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Guy Leavitt

Educator: Lifelong Learner, Advocate for Progress| The Committed Sardine - 1 views

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    Changes in Education to meet the needs of 21st Century Learners
Robert Slane

Pinwheel Discussions: Texts in Conversation < Teaching Channel - 0 views

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    Pinwheel Discussions: Great Way to Engage Learners - Watch this video
Bradford Saron

Education in the Age of Globalization » Blog Archive » My new book: World Cla... - 0 views

  • This book is the result of my attempts to answer these questions with data and evidence from a variety of sources. Essentially, I reached the following conclusions: The current education reform efforts that attempt to provide a common, homogenous, and standardized educational experience, e.g., the Common Core Standards Initiative in the U.S., are not only futile but also harmful to preparing our children for the future. Massive changes brought about by population growth, technology, and globalization not only demand but also create opportunities for “mass entrepreneurship” and thus require everyone to be globally minded, creative, and entrepreneurial. Entrepreneurship is no longer limited to starting or owning a business, but is expanded to social entrepreneurship, policy entrepreneurship, and intrapreneurship. Traditional schooling aims to prepare employees rather than creative entrepreneurs. As a result the more successful traditional schooling is (often measured by test scores in a few subjects), the more it stifles creativity and the entrepreneurial spirit. To cultivate creative and entrepreneurial talents is much more than adding an entrepreneurship course or program to the curriculum. It requires a paradigm shift—from employee-oriented education to entrepreneur-oriented education, from prescribing children’s education to supporting their learning, and from reducing human diversity to a few employable skills to enhancing individual talents. The elements of entrepreneur-oriented education have been proposed and practiced by various education leaders and institutions for a long time but they have largely remained on the fringe. What we need to do is to move them to the mainstream for all children.
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    @YongZhaoUO and his new book. Note the conclusions. 
Bradford Saron

Leading in Learning as Lead Learners: Keynote Remarks at NEIT 2010 « 21k12 - 0 views

  • ecause what our students need to learn is changing, because our understanding of how learning works is changing, because the technology which enhances learning is changing.
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    Jonathan Martin is a principal at St. Gregory College Preparatory School in Tucson, AZ. St. Gregory is a 1:1 laptop school.  He blogs at www.21k12blog.net and tweets at @JonathanEMartin.
Bradford Saron

Pencil as Power Tool | Daniel Pink - 1 views

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    For all of you visual learners out there.
Bradford Saron

The Man Behind Spore Explores Gaming as Learning - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • For the moment, most of the games I see have properties that could produce powerful learning experiences and build constructive communities.
  • Is there a way to keep the magnetic allure of such games but build in scientific concepts or goals that could foster progress on this finite planet?
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    Gaming, Google Earth, Skype, and 2nd World activities are a form of empirical learning, which allows learners to actually "experience" something when learning--as if they were there. 
Bradford Saron

Educators: Keep Up or Risk Losing Learners | MindShift - 0 views

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    Great article.
Bradford Saron

Cultivating a Learning Environment: Six Suggestions : 2¢ Worth - 2 views

  • We are preparing our children for a future of frightening uncertainty, but astounding opportunity, and to prosper within that future, our children must become skilled, resourceful, and habitual learners — not just lifelong learners but adopting a learning lifestyle.
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    Observant, witty, and predictive in nature, Warlick is always worth the read. 
Bradford Saron

