What is Learning Agility?
Learning agility is the capacity for rapid, continuous learning from experience. Agile learners are good at making connections across experiences, and they’re able to let go of perspectives or approaches that are no longer useful — in other words, they can unlearn things when novel solutions are required. People with this mindset tend to be oriented toward learning goals and open to new experiences. They experiment, seek feedback, and reflect systematically.
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4 Ways to Become a Better Learner - 0 views
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How Do You Develop Learning Agility? Since developing learning agility involves learning to recognize and change automatic routines, the aid of a coach can be invaluable. Coaching, which Peterson calls “the ultimate customized learning solution,” helps clients understand how their minds work and how to make them work better. But even if you’re not working with a coach, there are steps you can take on your own to enhance your learning agility. Ask for feedback. Think of one or more people who interacted with you or observed your performance on a given task.
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Experiment with new approaches or behaviors. To identify new behaviors for testing, Peterson recommends reflecting on a challenge you’re facing and asking yourself questions such as “What’s one thing I could do to change the outcome of the situation?” and “What will I do differently in the future?”
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Look for connections across seemingly unrelated areas. For example, Peterson has systematically applied principles he’s used to learn about wine to the domain of leadership development
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Make time for reflection. A growing body of research shows that systematically reflecting on work experiences boosts learning significantly. To ensure continuous progress, get into the habit of asking yourself questions like “What have I learned from this experience?” and “What turned out differently than I expected?”
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The Science of Classroom Design [Infographic] - Blog | USC Rossier Online - 1 views
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The Teacher Curse No One Wants to Talk About | Edutopia - 1 views
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"The Curse of Knowledge The Curse of Knowledge has been variously described in articles by Chip and Dan Heath, Carmen Nobel, and Steven Pinker, and also in books such as The Sense of Style and Made to Stick. It has been applied to a variety of domains: child development, economics, and technology are just a few. All of the resources describe the same phenomena -- that a strong base of content knowledge makes us blind to the lengthy process of acquiring it. This curse has implications for all teachers: We do not remember what it is like to not know what we are trying to teach. We cannot relive the difficult and lengthy process that learning our content originally took. As a result, we end up assuming that our lesson's content is easy, clear, and straightforward. We assume that connecti"
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DESIGNING LEARNING SPACES - Part 1 | gregmiller68 - 2 views
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So You Want to Drive Instruction With Digital Badges? Start With the Teachers | EdSurge... - 1 views
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the HISD badging system provides flexibility for HISD teachers to access the modules online at any time and place and to complete them at their own pace.
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This flexibility is critical to help teachers balance their everyday demands with the expectation to build new expertise in content, pedagogy and new technologies.
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It allows them to build a badging portfolio that reflects the skills and knowledge they have developed, as well as evidence of classroom impact. That portfolio is portable.
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First, personalizing professional development pathways with modules and badges reflect an individual teacher’s learning needs.
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The Company Chaos You Don't Know You're Creating - 1 views
www.fastcompany.com/...s-you-dont-know-youre-creating
chaos classroom organization executive function time management education learning


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define organizational chaos. You know exactly what I am talking about: shifting priorities, unclear direction, unstable processes, unhappy customers, disengaged employees.
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I'm also not talking about energizing chaos—the type of externally driven change from customers and competitors that stimulates innovation, reduces complacency,
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By reducing the organizational chaos that is completely within your control, you not only establish a solid foundation on which excellence can be built, but you also free up the psychic energy and resources you need to cope with the truly unforeseen circumstances
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Habits are nearly invisible. You engage in them without realizing they are there. And you can look at another organization that is succeeding and not notice the real differences between how that outstanding organization behaves and how your organization behaves. When looking at outstanding organizations, you may miss the important trees and just see the forest.
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economist Lant Pritchett, who describes this process as isomorphic mimicry, a phrase that means the copying of forms rather than functions. I
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What Checking Email All The Time Does To Your Brain - Business Insider - 2 views
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http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs184/1102752268498/archive/1122580804441.html - 1 views
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In my mind, a solid 4 rating means that your adult professional embraces feedback, both formal and informal and has strong systems and processes in place that encourage feedback - things like annual faculty, parent, and board surveys, intentionally designed evaluation processes for students, faculty, staff and leadership that happen at minimum annually, but even better quarterly, regular audits of programs, curriculum, pedagogy, time and space. Other good signs that your culture supports feedback might be meetings that end with questions like, "How are we working together as a team/department?" and "What can we do to get better at this work?" and school leaders who ask their reports with genuine curiosity, "What can I do to better support your work?" "What do you think about this idea?" or "How did this meeting go for you?"
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What if you spent a week "playing anthropologist" with the following question in mind: "What evidence do I see that our adult community has a strong culture of feedback?"
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pend some time with colleagues. Ask them questions about their classes. See how many times you hear someone ask questions like: "What do you think about this?" "Will you come by my class and let me know what you think about this lesson I am teaching?" "How can I/we do this better?" Attend meetings with this question in mind. How receptive are team members to feedback they get in meetings?
