Commonlit - 0 views
Tinkering Spaces: How Equity Means More Than Access | MindShift | KQED News - 0 views
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Existing inequities play out when adults engage with kids around tinkering or making. And, while makerspaces are a unique kind of learning space, many of the techniques thoughtful educators are using to improve their interactions with students could be used in other venues.
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Sewing has been one of the most successful projects in the program Escudé helps run at the Boys and Girls Club in San Francisco’s Visitacion Valley neighborhood. Kids shared their family histories of sewing and even invited grandparents to participate and share. The activity was framed as intellectual thought and valued as equal to any other tinkering task. The success of this activity came from giving students the space to share themselves and build relationships with one another and the facilitators, not because they were using the most recent technology or because they were building robots.
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it’s a cultural assumption that kids would think taking apart toys would be fun.
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3 Ways to Plan for Diverse Learners: What Teachers Do | Edutopia - 0 views
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Differentiating content includes using various delivery formats such as video, readings, lectures, or audio. Content may be chunked, shared through graphic organizers, addressed through jigsaw groups, or used to provide different techniques for solving equations.
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Process is how students make sense of the content. They need time to reflect and digest the learning activities before moving on to the next segment of a lesson.
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Processing helps students assess what they do and don't understand. It's also a formative assessment opportunity for teachers to monitor students' progress.
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8 Basic Steps Of Project-Based Learning To Get You Started - - 0 views
Golden Rules for Engaging Students in Learning Activities | Edutopia - 0 views
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In aiming for full engagement, it is essential that students perceive activities as being meaningful. Research has shown that if students do not consider a learning activity worthy of their time and effort, they might not engage in a satisfactory way, or may even disengage entirely in response (Fredricks, Blumenfeld, & Paris, 2004).
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highlighting the value of an assigned activity in personally relevant ways.
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Researchers have found that effectively performing an activity can positively impact subsequent engagement (Schunk & Mullen, 2012). To strengthen students' sense of competence in learning activities, the assigned activities could: Be only slightly beyond students' current levels of proficiency Make students demonstrate understanding throughout the activity Show peer coping models (i.e. students who struggle but eventually succeed at the activity) and peer mastery models (i.e. students who try and succeed at the activity) Include feedback that helps students to make progress
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The Marshall Memo Admin - Issues - 0 views
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1. Growth mindset thinking makes its uncertain way into schools 2. A middle-school teacher tries to shift to student-centered math 3. Harnessing adolescent rebelliousness 4. “Firewalks” in a California high school 5. The potential of instructional rounds 6. Fidgeters of the world, unite! 7. Keys to a successful staff retreat 8. Teaching about the election
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However, 85 percent of teachers said they wanted more professional development to use growth mindset insights most effectively. While the central ideas are intuitive to many educators, it takes time and collaboration for them to filter down to daily classroom practice.
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Because training is so spotty, there are also some key growth-mindset practices that are not being emphasized enough in classrooms, including: - Having students evaluate their own work; - Using on-the-spot and interim assessments; - Having students revise their work; - Encouraging multiple strategies for learning; - Peer-to-peer learning.
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Valuing and responding to resistance to change - The Learner's Way - 0 views
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For education at present we face a deluge of reports that the pace of change shall only accelerate and its scale become more absolute.
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The resistor is that person or even group of people who are seen by advocates of change to be habitually irrational and averse to change.
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Input to the change and the agency that comes with having input may allow the change to be embraced more readily.
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6 ways to bolster STEM education for the future | eSchool News - 0 views
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analysts predict that over the next five years, major American companies will need to add to their workforce a total of nearly 1.6 million employees versed in STEM: 945,000 who possess basic STEM literacy and 635,000 who demonstrate advanced STEM knowledge. Other data suggest that at least 20 percent of U.S. jobs require a high level of knowledge in at least one STEM field, according to the report.
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Accessible learning activities that invite intentional play and risk.
