Skip to main content

Home/ BBN School/ Group items tagged information

Rss Feed Group items tagged

S G

YouTube - Diigo V5.0: Collect, Highlight and Remember! - 0 views

  • Awesome cloud-based information management tool that enables users to collect, highlight, access and share a variety of information, on a variety of devices. Category: Howto & Style Tags: diigo annotate collect highlight 4 likes, 0 dislikes
  • Suggestions
    • S G
       
      this is a great intro to diigo
  •  
    Awesome cloud-based information management tool that enables users to collect, highlight, access and share a variety of information, on a variety of devices.
Demetri Orlando

10 Things in School That Should Be Obsolete | MindShift - 0 views

  •  
    In a modern school a library should be more of a learning commons able to support a variety of student activities as they learn to access and evaluate information.  Books have their place but they are not the end-all of libraries.  A learning commons is no longer the quiet sanctum of old, rather it is a space that can be central or distributed, used formally or informally, and one that can stimulate a spirit of inquiry in students.
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.
Demetri Orlando

Educational Leadership:Technology-Rich Learning:Students First, Not Stuff - 0 views

  • productive learning is the learning process which engenders and reinforces wanting to learn more" (p. x). Never has that been more possible than at this moment of abundant access to information, knowledge, and people via the web. But "wanting to learn more" suggests a transfer of power over learning from teacher to student—it implies that students discover the curriculum rather than have it delivered to them. It suggests that real learning that sticks—as opposed to learning that disappears once the test is over—is about allowing students to pursue their interests in the context of the curriculum.
  • literacy is much more than simply reading and writing texts. The organization's position statement (n.d.) now defines 21st century literacies as including "proficiency with the tools of technology," an ability to "manage, analyze, and synthesize multiple streams of simultaneous information," an ability to "design and share information for global communities to meet a variety of purposes," and more.
  • Stanford professor Howard Rheingold, believe that technology now requires an attention literacy—the ability to exert some degree of mental control over our use of technology rather than simply being distracted by it
Megan Haddadi

Summer Prof Dev- Google's Computer Science for High School - 0 views

  •  
    CS4HS (Computer Science for High School) is an initiative sponsored by Google to promote Computer Science in high school curriculum. With a grant from Google's Education Group, universities develop projects including workshops for local high school CS teachers that incorporate informational talks by industry leaders, and discussions on new and emerging CS curricula at the high school level. On this site, you'll find information on how to hold a CS4HS program and workshop at your university, information for workshop attendees and partners, and other helpful resources. We currently offer CS4HS grants in the US, Canada, and Europe, Middle East and Africa. February 18 - Online Application closes visit http://cs4hs.media.mit.edu/
Demetri Orlando

Potomac School Excellence document - 0 views

  •  
    There is good language and good ideas in this document that may inform our tech plan.
Megan Haddadi

What's Worth Learning in School? | Harvard Graduate School of Education - 0 views

  • Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi was getting on a train. One of his sandals slipped off and fell to the ground. The train was moving, and there was no time to go back. Without hesitation, Gandhi took off his second sandal and threw it toward the first. Asked by his colleague why he did that, he said one sandal wouldn’t do him any good, but two would certainly help someone else.
  • It was also a knowledgeable act. By throwing that sandal, Gandhi had two important insights: He knew what people in the world needed, and he knew what to let go of.
  • crisis of content
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • information, achievement, and expertise.
  • ifeworthy — likely to matter, in any meaningful way, in the lives learners are expected to live.
  • Knowledge is for going somewhere,” Perkins says, not just for accumulating.
  • Just as educators are pushing students to build a huge reservoir of knowledge, they are also focused on having students master material, sometimes at the expense of relevance.
  • The achievement gap asks if students are achieving X. Instead, it might be more useful to look at the relevance gap, which asks if X is going to matter to the lives students are likely to lead.
  • the encyclopedic approach to learning that happens in most schools that focuses primarily on achievement and expertise doesn’t make sense.
  • we need to rethink what’s worth learning and what’s worth letting go of — in a radical way
  • With high-stakes testing, he says, there’s a fixation on “summative” versus “formative” assessment — evaluating students’ mastery of material with exams and final projects (achievements) versus providing ongoing feedback that can improve learning.
  • “students are asked to learn a great deal for the class and for the test that likely has no role in the lives they will live — that is, a great deal that simply is not likely to come up again for them in a meaningful way.”
  • “As the train started up and Gandhi tossed down his second sandal, he showed wisdom about what to keep and what to let go of,” Perkins says. “Those are both central questions for education as we choose for today’s learners the sandals they need for tomorrow’s journey.”
  •  
    David Perkins discusses what's worth learning.  We teach a lot that doesn't matter.  There's also a lot we should be teaching that would be a better return on investment.  
Demetri Orlando

TeachThoughtHow 21st Century Thinking Is Just Different - 0 views

  • If the 20th century model was to measure the accuracy and ownership of information, the 21st century’s model is form and interdependence. The close thinking needed to grasp this is not beyond the reach of a typical middle school student, but it may be beyond their thinking habits.
Demetri Orlando

Apple - Punahou School - 0 views

  • curriculum to better prepare students for a working world that increasingly favored the technologically fluent
  • Teachers observed that students were more engaged when using the Mac, and they saw the effect as potentially transformative
  • teachers rarely lecture from the front of the classroom. Instead, they ask questions, then issue clear guidelines and expectations for students to meet. Either alone or in small groups, students research the topic on the Mac to come up with the information they need to answer each question
  •  
    Apple web page touting the benefits of 1 to 1
Demetri Orlando

Why Schools Must Move Beyond One-to-One Computing | November Learning - 1 views

  • Perhaps the weakest area of the typical one-to-one computing plan is the complete absence of leadership development for the administrative team—that is, learning how to manage the transition from a learning ecology where paper is the dominant technology for storing and retrieving information, to a world that is all digital, all the time. Leaders must be given the training to: Craft a clear vision of connecting all students to the world’s learning resources. Model the actions and behaviors they wish to see in their schools. Support the design of an ongoing and embedded staff development program that focuses on pedagogy as much as technology. Move in to the role of systems analyst to ensure that digital literacy is aligned with standards. Ensure that technology is seen not as another initiative, but as integral to curriculum.
1 - 12 of 12
Showing 20 items per page