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talk Feedback Without Frustration. This 15 minute video offers some key habits and practices that designers (and educational leaders in their roles as experience designers) can adopt in order to make feedback more meaningful, especially when presenting a new idea or product and much of which can be applied to feedback - both formal and informal. A few tips include:taking responsibility for the feedback you are gettinggoing after the kind of feedback you wanthaving a designated facilitator for more significant processeshaving goals for the project that you can use to make the feedback more helpfulnot confusing what you like/don't like with what is good/bad(most importantly) just getting better at talking to each other.
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Education World: Consider Digital Badges for Kids - 0 views
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What Project-Based Learning Is - and What It Isn't | PROJECT BASED LEARNING | MindShift... - 2 views
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The term “project-based learning” gets tossed around a lot in discussions about how to connect students to what they’re learning. Teachers might add projects meant to illustrate what students have learned, but may not realize what they’re doing is actually called “project-oriented learning.” And it’s quite different from project-based learning, according to eighth grade Humanities teacher Azul Terronez.
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Cultivating the Habits of Self-Knowledge and Reflection | Edutopia - 1 views
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As a teacher, your "self" is embedded within your teaching -- which is how it goes from a job to a craft. The learning results are yours.
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Lack of apparent curiosity Apathy Refusal to take risks Decreased creativity Defeated tones Scrambles for shortcuts
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Help them to separate themselves from their work and related performance. Help them to understand that our lives aren't single decisions, but a vast tapestry of connections, with any single moment, performance or failure barely visible, and only important as it relates to their lives as a whole.
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How do I respond when I'm challenged, both inwardly and outwardly? Which resources and strategies do I tend to favor, and which do I tend to ignore? What can I do to make myself more aware of my own thinking and emotions? What happens if I don’t change anything at all?
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Like anything, it is first a matter of visibility -- understand what is necessary, seeing it when it happens, emphasizing and celebrating it, etc.
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The more that students see themselves face major and minor challenges in the classroom, and then see the effects of how they respond, the more conditioned they'll become to responding ideally on their own.
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Can Social Media Have a Role to Play in Managing a Successful Classroom? | Langwitches ... - 0 views
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why would we not want to expose, facilitate and support our students in becoming literate in the area of global, network, media, information literacies and digital citizenship?
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Educational Leadership:Feedback for Learning:Seven Keys to Effective Feedback - 3 views
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Expert coaches uniformly avoid overloading performers with too much or too technical information. They tell the performers one important thing they noticed that, if changed, will likely yield immediate and noticeable improvement ("I was confused about who was talking in the dialogue you wrote in this paragraph"). They don't offer advice until they make sure the performer understands the importance of what they saw.
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I say "in most cases" to allow for situations like playing a piano piece in a recital. I don't want my teacher or the audience barking out feedback as I perform. That's why it is more precise to say that good feedback is "timely" rather than "immediate."
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eedback is often used to describe all kinds of comments made after the fact, including advice, praise, and evaluation
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Whether the feedback was in the observable effects or from other people, in every case the information received was not advice,
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Guidance would be premature; I first need to receive feedback on what I did or didn't do that would warrant such advice.
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Formative assessment, consisting of lots of feedback and opportunities to use that feedback, enhances performance and achievement
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Decades of education research support the idea that by teaching less and providing more feedback, we can produce greater learning
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Whether feedback is just there to be grasped or is provided by another person, helpful feedback is goal-referenced; tangible and transparent; actionable; user-friendly (specific and personalized); timely; ongoing; and consistent.
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The most ubiquitous form of evaluation, grading, is so much a part of the school landscape that we easily overlook its utter uselessness as actionable feedback.
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Learning from coaching and learning in other situations to giving feedback in classrooms.
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Making Innovation Routine | Garth Nichols - 1 views
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The idea is to understand the challenges facing teachers and students today, and to design solutions and share them
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making innovation routine by providing engaging questions both in class and out, and providing a space, resources and inspiration to pursue and explore answers to these questions.
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The 13 most innovative schools in the world - Tech Insider - 2 views
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Innovation in education can look like lots of things, like incorporating new technology or teaching methods, going on field trips, rejecting social norms, partnering with the local community.
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16 of the Best Blended Learning Resources | Edudemic - 4 views
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Blended learning uses both in-person and online methods to teach students, and there are several different models for implementing it in the classroom.
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Flipped learning is one of the blended learning models. This article from Edutopia gives tips for flipping a project-based learning classroom. The tips include things like using short videos, encouraging collaborative virtual work, and considering the scope of technology that is available to students.
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Adjusting to blended learning may mean adjusting how you motivate your students. Dellicker Strategies provides a brief overview of how to encourage students to thrive in a blended learning environment. The article goes over three things that teachers should try to cultivate in students, namely autonomy, priority, and visibility.
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Tools to Make Blended Learning Work
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