Five Characteristics of Learner-Centered Teaching | Faculty Focus - 0 views
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Learner-centered teaching engages students in the hard, messy work of learning.
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Learner-centered teaching includes explicit skill instruction.
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Learner-centered teaching encourages students to reflect on what they are learning and how they are learning it.
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Dipsticks: Efficient Ways to Check for Understanding | Edutopia - 0 views
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What strategy can double student learning gains? According to 250 empirical studies, the answer is formative assessment, defined by Bill Younglove as "the frequent, interactive checking of student progress and understanding in order to identify learning needs and adjust teaching appropriately."
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Alternative formative assessment (AFA) strategies can be as simple (and important) as checking the oil in your car -- hence the name "dipsticks." They're especially effective when students are given tactical feedback, immediately followed by time to practice the skill.
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New to Alternative Formative Assessment? Start Slow
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How to Incubate Creativity in School Through Making and Discovery | MindShift | KQED News - 0 views
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The Turtle Art project, and the concept of “doing” or “making” before any explicit instruction has been given, is part of the school’s attempt to shake up its teaching. Lighthouse Community Charter has to cover the same standard curriculum as district schools, so teachers have to choose carefully the times when they’ll spend a little more time and creativity on a difficult subject.
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“The concept of the coaching is that if we help someone with one or two projects, they may do more on their own.”
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“I would much rather push for this kind of curriculum in schools serving low-income communities than in other schools because I think it will help students to gain their own voice, and a lot of the kind of character-building aspects that are intrinsic in this, but also to be exposed to new possibilities for the future,” Vanderwerff said.
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ADHD Expert Webinars from ADDitude Magazine - 0 views
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Open access archive of webinars dealing primarily, but not exclusively, with support for ADHD students. Pedagogically sound and research-based, but some hosts, like the ADDitude site itself, trend towards a blame-teachers perspective in "defense" of students/families/etc. Still, a fantastic resource.
NAIS - The Truth About Making Real Change for Racial Justice - 0 views
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To look at ourselves honestly means to ask: Why are our schools here? The raison d’être of independent schools has been, and continues to be, that of advancing the interests of those who already have privilege—to provide a return on investment (ROI) to those who have sufficient disposable income to afford independent school. To put it differently, our main job is to preserve the social status quo or reproduce the elite; this class-bound purpose results in a hierarchical view of the world in which our students are destined for leadership. In our mission statements, the idea that we are creating leaders is almost universal. On their face, these statements provide a binary and hierarchical understanding of society, one in which there are leaders and followers, and we are teaching the leaders.
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noblesse oblige, a worldview that accepts and perpetuates existing social hierarchies while promoting social good.
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When we look at our schools’ service programs, the idea of “giving back” is ubiquitous. Yet we fail to discuss or even question how much taking is appropriate.
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How School Leaders Can Support Teachers and Students This Year | Edutopia - 0 views
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One of the things we know about brains that have been pushed too far is that they can’t learn. They just can’t. They need an opportunity to calm, to feel safe, to find their way out of the lizard-brain response that is fight-flight-flock-freeze-appease.
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High social complexity + low form predictability = stress reactive behaviors.
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High social complexity (lack of clarity around the social expectations, cultural norms, and how to navigate the expected social realities of a situation) + low form predictability (confusion about what is going to happen moment to moment, day to day, week to week) = stress reactive behaviors (fight-flight-flock-freeze-appease or signs that the amygdala, the lizard brain, has taken control and the prefrontal cortex—the part that learns and plans and creates—isn’t fully engaged).
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Good Homework Practices for Students with ADHD or LD - 0 views
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This one definitely made the hair stand up on the back of my neck. ADDitude definitely has a bad habit of presenting all teachers as the enemy of students with ADHD and all parents as innocent, often passive victims of heartless educators, and this article is a prime example of that. That said, while I disagree with several of these "good homework practices" to be clear, I think it's worth looking over what some are advising out there in some circles.
Students: AI is Part of Your World | Harvard Graduate School of Education - 0 views
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“If anyone can dash off a paper written by AI, perhaps this will push classrooms to revive other ways of communicating knowledge, including project-based learning, Socratic seminars, writing papers with ChatGPT as a starting point where students take on the role of critical editor, and other assessment tools that aren’t so easily hacked,” like video projects and live-action play. “The fastest, cheapest way to ensure the work is done by the student is to use pencil and paper instead of typed papers.”
The How (and Why) It's Time to Create Digital Student Portfolios - 1 views
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We MUST Archive Student Work
Relationship Building Through Culturally Responsive Classroom Management | Edutopia - 0 views
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Cultural competence is the ability to successfully communicate and empathize with people from diverse cultures and incomes,
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To build rapport, talk directly to children outside of class, using their names. Also begin class by checking in -- asking kids how they’re doing -- even if the misbehavior of the previous class reached biblical proportions.
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Monitor your discourse style. Indirect requests (“Would you like to let me finish reading the directions?”) can confuse some children who are used to receiving explicit directives from their working-class parents.
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50 Funny "Would You Rather" Questions for Students - 0 views
Middle School Math Lantern Project - 0 views
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In this project, the entire 6th grade learned about geometry, unit rate, expenses and revenue by designing and creating their own paper lanterns. At the same time, students explored various cultures around the world through the lens of important global issues. Their final product was an original paper lantern that was to be part of an auction to raise awareness and funds for a community improvement project of their choice through the non-profit organization, Lantern Projects. The exhibition took place at Centro Cultural de la Raza in Balboa Park.
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"In this project, the entire 6th grade learned about geometry, unit rate, expenses and revenue by designing and creating their own paper lanterns. At the same time, students explored various cultures around the world through the lens of important global issues. Their final product was an original paper lantern that was to be part of an auction to raise awareness and funds for a community improvement project of their choice through the non-profit organization, Lantern Projects. The exhibition took place at Centro Cultural de la Raza in Balboa Park. "
An Inside Look at an Award-Winning Maker Program | Edutopia - 0 views
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Making matters. And design thinking matters to makers.
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Eleven students, including four who had just graduated eighth grade, would spend the weekend explaining how design thinking drove our program’s work and their learning. Kids used student-built prototypes to explain how they employed design thinking to solve problems and make the world a better place.
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We set up stations where Faire attendees got to experience prototyping for themselves, tackling design challenges based on the Extraordinaires Design Studio and expertly explained by our kids.
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'Diversity Does Not Happen By Accident' and Other Lessons About Equity in th... - 0 views
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1. Equity and diversity will not happen by accident
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3. Projects should not be limited to classrooms
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This idea of blending Maker opportunities with real-life activities has a strong supporter in Davis, who believes that it helps to show students the purpose of what they are doing.
Teaching Why Facts Still Matter | Edutopia - 0 views
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When politicians and thought leaders can’t or won’t agree on a basic set of facts, how can we motivate students for the noble pursuit of truth and help them see why it still matters?
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An unavoidable challenge arises when students realize that no matter how many facts support a certain conclusion, denial and dissent remain.
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“You have to trust [that] the best information, the truth, will always prevail,” he said, though “that’s tough when you face a crowd of people screaming at you on Twitter in probably not the nicest way.”
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