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Flexible and inclusive learning spaces. Teachers and students need flexibility in structures, equipment and access to materials in both the classroom and the natural world, as well as environments augmented by virtual and technology-based platforms.
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What's Missing from the Conversation: The Growth Mindset in Cultural Competency - Indep... - 0 views
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“In a fixed mindset, people believe their basic qualities, like their intelligence or talent, are simply fixed traits. They spend their time documenting their intelligence or talent instead of developing them. They also believe that talent alone creates success — without effort. They’re wrong,” according to Dweck’s website. “In a growth mindset, people believe that their most basic abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work — brains and talent are just the starting point. This view creates a love of learning and a resilience that is essential for great accomplishment. Virtually all great people have had these qualities,” according to Dweck’s website. (See graphic by Nigel Homes.)
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The “All or None” myth teaches us that there those who are “with it” and those who are not. Under this myth, those of us who understand or experience one of the societal isms (racism, sexism, classism, ableism, ageism, heterosexism, ethnocentrism, etc.) automatically assume that we understand the issues of other isms.
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This myth keeps us from asking questions when we don’t know; we spend more energy protecting our competency status rather than listening, learning, and growing.
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Strengthening Student Engagement:A Framework for Culturally Responsive Teaching - 0 views
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To be effective in multicultural classrooms, teachers must relate teaching content to the cultural backgrounds of their students.
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Engagement is the visible outcome of motivation, the natural capacity to direct energy in the pursuit of a goal. Our emotions influence our motivation. In turn, our emotions are socialized through culture—the deeply learned confluence of language, beliefs, values, and behaviors that pervades every aspect of our lives.
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What may elicit that frustration, joy, or determination may differ across cultures, because cultures differ in their definitions of novelty, hazard, opportunity, and gratification, and in their definitions of appropriate responses. Thus, the response a student has to a learning activity reflects his or her culture.
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Using Design Thinking to Embed Learning in Our Jobs - 0 views
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The telecomm company used design thinking to come up with a different approach: Rather than inject “training” into employees, it studied the job of a retail sales agent over the first nine months and developed a “journey map” showing what people need to know the first day, the first week, the first month, and then over the first few quarters.
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What this process revealed is that there are some urgent learning needs that must be addressed immediately, and then there are people to meet, systems to learn, products to understand, and many other processes to master over the first year. And of course, much of this involves getting to know customers, product experts, and fundamentals of sales and customer service.
What Do "Future Ready" Students Look Like? | Edutopia - 0 views
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a key readiness factor: knowing how to learn.
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If you believe in what you're doing," he adds, "working out your problems is the only option."
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Resilience turns out to be another key readiness factor for tackling hard problems.
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Cities drive the maker movement | TechCrunch - 0 views
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The maker movement is encouraging entrepreneurs to share ideas, and the city is the central place where it lives, breathes, and succeeds.
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Makers draw production back into the cities where consumption occurs, which can have profound economic and social benefits.
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The untapped skills and knowledge unleashed in a makerspace now have the potential to become part of the creative economy of the city as a whole.
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Turning the Tide: Inspiring Concern for Others and the Common Good through College Admi... - 0 views
Building Staff Rapport With Flash Lessons | Edutopia - 0 views
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Teachers are, by nature, protective of their practice and their space. In this way, even before I enter a teacher's room, I must establish the requisite rapport to garner the invitation. From there, the teacher picks the class, the day, and the time. Then she gives me a sense of what she's doing, has just finished, or will be doing soon. Finally, I show up and get to work.
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Ultimately, I had no idea if anyone would invite me in. Moreover, I didn't know if the lessons would work once I was invited. What I learned, however, is that only the former matters. Like an educational grandparent, if I show up and the lesson bombs, I get to leave and let the teacher move on without me. But the fact that teachers are willing to give up control of their rooms -- to an administrator -- without so much as a hint about what will happen when I get there, well, that's how I know the flashes are working.
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For all but one, I admit to having only a Google-search-based knowledge of the content, yet teachers keep inviting me in
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Ready. Set. Let go. - 0 views
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