Google Course Asks Employees to Take a Deep Breath - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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“Now how do we keep them? Teaching employees with terrific technical abilities also means helping them to develop presentation skills and communication skills, helping them to understand their impact on other people, their ability to collaborate across groups and cultivate a mentality from which great motivation can spring.”
What You (Really) Need to Know - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Education will be more about how to process and use information and less about imparting it.
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An inevitable consequence of the knowledge explosion is that tasks will be carried out with far more collaboration.
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New technologies will profoundly alter the way knowledge is conveyed.
Let Kids Rule the School - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Their guidance counselor was their adviser, consulting with them when the group flagged in energy or encountered an obstacle. Though they sought advice from English, math and science teachers, they were responsible for monitoring one another’s work and giving one another feedback. There were no grades, but at the end of the semester, the students wrote evaluations of their classmates.
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The students also designed their own curriculum, deciding to split their September-to-January term into two halves.
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each of them focused on specific mathematical topics, from quadratic equations to the numbers behind poker
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Blogs vs. Term Papers - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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blog writing has become a basic requirement in everything from M.B.A. to literature courses. On its face, who could disagree with the transformation? Why not replace a staid writing exercise with a medium that gives the writer the immediacy of an audience, a feeling of relevancy, instant feedback from classmates or readers, and a practical connection to contemporary communications? Pointedly, why punish with a paper when a blog is, relatively, fun?
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Because, say defenders of rigorous writing, the brief, sometimes personally expressive blog post fails sorely to teach key aspects of thinking and writing. They argue that the old format was less about how Sherman got to the sea and more about how the writer organized the points, fashioned an argument, showed grasp of substance and proof of its origin. Its rigidity wasn’t punishment but pedagogy.
Come the Revolution - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Teachers Teaching Teachers, on Twitter: Q. and A. on 'Edchats' - NYTimes.com - 2 views
Why Do Americans Stink at Math? - NYTimes.com - 6 views
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The very people who embody the problem — teachers — are also the ones charged with solving it.
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the apprenticeship of observation
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The research showed that Japanese students initiated the method for solving a problem in 40 percent of the lessons; Americans initiated 9 percent of the time. Similarly, 96 percent of American students’ work fell into the category of “practice,” while Japanese students spent only 41 percent of their time practicing.
What You (Really) Need to Know - Harvard - Belfer Center for Science and International ... - 0 views
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Yet undergraduate education changes remarkably little over time.
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Education will be more about how to process and use information and less about imparting it.
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An inevitable consequence of the knowledge explosion is that tasks will be carried out with far more collaboration.
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