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Megan Haddadi

PBS Teachers | PBS Teachers Innovation Awards - 0 views

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    PBS teachers- are you an innovative teacher?   The 2011 PBS Teachers Innovation Awards is open for entries through April 14th, 2011
Demetri Orlando

UVA Med School Embraces Innovative Teaching - 0 views

  • they are expected to graduate with the habits of mind—curiosity, skepticism, compassion, wonder—that will prepare them to be better physicians
  • About half of all medical knowledge becomes obsolete every five years. Every 15 years, the world’s body of scientific literature doubles.
  • better integration of formal knowledge and clinical experience and a learning process that is individualized, not one-size-fits-all
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • One of the goals of this whole model—of having students do a lot of the learning themselves rather than passively listening—is that they need to be lifelong learners
  • Gone is the traditional 50-minute lecture. (Also gone is paper, for the most part.) The students have completed the assigned reading beforehand and, because they’ve absorbed the facts on their own, class time serves another purpose. Self-assessment tests at the start of class measure how well they understand the material. Then it’s time to do a test case, to reinforce their critical thinking and push their knowledge and skills to another level.
  • The room’s interactive technology allows her to link to students’ laptops; it also enables their work to be broadcast onto the big screens. Instead of a blackboard, she can use a document camera, which is like an overhead projector, allowing her to write or draw a diagram that will project on the screens. Absentees can view a podcast of the session.
  • We’re trying to create a situation in which they are thinking as a physician working with a patient, not as a professional test taker,
  • Immediately following the exercise, students move to a separate room where, still highly energized, they watch the video and reflect on their decision making as physicians in that particular situation.
  • studies in modern learning theory indicate that hour-long lectures are not the best way to teach students because the average attention span for listening to one is about 12 minutes.
  • The circular learning studio, Pollart notes, is designed for learning, not teaching.
  • There was some initial resistance. Some faculty felt a little offended
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    a lot of these ideas are applicable to k-12
Demetri Orlando

The Innovative Educator: 6 Ways to Turn Your 1-Computer Classroom Into a Global Communi... - 0 views

  • Support teachers in using technology for professional purposes. Provide teachers with support for securing interactive digital content. Encourage teachers to partner with students to integrate technology into learning. School principal must lead by example. Embed technology integration into teacher and leader evaluation. Support student acquisition and use of technology in schools. Work with students to develop responsible use policies. Secure appropriate permissions from students and their parents.
  • Support teachers in using technology for professional purposes. Provide teachers with support for securing interactive digital content. Encourage teachers to partner with students to integrate technology into learning. School principal must lead by example. Embed technology integration into teacher and leader evaluation. Support student acquisition and use of technology in schools. Work with students to develop responsible use policies. Secure appropriate permissions from students and their parents. As schools put these building blocks in place, they will be able to work to
Demetri Orlando

Lisa Nielsen: The Innovative Educator: Stop trying to figure out if screentime is good ... - 0 views

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    Great response to the "too much screentime?" doom & gloom
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

Innovation Labs and Makerspaces - 0 views

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    Nice compilation of resources on design thinking maker spaces
Megan Haddadi

Thinkquest International Competition 2011 - 0 views

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    Challenging Students Globally to Think, Create, and Innovate This exciting competition challenges students to apply their critical thinking, communication, and technology skills to a real-world problem.
Megan Haddadi

Photo Ops: 10 Innovative Ways to Use Visual Media - 0 views

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    This article suggests 10 ways that educators can use visual media in classroom lessons. Using a digital camera, students can take photos and video as part of original public-service announcements, create multimedia book reports on Glogster or organize a fictional crime-scene investigation
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.
Megan Haddadi

Google Labs - Explore Google's New Ideas - 0 views

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    Play around with prototypes of some of Google's wild and crazy ideas and offer feedback directly to the engineers who developed them.
Demetri Orlando

Project XQ - 0 views

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    A site devoted to re-imagining how high school should function.
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