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Sheri Edwards

KARE Givers - 0 views

shared by Sheri Edwards on 04 Feb 13 - No Cached
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    We are traveling companions sharing our stories with each other until it is time to move into different learning spaces, and then we meet new companions to take new voyages with that lead to new places to be explored and appreciated; the places where answers get questioned and together, we become innovators.
Sheri Edwards

Learning to Lead, Inspiring to Change - 0 views

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    Sample of a teacher blog portfolio
Sheri Edwards

Read&Write for Google Provides Reading, Writing Support Tools for Google Apps for Educa... - 0 views

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    Texthelp, which provides literacy software for struggling readers and writers, English language learners, and students with learning disabilities, has released a suite of support tools for Google Docs, PDFs, and ePubs. Read&Write for Google, which integrates with Google Drive, is available in the Chrome Web Store. Read&Write for Google comes with Read&Write for Google Docs Chrome Extension, PDF Reader, and ePub Reader. All three pieces of software, which are compatible with Google Drive on PCs, Macs, and Chromebooks, include read-aloud and dual-color highlighting features, which are available through a Google Chrome toolbar. Other features available in the toolbar include: A talking dictionary; A translator; A picture dictionary; A fact finder; and A vocabulary list builder, which allows students to generate a list of highlighted words along with definitions and images. In addition, typewriter and pushpin annotation tools are provided in PDF Reader and ePub Reader, and navigation tools are also available for ePub Reader. Texthelp is offering 30-day free trials of Read&Write for Google, which can be accessed in the Chrome Web Store. After that, it is available through single-user or domain-wide subscriptions. For more information, visit texthelp.com. Read more at http://thejournal.com/articles/2013/08/07/readwrite-for-google-provides-reading-writing-support-tools-for-google-apps-for-education.aspx#h2qiaTTzLsvJtUWU.99
Sheri Edwards

Building School-Based Student Digital Book Clubs | MiddleWeb - 0 views

  • So instead of focusing on skill development alone, we considered engagement.
  • real readers find pockets of time during the day in which to squeeze some reading, known in her classes as “reading emergencies.” Highly portable digital devices make it much easier to exploit these pockets of time.
  • responses to their reading on Kidblog.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Two other elements for engagement, purpose and audience, proved to be the difference makers. When learners know that they will receive feedback when posting their thoughts and questions about what they’re reading, they see how these digital forums can serve them compared to just chatting about the mundane.
  • We stopped referring to this offering as an “intervention.” It was a book club.
  • having a diversity of abilities and interests paved the way toward a more authentic community of readers.
  • readers theater performance,
  • But we don’t plan to quantify the results. Instead we’ll ask questions like: Do they read without the need of a log? Have they ever saved up their allowance so they could get that special title on its release date? Has a whole afternoon passed by because they were so immersed in a book?
  • All learning is social.
  • . Bridging these two worlds through social media such as Google+, Twitter, and Edmodo gives us that authentic experience of what read readers do.
  • teach our students to be critical thinkers of what we read and investigate multiple perspectives before we can say we “learned” something.
Sheri Edwards

Actually, practice doesn't always make perfect - new study - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • They found that how interested the students were in the passage was thirty times more important than how “readable” the passage was.
  • Maybe the right question to ask is: Why do some people decide to practice a lot in the first place? Could it be because their first efforts proved mostly successful?   (That’s a useful reminder to avoid romanticizing the benefits of failure.) Or, again, do they keep at it because they get a kick out of what they’re doing? If that’s true, then practice, at least to some extent, may be just a marker for motivation. Of course, natural ability probably plays a role in fostering both interest and success, and those two variables also affect each other.
  • By contrast, when the hours were logged, and the estimates presumably more reliable, the impact of practice was much diminished. How much? It accounted for a scant 5 percent of the variance in performance. The better the study, in other words, the less of a difference practice made.[1]
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  • What’s true of time on task, then, is true of practice — which isn’t surprising given how closely the two concepts are related.
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    "The question now is what else matters." And there are many possible answers. One is how early in life you were introduced to the activity - which, as the researchers explain, appears to have effects that go beyond how many years of practice you booked. Others include how open you are to collaborating and learning from others, and how much you enjoy the activity."
Sheri Edwards

#TackkEdu Tackkboard - Tackk Essay - 0 views

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    how to write an essay tackk
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    How to use tackk in the classroom
Sheri Edwards

Crystal Lothian (CrystalLothian) on Twitter - 0 views

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    " Following Lorraine Boulos ‏@RaineCB"
Sheri Edwards

Connectedness, or lack of, in Education (School) « User Generated Education - 0 views

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