences they offer to students.  We need to help educators become fluent users of technology, creative and collaborative problem solvers, and adaptive, socially aware experts throughout their careers. We need to equip them with a pedagogy that is rich in project-based, authentic learning experiences that require students to use technology as tools for discovery, collaboration, and the creation.  Only then will we see the full impact of what is possible with technology. The notion that technology itself can improve student outcomes must die. "
Demetri Orlando

Quarks: Building Creative Classrooms - 0 views

shared by Demetri Orlando on 31 Jul 13 - No Cached
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    classroom ideas printed on cards.
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.
Megan Haddadi

Strategies for Embedding Project-Based Learning into STEM Education by Thom Markham (Bu... - 0 views

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    Strategies for embedding project-based learning into STEM Education
Megan Haddadi

Bloom-iPads-Apps.jpg (1024×768) - 0 views

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    Bloom's Taxonomy for the iPad
Demetri Orlando

Getting Schools Ready for the World - Educational Leadership - 0 views

  • 1. Articulate the Abilities Needed To begin, schools need to clearly articulate the abilities that they need to develop in students. For example, the Albemarle, Virginia, School District has identified a dozen "Lifelong Learner Competencies" that are the focus of practice in the classroom. They include things like ▪ Gather, organize, and analyze data; evaluate processes and products; and draw conclusions. ▪ Think analytically, critically, and creatively to pursue new ideas, acquire new knowledge, and make decisions. ▪ Apply and adapt a variety of appropriate strategies to solve new and increasingly complex problems. ▪ Participate fully in civic life, and act on democratic ideals within the context of community and global interdependence. ▪ Apply habits of mind and metacognitive strategies to plan, monitor, and evaluate one's own work.
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