That’s what we want to do. Well…OK, that’s what I in my omniscient infinitude want to do. This is the problem of the connected classroom how can one give up the hiearchy, trusting that the course of things will be taken up in manifold ways and products?
StoryDesk- A Powerful Alternative to PowerPoint and Prezi ~ Educational Technology and ... - 0 views
Jr Imagination - Raising a Creative Genius - The Powerful Fours of Creative T... - 0 views
Gaming Meets the Six Traits | Six Trait Gurus - 0 views
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"magine, for example, a province in which light is the metaphoric key to destiny and success. Which trait might that province represent? Imagine another in which residents dig for linguistic "gems," each with the power to convey ideas unambiguously. Any trait come to mind there? In a third province, ruled by graceful dolphins, flow and rhythm are essential."
If Thou Beest a Moon Calf…More Stories from My Dark Night of the #CCourse Sou... - 0 views
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And therein lay the rub: in response to the fear and confusion I sensed in my students I became Uncle “Hub Central”. Understanding how to summarize became an external act outside their own minds consisting of checklists, algorithms, and templates designed to connect the dots that I so faithlessly put on the page. But in the end I believe that summing up needs to be an internal algorithm that rises up as a personal exigency, a massing together of sets of neuronal allies, firing and wiring like a mosh pit of nodal “hands” holding up the crowd surfing madman named Summary.
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Here you are tough on yourself again while the rock and the hard place remain exactly where you found them. In my view, Uncle Hub Central responded with support strategies (I'm shocked to discover your use of the word scaffold, Terry. :) How might you throw out the bathwater of hierarchy while tucking the baby of your support strategies under your arm? If the hierarchy disappeared, how might you leverage your support skill and instinct in a more networked, dynamic way?
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Meaning making and perhaps internal connecting? A consummation devoutly to be wished.
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Is It Time to Give Up on Computers in Schools? - Hybrid Pedagogy - 0 views
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The sorts of hardware and software that were purchased had to meet those needs — the needs and the desire of the administration, not the needs and the desires of innovative educators, and certainly not the needs and desires of students.
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we must stare critically at the belief systems that are embedded in these tools.
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The mainframe never went away. And now, virtualized, we call it “the cloud.” Computers and mainframes and networks are a point of control. Computers are a tool of surveillance. Databases and data are how we are disciplined and punished. Quite to the contrary of Seymour’s hopes that computers will liberate learners, this will be how all of us will increasingly be monitored and managed.
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Chapter Two of Participatory Culture in a Networked Era - Impedagogy - 0 views
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Youth Culture, Youth Practices
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If we are going to make meaningful interventions here, we have to go well beyond the myth of the digital native, which tends to flatten diversity and mask inequality. We need to engage more closely with the very different ways that young people encounter new media in the contexts of lives that are defined around different kinds of expectations and norms, different resources and constraints, from those encountered by youth raised under more privileged circumstances.
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Coming of Age
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