Defining Differentiated Instruction | Edutopia - 0 views
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Equal education is not all students getting the same, but all students getting what they need
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We have to start where each child is in his learning process in order to authentically meet his academic needs and help him grow. With a classroom full of children at different stages of learning, this certainly sounds overwhelming,
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the first step is to find out as much as you can about her educational history and anything else
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Cutting and Using the Stencil - 0 views
Why I Gave Up Flipped Instruction - 0 views
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the flip wasn’t the same economic and political entity then that it is now
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my brief love affair with the flip has ended. It simply didn’t produce the tranformative learning experience I knew I wanted for my students .
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The flipped classroom essentially reverses traditional teaching. Instead of lectures occurring in the classroom and assignments being done at home, the opposite occurs.
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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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Toxic Stress and SPD, Dr. Jamie Chaves, OTD, OTR/L, SWC - Dr. Jamie Chaves, OTD, OTR/L - 0 views
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Stress isn’t necessarily a bad thing—it can mobilize us and allow us to function well.
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our bodies and brains are designed to handle small amounts of stress.
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“toxic stress” and it has a myriad of negative implications for the body, brain, emotions, and relationships. Examples include inattention, poor emotional control, decreased memory, difficulty learning, poor frustration tolerance, irritable bowel syndrome, and even a compromised immune system.
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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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The Value of Guided Projects in Makerspaces | Renovated Learning - 0 views
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Working through guided projects can help students to develop the skills that they need to further explore creatively. It’s true that some students can just figure it out, but most need that gentle push to get them started.
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Following patterns to the letter when I first got started helped me to learn the skills that I needed to be creative in my knitting.
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The problem comes when all we ever do are guided projects. Sylvia Martinez and Gary Stager warn against the “20 identical birdhouses” style class projects, where there is zero creativity involved. It’s very easy to fall into the trap of focusing too much on standards, rubrics and guided projects and zapping all the fun and creativity out, turning a makerspace into nothing more than another classroom. It’s tempting for many educators to just print out a list of instructions, sit students down in front of a “maker kit” and check their e-mail while students work through the steps one by one. This is obviously not what we want in our makerspaces.
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Evaluating Project-Based Learning | Edutopia - 0 views
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There are many dimensions of student achievement that we need to evaluate in PBL. The end product is certainly important, but if we focus only on that, the meaningful learning that happens throughout the process can be lost as students feel pressure to do whatever it takes to "make the grade."
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In other words, we want to acknowledge not only what they learned, but how they came to learn it so that they can use these processes in the future.
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Establish target goals early to provide purpose for the project, while also establishing expectations of the result: What is the problem to solve or the product to create? What kinds of subject area content need to be included or addressed in the project? What expectations do you have for the final product's presentation, publishing, or performance? What kinds of collaborative behaviors must be demonstrated by students throughout the process? Feedback and corrections should happen frequently to keep students on track, improve their work, and set them up for success in the final product. Waiting too long to give feedback may result in work that is too far gone to be fixed or improved.
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4 Proven Strategies for Teaching Empathy | Edutopia - 0 views
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Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.
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In psychology, there are currently two common approaches to empathy: shared emotional response and perspective taking.
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Shared emotional response, or affective empathy, occurs when an individual shares another person’s emotions.
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Twitter Is My Teacher Superpower: 5 Steps to Make it Yours | Jo-Ann Fox - 1 views
Micro-Credentials: Empowering Lifelong Learners | Edutopia - 0 views
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Within our own profession, teachers are engaging in continued learning through personal learning networks, websites like Edutopia and MOOCs. Anyone has the ability to self-construct curriculum and gain the skills once exclusive to those able to pay for a traditional education.
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Despite the vast shift in how we pursue knowledge, little has changed with how we credential those who acquire knowledge. We still primarily credential learners based on seat time and credit hours, and often only recognize learning pursued through traditional pathways.
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For teachers, badges could be a way to demonstrate skills to potential employers, build identity and reputation within learning communities, and create pathways for continued learning and leadership roles.
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How Does Project-Based Learning Work? | Edutopia - 0 views
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Have in mind what materials and resources will be accessible to the students. Next, students will need assistance in managing their time -- a definite life skill. Finally, have multiple means for assessing your students' completion of the project: Did the students master the content? Were they able to apply their new knowledge and skills? Many educators involve their students in developing these rubrics
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Here are steps for implementing PBL, which are detailed below: Start with the Essential Question Design a Plan for the Project Create a Schedule Monitor the Students and the Progress of the Project Assess the Outcome Evaluate the Experience
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Involve the students in planning; they will feel ownership of the project when they are actively involved in decision making.
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50 End-of-School-Year, Self-Probing Questions for Educators - Getting Smart by John Har... - 1 views
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Did I refer to the class as our class or my class?
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8. If our class were a company, would it be out-of-business now?
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9. Did students create and experience a great class or simply take a class and get credit?
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Simulations Can Change the Course of History . . . Classes | Edutopia - 0 views
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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.
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When a student adopted that character's thinking and point of view in one of the simulations, passion and purpose soared.
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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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What Reflects a Great School? Not Test Scores - Education Week - 0 views
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Enduring achievement gains require not only applying content and concepts worth knowing, but also ensuring that learning is occurring in a healthy, thriving culture as well
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Is the principal visible in classrooms and noticing and commenting on teachers' and students' strengths?
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Joy in learning is essential to a healthy and productive school culture; fear and joy cannot coexist.
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The Marshall Memo Admin - Issues - 0 views
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“The act of writing, even if the product consists of only a hundred and forty characters composed with one’s thumbs, forces a kind of real-time distillation of emotional chaos.” Researchers have confirmed the efficacy of writing as a therapeutic intervention.
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She was trained to avoid jumping into problem-solving mode, instead using validation
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Probes were important to get more information
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