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Jill Bergeron

Revolution, Responsibility, and Football: Teaching Financial Literacy to Middle Schoole... - 0 views

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    Three games to teach financial literacy.
Jill Bergeron

Enhancing Learning Through Differentiated Technology | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Differentiation Tools for writing, literacy, and flipped teaching.
Jill Bergeron

5 Good Tools to Differentiate Instruction | Opening Paths - 0 views

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    "5 Good Tools to Differentiate Instruction"- low tech tools
Jill Bergeron

A World of Project Ideas (You Can Steal) | Edutopia - 0 views

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    PBL prompts to modify for your classes.
Jill Bergeron

A Quiver of Teaching Strategies (Not Just One Silver Bullet) | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Why a variety of teaching strategies is healthy for a school and its students.
Jill Bergeron

Creating a Mini Maker Space | Parents | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    How to create a mini-maker space. Good for classrooms
Jill Bergeron

50 End-of-School-Year, Self-Probing Questions for Educators - Getting Smart by John Har... - 1 views

  • Did I refer to the class as our class or my class?
  • 8. If our class were a company, would it be out-of-business now?
  • 9. Did students create and experience a great class or simply take a class and get credit?
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  • 15. Did I take advantage of spontaneous learning opportunities when students’ interests had obviously shifted, or did I maintain an inflexible mindset and vow to never deviate from an archaic lesson plan?
  • 17. Was our class set up to promote creativity and collaboration or memorization and silence?
  • 19. Were 21st Century skills embedded within daily assignments?
  • 22. Did I gain professional wisdom by speaking to my collegial mentor?
  • 25. Did I avoid professional negativity by declining to gossip at work?
  • 24. Was the technology in my classroom used in an authentic manner? (Shannon Reed)
  • 26. Did I manage my stress level by enjoying time with my family and friends, by exercising several times a week, by zoning out while engaged in a hobby, and by simply chilling out every once in a while?
  • 28. Did I laugh often with students and colleagues?
  • 31. Did I allow students to co-write their own project-based, learning contracts?
  • 34. How many colleagues did I observe in-action in their classrooms this past school year?
  • did I remember the names of all co-workers?
  • 39. How balanced were the assignments this year in terms of requiring creativity, practical thinking, and analysis? (Adam Johnson)
  • 40. Did I participate in a professional learning community outside of my school via Twitter?
  • 46. Did I consistently blog as a form of professional self-reflection?
  • 47. Am I a stronger teacher today than when I first stepped into the classroom at the beginning of the school year?
Kimberly Marlow

Twitter Support for Educators and Parents | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Find this free five-part Series, Twitter 101: An eCourse for Educators and Parents, here (8). Below is an overview of what participants can expect to learn. Part 1: The Basics (9) Part 2: The Language of Twitter (10) Part 3: Registration & Interface Overview (11) Part 4: Sending a Tweet (12) Part 5: Finding People & Resources, Taking Control of Your Own Development
Jill Bergeron

The Backchannel: Giving Every Student a Voice in the Blended Mobile Classroom | Edutopia - 0 views

  • A backchannel (3) -- a digital conversation that runs concurrently with a face-to-face activity -- provides students with an outlet to engage in conversation.
  • TodaysMeet (4) would have let teachers create private chat rooms so that students could ask questions or leave comments during class. A Padlet (5) wall might have fueled students to share their ideas as text, images, videos, and links posted to a digital bulletin board. The open response questions available in a student response system like Socrative (6) or InfuseLearning (7) could have become discussion prompts to give each student an opportunity to share his or her ideas before engaging in class discussion.
  • They create a blended environment where teachers and students engage in both physical and online conversations so that learning is no longer confined to a single means of communication or even an arbitrary class period. Backchannels don't replace class discussions -- they extend them.
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  • To inspire questioning and wondering, Meghan Zigmond (10) put her first grade students in groups and allowed them to use a Padlet wall (11) to capture their questions as they read Douglas Florian's Comets, Stars, The Moon, and Mars: Space Poems and Paintings
  • She used Socrative to capture her fifth graders' questions and answers throughout the presentation, giving them an immediate channel for their thoughts.
  • The backchannel gave every student an opportunity to express his or her views and to listen to voices that otherwise may not have been heard.
  • A backchannel creates ubiquitous opportunities (18). In a blended environment, students and teachers can communicate through multiple modalities, allow their thoughts to develop over time, and engage in authentic learning.
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    This article provides three good tech tools for teachers who want to try a back channel chat and nearly a half dozen ideas for incorporating this type of technology into the curriculum. There are even suggestions for how to use it with students as young as 6 years old.
Jill Bergeron