Will Richardson: Have Our Schools Reached Their Limits? - 0 views

  • Have we reached the limits of our traditional school system's capacity to deal with the diversity of learners that come into our schools today?
  • To do this we need to shift our thinking from a goal that focuses on the delivery of something -- a primary education -- to a goal that is about empowering our young people to leverage their innate and natural curiosity to learn whatever and whenever they need to. The goal is about eliminating obstacles to the exercise of this right -- whether the obstacle is the structure and scheduling of the school day, the narrow divisions of subject, the arbitrary separation of learners by age, or others -- rather than supplying or rearranging resources. The shift is extremely powerful...
  • We can see an emerging crisis in our schools, while, on the other hand, we see a renaissance for learning. The question then simply becomes: would a completely different perspective that builds on the latter, be a more productive focus for us than the continued, largely unproductive, public debate around the former?
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  • Instead of seeing the non-face-to-face learning space as one of a compromised experience, we surely need to recognize and explore without fear the new and, in many ways, more profound pedagogical opportunities the virtual space opens; opportunities that will challenge and possibly even undermine our traditional perspectives around effective teaching and learning.
  • I agree with the premise of the report: if we continue to place our energy toward "fixing the system," literally millions of kids will be under-served in the process. Instead, what if we put a laser-like focus on improving real student learning, not test scores? (And yes, the two are decidedly different.)
  • Let's start talking about how we can begin to deliver more personalized, relevant learning to kids right now. Let's rethink our definitions of teacher and classroom and school, in some profound, albeit, radical ways. Let's deeply consider the affordances that technologies bring to the learning equation, despite being made decidedly uncomfortable by those potentials in some big ways.
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    Yikes. Read this over. What do you think? 
Bradford Saron

Educational Leadership:Technology-Rich Learning:Students First, Not Stuff - 1 views

  • But it's not about the tools. It's not about layering expensive technology on top of the traditional curriculum. Instead, it's about addressing the new needs of modern learners in entirely new ways. And once we understand that it's about learning, our questions reframe themselves in terms of the ecological shifts we need to make: What do we mean by learning? What does it mean to be literate in a networked, connected world? What does it mean to be educated? What do students need to know and be able to do to be successful in their futures? Educators must lead inclusive conversations in their communities around such questions to better inform decisions about technology and change.
  • Right now, the web requires us to reconsider the ecology of schools, not just the technologies we use in them. We must start long-term, broad, inclusive conversations about what teaching, learning, and being educated mean in light of the new technologies we now have available to us. Just like business, politics, journalism, music, and a host of other long-standing institutions that the web has rocked at their foundations, education will be and is being changed. To understand the implications fully, we need to start with the questions that focus on our students—and not just on the stuff.
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    Yup!
Bradford Saron

For the Love of Laptops | Scholastic.com - 0 views

  • The iPad is a consumption device. Sure, you can use it for Web browsing, video-watching, or note-taking, but the laptop affords a much greater range of expressive possibilities. Apple’s embrace of digital textbooks reinforces a quaint view of education that transfers agency from learners to publishers. The tools for creating e-books, such as iBooks Author, require Macs, but the laptop cannot read the books it creates, forcing schools to choose between textbooks and computing. Apple has made it clear that education is about content delivery and testing, no longer about the power to be your best.
  • Tablets could have all the functionality of a laptop, but they don’t. Until they do, I recommend that schools invest in laptops for student use.
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    I love Gary Stager. Not only one of the foremost experts on 1:1, but also a master at sarcasm. 
Bradford Saron

Published: The Old Revolution - 1 views

  • n the pursuit of these new learning environments we find ourselves asking those wonderfully fundamental questions: What are “the basics” and “basic literacy skills” today? How might our students best learn them? How are schools/classrooms/desks/subjects/schedules/teachers necessary to this learning process, and how are they not? And these are the best kinds of questions, because their best answers are just more questions. And so we find ourselves exactly where any great learner would want to be, on a quest, asking question after question after question.
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    Thoughtful argument in favor of changing our paradigms in education. 
Robert Slane

- The Connected Educator Culture - 0 views

  • What does it take to be a Connected Educator?Willingness to be digitally literateWillingness to seek out and connect with other educators.Willingness to explore and share ideas with other educatorsWillingness to develop and maintain a Professional Learning Network of sourcesWillingness to peruse, engage, and share pertinent Education BlogsWillingness to be a lifelong learner in pursuit of relevance
Bradford Saron

