Skip to main content

Home/ ChisholmCC/ Group items tagged skills

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Sara Wilkie

Hard Fun - 0 views

  •  
    "Once I was alerted to the concept of "hard fun" I began listening for it and heard it over and over. It is expressed in many different ways, all of which all boil down to the conclusion that everyone likes hard challenging things to do. But they have to be the right things matched to the individual and to the culture of the times. These rapidly changing times challenge educators to find areas of work that are hard in the right way: they must connect with the kids and also with the areas of knowledge, skills and (don't let us forget) ethic adults will need for the future world. "
Sara Wilkie

K-5 iPad Apps According to Bloom's Taxonomy | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    "In this six-part series, I will highlight apps useful for developing higher order thinking skills in grades K-5 classrooms. Each list will highlight a few apps that connect to the various stages on Bloom's continuum of learning. Given the size and current exponential growth of the app market, I will also assist educators in setting criteria necessary to identify apps that maintain the integrity of teaching for thinking."
Sara Wilkie

Why More Schools Aren't Teaching Web Literacy-and How They Can Start | November Learning - 0 views

  •  
    "Fourteen years after writing Teaching Zack to Think, there is still no Internet skill more critical than Web literacy. However, simply teaching students to be able to search for and validate information is not enough. The ever-growing amount of information on the Web and the immediate access to experts and peers from around the world create great opportunities for thoughtfully organizing and expanding upon learning. Alan November and Brian Mull have recently written an article titled Why More Schools Aren't Teaching Web Literacy-and How They Can Start, which now appears on the eSchool News site and discusses a three-part framework for making sure students are Internet savvy."
Sara Wilkie

brainyard - Information Literacy - 0 views

  •  
    "Evaluate websites with variations and extensions of skills you use to evaluate print materials."
Sara Wilkie

Using Action Research in Online Communities to Effect Building-Level Change | Connected... - 0 views

  •  
    "We want a team to think about action research as a collaborative endeavor, where principals and teachers work together to improve something over time. It's not just about gathering data, it's about working hard to improve something. Maybe you see a need to improve writing in the building, and you're going to figure out whether there's a way to take a techno-constructivist approach to strengthening students' writing skills. Maybe you feel the culture of your school is very mired in antiquated approaches to teaching and learning, and you want to build a new culture of innovation and collaboration, so you're going to develop your project around that goal."
Sara Wilkie

Teaching Empathy: Turning a Lesson Plan into a Life Skill | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    "In cooperative learning, students work together, think together and plan together using a variety of group structures designed along an instructional path. This dynamic learning model breaks with the dusty forms of frontal teaching that often create classrooms of "lonesome togetherness" -- students who may sit together but live worlds apart. Cooperative learning creates what Daniel Goleman calls "cognitive empathy," a mind-to-mind sense of how another person's thinking works. The better we understand others, the better we know them -- pointing toward (among other virtues) greater trust, appreciation and generosity. "
Cally Black

Year 10 Transition - Being netsmart - Digital Citizenship - LibGuides at Melbourne High... - 0 views

  •  
    In the digital age, what are the most important skills we need to develop? We need to be smart online. We need to be netsmart.
Cally Black

Study Ties College Success to Students' Exposure to a High School Librarian - The Digit... - 0 views

  •  
    Attention, educators: training high school students early in digital research, partnering them with a school librarian, and providing time to practice skills can instill a high level of confidence during college. This triple play of digital literacy education was affirmed by preliminary observations of a study underway by EBSCO Information Services, an online database provider.
Sara Wilkie

Project Based Learning: Explained. - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    "The Buck Institute for Education commissioned the cutting-edge advertising agency, Common Craft, to create a short animated video that explains in clear language the essential elements of Project Based Learning (PBL). This simple video makes the essential elements of PBL come alive and brings to light the 21st Century skills and competencies (collaboration, communication, critical thinking) that will enable K-12 students to be college and work-ready as well as effective members of their communities."
Cally Black

It's essential: Putting 'magic' into how you teach! | NovaNews - 4 views

  •  
    Knowing how and when to raise your eyebrows to elicit the kind of response you're after from a student or how to move around the classroom and/or moderate your voice to ensure that students are engaged and 'with you' are just some of the skills that should be second nature to teachers in our classrooms.  But are they?
Cally Black

It's time to kill off 'e-learning' & '21st century skills' - 1 views

  •  
    There are two separate conversations about what should happen in education at the moment, and both are doomed unless we connect them as soon as possible.
Cally Black

copyrightconfusion - Teaching - 0 views

  •  
    "The Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education helps educators gain confidence about their rights to use copyrighted materials in developing students' critical thinking and communication skills. These slides accompany the book, Copyright Clarity: How Fair Use Supports Digital Learning by Renee Hobbs. You can offer a staff development program using the materials in the book, plus these slides, to introduce your colleagues to the power of the Code. Use the lessons below, which are complete with multimedia, readings, discussion questions, activities and hands-on production projects to help you teach about copyright and fair use."
Cally Black

Best, Worst Learning Tips: Flash Cards Are Good, Highlighting Is Bad | TIME.com - 0 views

  •  
    In a world as fast-changing and full of information as our own, every one of us - from schoolchildren to college students to working adults - needs to know how to learn well. Yet evidence suggests that most of us don't use the learning techniques that science has proved most effective. Worse, research finds that learning strategies we do commonly employ, like rereading and highlighting, are among the least effective
Cally Black

10 Hilarious Hoax Sites to Test Website Evaluation | TeachBytes - 0 views

  •  
    In this day and age, where anyone with access to the internet can create a website, it is critical that we as educators teach our students how to evaluate web content. There are some great resources available for educating students on this matter, such as Kathy Schrock's Five W's of Website Evaluation or the University of Southern Maine's Checklist for Evaluating Websites.
Mark O'Mara

Why Learning Should Be Messy| The Committed Sardine - 0 views

  •  
    Why Learning Should be Messy. The following is an excerpt of One Size Does Not Fit All: A Student's Assessment of School, by 17-year-old Nikhil Goyal, a senior at Syosset High School in Woodbury, New York.
  •  
    I extracted this excerpt summing up the excellent points made In a summary published on Edutopia, Brigid Barron and Linda Darling-Hammond reviewed numerous studies and found that: : Students learn more deeply when they can apply classroom-gathered knowledge to real-world problems, and when they take part in projects that require sustained engagement and collaboration. Active-learning practices have a more significant impact on student performance than any other variable, including student background and prior achievement. Students are most successful when they are taught how to learn as well as what to learn. As the old adage goes, "Tell me and I forget, show me and I remember, involve me and I understand." Harvard Professor Howard Gardner said to me that schools should incorporate the best of two models of learning: a hands-on children's museum, which encourages open-ended exploration, and an apprenticeship, which provides a more structured environment for practicing meaningful skills in an authentic, real-life context.
Cally Black

Taking Notes On Your Laptop Could Be Ruining Your Test Scores - 0 views

  •  
    A newly published study concludes that people actually remember better when they've taken handwritten notes, rather than typed ones. In fact, studying from typed notes could actually hurt your test scores.
Cally Black

How to solve impossible problems: Daniel Russell's awesome Google search techniques - 0 views

  •  
    Here are some of my favorite tips shared by Russell at the 2012 Investigative Reporters and Editors conference. Some of these techniques are powerful but obscure; others are well-known but not fully understood by everyone.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 47 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page