Closing Out vs. Fading Out: 5 Steps for Ending the Year Strong | Edutopia - 0 views

  • If you're a teacher and not an instructional leader, you can initiate this important conversation, too.
  • make sure you acknowledge his or her specific strengths so that he or she can build on them
  • now is the time to give them complete ownership over their development so that it's meaningful for them and they're inspired to do it.
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  • clearing the path is about thinking through the details of the teachers' next steps and removing barriers so that they can visualize these steps happening and articulate how they'll happen.
  • a concrete plan to focus on as they think about next school year.
  • he or she should be the one leading the ideas for these next steps based on whatever meaningful focus areas you've identified together
  • it's too easy for the summer weeks to fly by until, all of a sudden, it's the first day back at school, and the teacher hasn't accomplished any of the summer plans that he or she intended to
  • Find out from the teachers you support what they appreciated about your support, what they wanted more of, and what they'd want to change.
  • it helps them identify what they need from a coach or evaluator, and it helps you get insight into how to better support your teachers next year.
  • closing the year strong with positive, actionable takeaways will ensure that teachers walk away feeling empowered, inspired, and ready to come back even stronger next year!
Jill Bergeron

Simulations Can Change the Course of History . . . Classes | Edutopia - 0 views

  • With each unit of study, I made sure to incorporate an active simulation, ranging from mock press conferences and trials to murder mysteries and dinner parties, from spy dilemmas to mock Survivor games.
  • When a student adopted that character's thinking and point of view in one of the simulations, passion and purpose soared.
  • Even the quietest, most introverted student, given the opportunity to play a personality from history, can step up and into the opportunity to speak from that person's perspective
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  • Set up the environment so that students will be speaking and debating with each other in the roles of their historical characters and around a framing problem or issue
  • Bring in a variety of sources for students to analyze and research.
  • Social media is a wonderful connector for these kinds of simulations, with students setting up Edmodo, Schoology, or Facebook pages for their characters in a simulation, figuring out friend groups, posting photos, and speaking from their character's point of view.
Jill Bergeron

4 Free Web Tools for Student Portfolios | Edutopia - 0 views

    • Jill Bergeron
       
      Weebly does the same things as Google Sites, but it looks way better.
    • Jill Bergeron
       
      Weebly does the same thing as Google Sites and it looks tons better.
  • think of Evernote as the Swiss Army knife of organization
  • Evernote allows students to write, take photos, record audio, upload content and more with the ability to tag items, create notebooks for organization and share content socially.
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  • Evernote doesn't give teachers any way to moderate its use by students.
  • Evernote isn't publicly viewable, either.
  • what Three Ring offers that Evernote doesn't is teacher-created class accounts. In other words, teachers initiate the use of Three Ring in the classroom by creating classrooms within the teacher account and adding students to each class
  • Three Ring
  • students can create and upload content from their own devices and tag, search and share their portfolios
  • Three Ring even allows parents to view their students' accounts once linked by the teacher
  • This is the effect of good portfolios. They craft a narrative of learning, growth and achievement over time.
  • If your school is fueled by Google Apps for Education, then using Google Sites (3) to create student portfolios, or "Googlios," makes perfect sense.
Jill Bergeron

Homework, Sleep, and the Student Brain | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Are you able to stay up with your son or daughter until he or she finishes those assignments? If the answer is no, then too much homework is being assigned, and you both need more of the sleep that, according to Daniel T. Willingham (3), is crucial to memory consolidation.
  • we see moderate advantages of no more than two hours of homework for high school students. For younger students, the correlation is even smaller. Homework does teach other important, non-cognitive skills such as time management, sustained attention, and rule following, but let us not mask that as learning the content and skills that most assignments are supposed to teach
  • A scientific approach to tackling their homework can actually lead to deepened learning in less time.
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  • Delaying gratification is an important non-cognitive skill and one that research has shown enhances life outcomes
  • But it takes teachers to design better homework (which can include no homework at all on some nights), parents to not see hours of homework as a measure of school quality, and students to reflect on their current homework strategies while applying new, research-backed ones.
Jill Bergeron

The Best Education Posts of 2013: The Edutopia Top 10 Deep Dive | Edutopia - 1 views

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    Great tips from Edutopia!
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