Needed: A New Model of Pedagogy : : Don Tapscott - 1 views

  • We need to move to a customized and collaborative model that embraces 21st century learning technology and techniques.&nbsp; This is not about technology per se – it’s about a change in the relationship between the student and teacher in the learning process.
  • So Portugal launched the biggest program in the world to equip every child in the country with a laptop and access to the web and the world of collaborative learning. To pay for it, Portugal tapped into both government funds and money from mobile operators who were granted 3G licenses. That subsidized the sale of one million ultra-cheap laptops to teachers, school children, and adult learners. Here’s how it works: If you’re a teacher or a student, you can buy a laptop for 150 Euros (U.S. $207). You also get a discounted rate for broadband Internet access, wired or wireless. Low income students get an even bigger discount, and connected laptops are free or virtually free for the poorest kids. For the youngest students in Grades 1 to 4, the laptop/Internet access deal is even cheaper — 50 Euros for those who can pay; free for those who can’t. That’s only the start: Portugal has invested 400 million Euros to makes sure each classroom has access to the Internet. Just about every classroom in the public system now has an interactive smart board, instead of the old fashioned blackboard.
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    Don Tapscott is the author of a number of books on understanding the digital native. 
Bradford Saron

Education Reform is Re-establishing, Redefining and Retooling : 2¢ Worth - 0 views

  • new generation of learners In a new information landscape For an unpredictable future
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    And David Warlick hits it again. 
Bradford Saron

Is the New Information Landscape Changing our Shopping Practices? : 2¢ Worth - 2 views

  • It also makes more clear the need to retool every classroom and equip every teacher and learner with contemporary information technologies, and instill not only the literacy skills of this information landscape, but also the literacy habits.
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    Warlick is great at seeing the application of digital knowledge. 
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    That was an interesting read. I think as people become more accustomed to on-line purchasing it will inevitably grow. It sure beats standing in line all night to take advantage of the Black Friday sales.
Bradford Saron

The Innovative Educator: 10 Ways Technology Supports 21st Century Learners in Being Sel... - 0 views

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    This includes adults and administrators in addition to students. This does explain how digital tools create self-directed learning. 
Bradford Saron

The State of the World: 10 Belated Reflections on 2011 Davos Don Tapscott : : Don Tapscott - 0 views

  • The new “wiki revolutions” are so explosive and happen so fast, that there is no clear vanguard to take power, leaving a vacuum. The vacuums that result pose significant challenges for everyone who cares about moving from oppression, dictatorship and fundamentalism to openness, democracy and 21st century governments.
  • he world is increasingly complex and interconnected, and, at the same time, experiencing an erosion of common values and principles. This undermines the public’s trust in leadership, which in turn threatens economic growth and political stability.&nbsp; In the words of the WEF’s founder Klaus Schwab, we need to “concentrate on defining the new reality and discuss which shared norms are required for making global cooperation possible in this new age.”
  • There are traditional risks like nuclear war, terrorism, climate change, infectious diseases, economic crisis and failed states.&nbsp; But new risks are emerging everywhere. Consider something as seemingly mundane as the global supply chain. The vast networks that provide the world with food, clothing, fuel and other necessities could handle an Iceland volcano and one other catastrophe like the failure of the Panama Canal. But according to experts, a third simultaneous disaster would collapse the system. People around the world would stop getting food and water, leading to unthinkable social unrest and even a disintegration of civilized society.
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  • we will only make growth sustainable “if we make our growth inclusive.”
  • They have been bathed in bits; computers, the internet, and interactive technologies are a fundamental part of the experience of youth. To them, technology is like the air. When young people today use digital devices, they are interacting, searching, authenticating, remembering, collaborating, composing their thoughts, and organizing information. They interact with the media and know how to inform themselves and use technology to get things done.
  • China’s disciplined command-and-control style work force could ultimately be trumped by a massive force of Indian professionals who are creative, collaborative, entrepreneurial and life- long learners.
  • The irresistible force to cut government spending is confronted with the immoveable object of essential services, entitlements, military spending and extraordinary expenditures stemming from corporate bailouts and fiscal stimulation.&nbsp;
  • What’s needed is a Wikinomics approach — embracing more agile, networked structures enabled by global networks for new kinds of collaboration. Nation states would continue to play a central role but can overcome their silo thinking and behavior by sharing information more effectively, cooperating on real-time networks, and basing their decisions more deeply in the processes of multi-stakeholder networks.
  • Understandably social media, mobility and the relentless digital revolution continues to drive change and cause concern in everything from intellectual property to youth revolutions.
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    Tapscott on his continued (and insightful) reflections. 
Bradford Saron

Traits of "tech savvy" teachers | 1 to 1 Schools - 0 views

  • They must embrace change!
  • They must be lifelong learners and model that.
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    Have any upcoming interviews?
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