What Works for Differentiating Instruction in Elementary Schools | Edutopia - 0 views
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when you're staring out at 20 or 30 students as individual as snowflakes, you may find yourself asking that ever-daunting question: "How?"
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"Create file folders filled with various graphic organizers, visual aides, and sentence starters for different types of thinking (cause and effect, chronological, compare and contrast, to name a few). You can quickly pull out one of these in a pinch."
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each procedure needs to be practiced 28 times to stick.
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Lesson Plan - Media and Body Image - 0 views
Time - The finite resource - 0 views
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As time is such a valuable resource its allocation to particular aspects of teaching and learning signifies their value. If we give time to content and memorisation of facts, we signal to our students that this is what we value. Likewise, if we remind our students that time is short and work must be completed quickly we should not be surprised when our students see tasks as work to be done rather than learning to be mastered. A more effective distribution of our time will see students being given time to think deeply and truly engage with the problems they are asked to solve.
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The importance of these soft-skills including important aspects of socio-emotional learning, creativity and even critical thinking are often not given the time they deserve.
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Ritchhart (2015) quotes research that reveals the power of wait time and thinking time with the quality and quantity of student thinking increasing by 300% to 700% when additional time is given to thinking within class discussion. Wait time or thinking time combined with strategies such as those from ‘Making Thinking Visible’ signify to students that what is wanted is not a speedy response but a well considered one. Wait time and thinking time according to Ritchhart combat the habit many students develop of guessing what the teacher wants as a response.
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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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Managing Email Effectively - Time Management Training From Mind Tools - 0 views
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check email only at set points during the day.
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reserve time to read and respond to email after a long period of focused work, or at the time of day when your energy and creativity are at their lowest (this means that you can do higher value work at other times).
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if the email will take less than two minutes to read and reply to, then take care of it right now, even if it's not a high priority.
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NationStates | create your own country - 0 views
ASCD Express 9.10 - Engaging Curriculum: A Foundation for Positive School Culture - 1 views
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after I had designed the major portion of the curriculum for a new unit, but before starting it with my class, I would hold a "Curriculum Lunch." I invited students to bring their lunch to my classroom, where I would present a preview of my plans for the next project. I shared the standards and learning objectives as well as the projects I was preparing for the students to work on, then asked for their input and feedback.
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mostly gave feedback on how to make them more interesting; engaging; and, in some cases, challenging.
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Students who attended the curriculum lunches would often hype up the project to their classmates, which in turn helped create positive morale going into a unit. Students were excited about the next thing they were going to learn!
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Focus on Audience for Better PBL Results | Edutopia - 0 views
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The Innovations class is deliberately open-ended, which means students have to propose their own project ideas and the standards they plan to meet.
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"The mentor can't be their dad or their dad's buddy," Wettrick says. "It has to be an expert in an arena, and it has to be somebody who makes a commitment to help them."
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Students benefit from honest critique along with positive attention for their projects, Wettrick says. "They don't need to hear, 'Good job!' They're better off when an expert tells them, 'That's not bad, but have you considered this, or you might want to look at that.'
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Define Your Road | Roadtrip Nation - 0 views
Bloom's Taxonomy - 0 views
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