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Bradford Saron

Miracle Schools: Where Are They Now? | Gary Rubinstein's TFA Blog - 1 views

  • Despite their claims, the corporate reformers have no proof that the harm of their tactics is outweighed by any good. They lied about their 90-90-90-90 schools. Now they’ve been caught lying about their continually improving schools. They have absolutely nothing.
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    From @mcleod, a review of charter schools. 
Bradford Saron

School Finance in the Digital-Learning Era: A Review - Forbes - 0 views

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    Tweeted out by Digital Learning Now, so beware.
Bradford Saron

A Principal's Reflections: Why Blog? - 2 views

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    A great argument: Do you display your best thinking to others? Do you have a format to condense your best thinking for peer review and dialogue? 
Bradford Saron

The year in review: Some year-end blog stats for 2010 | Dangerously Irrelevant - 1 views

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    This is a great resource.
Bradford Saron

19 Top Ideas for Education in Drive by Daniel Pink | Connected Principals - 3 views

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    Great post reviewing Dan Pink's book, Drive. 
Bradford Saron

Knitter : 2¢ Worth - 0 views

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    Review of back-channel resources.
Bradford Saron

YouTube - ‪EngagingEducators's Channel‬‏ - 1 views

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    Great website to review!
Paul Blanford

Review - The Connected Educator - 1 views

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    Finished reading the Connected Educator. As we discussed in class, much of what we are doing is the same as outlined in this book. It is evident that since this book's publishing, there are many new and improved versions of these tools and ideas. This is a great book and I plan to use it as a resource in the future. I purchased the electronic version and have found that there were disadvantages to me versus the hard copy.
Paul Blanford

A Review: Revisiting Professional Learning Communities at Work - 1 views

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    Richard DuFour, Rebecca DuFour and Robert Eaker revisited their work on PLCs and published a sequel to their book on PLCs. In the sequel, they discuss their thoughts, "New Insights" on PLCs. The publisher, Solution Tree provides an "Action Guide" to assist the reader in understanding the findings/discussions described in the new book.
Robert Slane

Kathy Schrock's Home Page - 0 views

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    SLATE presenter
Bradford Saron

The Hard Science of Teamwork - Alex "Sandy" Pentland - Harvard Business Review - 1 views

  • Our data show that great teams: Communicate frequently. In a typical project team a dozen or so communication exchanges per working hour may turn out to be optimum; but more or less than that and team performance can decline.Talk and listen in equal measure, equally among members. Lower performing teams have dominant members, teams within teams, and members who talk or listen but don't do both. Engage in frequent informal communication. The best teams spend about half their time communicating outside of formal meetings or as "asides" during team meetings, and increasing opportunities for informal communication tends to increase team performance.Explore for ideas and information outside the group. The best teams periodically connect with many different outside sources and bring what they learn back to the team.
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    Great article on Teamwork, and the internal dynamics of human interaction (or lack there of). 
Bradford Saron

Flunking the Test | American Journalism Review - 3 views

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    Must read
Bradford Saron

Six Social Media Trends for 2011 - David Armano - The Conversation - Harvard Business R... - 0 views

  • It's The Integration Economy, Stupid.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Don Tapscott calls this Wikinomics. 
    • Deb Gurke
       
      I find all of this fascinating and at the same time wonder what it means for those who are not connected. The conversation about social media seems like a white, middle-class one to me. Yet our society is becoming increasingly diverse and, at least in Wisconsin, poorer. What are the consequences of all of this interconnectivity on those who are not able to participate?
  • Tablet & Mobile Wars Create Ubiquitous Social Computing.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      We've been talking about this for years, the anywhere, any time, all the time type of approach, which now is better facilitated by easy interface access. 
  • Facebook Interrupts Location-Based Networking.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      I would argue that it transforms our conception of "local." Now, local isn't physically limited, it's digitally liberated. 
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Average Participants Experience Social Media Schizophrenia
  • Google Doesn't Beat Them, They Join Them.
  • Social Functionality Makes Websites Fashionable Again
Bradford Saron

The Anti-Creativity Checklist - Youngme Moon - The Conversation - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    Scott McLeod just posted this video on his blog. It's thought provoking and very innovative. 
Bradford Saron

Four Principles for Crafting Your Innovation Strategy - Technology Review - 0 views

  • Think big, start small, fail quickly, scale fast.
  • Start with a clean sheet of paper.
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    Advice from the world of business.
Bradford Saron

The Four Personas of the Next-Generation CIO - R "Ray" Wang - The Conversation - Harvar... - 0 views

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    This is an extremely interesting article about the transformation of leadership in the field of information. 
Bradford Saron

21st Century Education Requires Lifewide Learning - Christopher Dede - Innovations in E... - 0 views

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    I love the concept of "lifewide" learning, meaning that education does not have to happen within the bricks but can happen between the clicks. 
Bradford Saron

Why progress matters: 6 questions for Harvard's Teresa Amabile | Daniel Pink - 0 views

  • We were pretty shocked to discover the dominant effect of negative events on inner work life – people’s mostly-hidden emotions, perceptions, and motivations at work. Setbacks have a negative effect on inner work life that’s 2-3 times stronger than the positive effect of progress. When we checked into whether other researchers had found something similar, we learned that it’s a general psychological effect; “bad is stronger than good.” The reason could be evolutionary. Maybe we pay more attention to negatives, and are more affected by them, out of self-preservation. So – because positive inner work life is so important for top performance, leaders should do whatever they can to root out negative forces.
  • Religiously protect at least 20 minutes – and, ideally, much more – every day, to tackle something in the work that matters most to you. Hide in an empty conference room, if you have to, or sneak out in disguise to a nearby coffee shop. Then make note of any progress you made (even if it was a small win), and decide where to pick up again the next day. The progress, and the mini-celebration of simply noting it, can lift your inner work life.
  • Bosses can religiously protect at least 5 minutes, every day, to think about the progress and setbacks of their team, and what enabled or inhibited that progress. The daily review should end with a plan to do one thing, the following day, that’s most likely to facilitate progress – even if that progress is only a small win. I think this practice, if used widely, could make a real difference in organizational performance and employee inner work life. And good inner work life isn’t only a matter of employee retention or the bottom line. It’s a matter of human dignity.  
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    Love the forward tilt of this book. 
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