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Sheri Edwards

Back to School Icebreakers - High School English Education on Pintere… - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

Back-to-School Icebreaker Activities - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

Classroom Icebreaker Activities for Teachers - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

Education World: Back to School: Icebreakers for High School Students - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

5 Engaging Digital Icebreakers for Back To School! - Teaching Toward Tomorrow - Educati... - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

Education World: Beyond Icebreakers: Building Student Connectedness - 0 views

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    system wide options
Sheri Edwards

Teaching the Process of Learning | Thoughtful Learning - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

BookerBlog - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

Video Educasts : KQED Education | KQED Public Media for Northern CA - 0 views

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    digital tools for sharing and caring
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]
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • 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

Social Media - Tackk - 0 views

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Sheri Edwards

The #TackkEdu Blog (@education) Tackkboard - Tackk - 0 views

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