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Jackie Rippy

Soviet Psychology: Psychology and Marxism Internet Archive - 14 views

    • Jackie Rippy
       
      This points to stark differences - what about subtle differences between cultures. Do our symbols affect brain development - do our tools affect brain development?
  • Other Gestalt psychologists emphasized the common properties of mind in all cultures
  • shifts
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  • in the basic forms, as well as in the content of people's thinking.
  • The early 1930
  • had experienced the conditions necessary to alter radically the content and form of their thought.
  • we expected that they would display a predominance of those forms of thought that come from activity that is guided by the physical features of familiar objects.
  • Therefore we began, as most field work with people does, by emphasizing contact with the people who would serve as our subjects. We tried to establish friendly relations so that experimental sessions seemed natural and non-threatening. We were particularly careful not to conduct hasty or unprepared presentations of the test materials.
  • As a rule, our experimental sessions began with long conversations which were sometimes repeated with the subjects in the relaxed atmosphere of a tea house, where the villagers spent most of their free time, or in camps in the field and in mountain pastures around the evening campfire. These talks were frequently held in groups. Even when the interviews were held with one person, the experimenter and other subjects made up a group of two or three who listened attentively to the person being interviewed and who sometimes offered remarks or comments on what he said. The talk often took the form of a free-flowing exchange of opinion between participants, and a particular problem might be solved simultaneously by two or three subjects, each proposing an answer. Only gradually did the experimenters introduce the prepared tasks, which resembled the “riddles” familiar to the population and therefore seemed like a natural extension of the conversation.
  • He characterized primitive thinking as “prelogical” and “loosely organized.” Primitive people were said to be indifferent to logical contradiction and dominated by the idea that mystical forces control natural phenomena
  • We conceived the idea of carrying out the first far-reaching study of intellectual functions among adults from a non-technological non-literate, traditional society
  • hamlets
  • nomad
  • 1. Women living in remote villages who were illiterate and who were not involved in any modern social activities. There were still a considerable number of such women at the time our study was made. Their interviews were conducted by women, since they alone had the right to enter the women's quarters. 2. Peasants living in remote villages who were in no way involved with socialized labor and who continued to maintain an individualistic economy. These peasants were not literate. 3. Women who attended short-term courses in the teaching of kindergarteners. As a rule, they had no formal schooling and almost no training in literacy. 4. Active kolhoz (collective farm) workers and young people who had taken short courses. They were involved as chairmen running collective farms, as holders of other offices on the, collective farm, or as brigade leaders. They had considerable experience in planning production, distributing labor, and taking stock of output. By dealing with other collective farm members, they had acquired a much broader outlook than isolated peasants. But they had attended school only briefly, and many were still barely literate. 5. Women students admitted to teachers school after two or three years of study. Their educational qualifications, however, were still fairly low.
  • Short-term psychological experiments would have been highly problematic under the field conditions we expected to encounter
Randolph Hollingsworth

Creating Significant Learning Experiences: An HETL Interview with Dr. Dee Fink - 57 views

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    Great interview including image of Fink taxonomy, references to Bok and Weimer too
Steve Ransom

The Whole Child Podcast « Whole Child Education - 22 views

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    In this interview we see an administrator/principal who is passionate and who values attributes beyond teaching skills - capacity to love and care for students. We teach students, not subjects.
Martin Burrett

The @UKEdPodcast - Episode 22 - Phonics Pruning and Thriving with @debbiehepp @JohnStan... - 0 views

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    "Hosted by @digicoled, in this episode we explore the Phonics teaching and learning strategy in England with an in-depth, fascinating interview with Debbie Hepplewhite MBE."
Peter Beens

What 6 Years of Study Says About Using Clickers in the Classroom | edcetera - Rafter Blog - 2 views

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    "After six years of study, more than 3,000 student surveys, nearly 40 interviews, close to 700 anonymous written responses, and numerous observations of students in classes across four disciplines, Dr. Angel Hoekstra knows a thing or two about how to use clickers in the classroom."
Martin Burrett

My Favourite Scientist - 105 views

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    This is a great video site showing the life and careers of famous scientists. Find out about Richard Feynman, Rosalind Franklin, Gregor Mendel and even Mister Spock in interviews with scientists in their field today. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/Science
Bill Kuykendall

As spring arrives, Maine flower growers weather challenges of late-winter snow, cold - ... - 10 views

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    Here is a nice little video featuring an appealing character telling a topical story produced by Troy Bennett for the Bangor Daily News. One brief, clean interview illustrated with video stills and a bit of action. Multimedia reporting 101.
Jennie Snyder

Need a Job? Invent It - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Thomas Friedman's NY Times article - interview w/ Tony Wagner on need to be prepare students to be innovation ready.
Jon Tanner

Inevitable - Resources - 1 views

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    Youtube interviews, a blog, and the place to order the Inevitable Field Guide.
psmiley

Techlandia Episode 23 - Tony Vincent Interview - Techlandia Podcast | Pocket Casts - 0 views

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    Creating rubrics
Roland Gesthuizen

Dan Pink: How Teachers Can Sell Love of Learning to Students | MindShift - 108 views

  • educators are sellers of ideas
  • Games have the potential to make math more relevant or engaging, Pink said, but if they lead to standardized thinking about getting to the one right answer, that can be problematic
  • If the only aim of a game is for points and badges, the game has little benefit for the player. For a game to be compelling and a good source of learning, it should be capable of providing rapid, robust, regular, and meaningful feedback.
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  • Students who are driven by external rewards (grades, trophies), will be fare worse than those who are self-directed, motivated by freedom, challenge, and purpose
  • When students assessed themselves, they held themselves to a higher standard. This changed the way he looked at the kids.
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    "Jobs in education, Pink said in a recent interview, are all about moving other people, changing their behavior, like getting kids to pay attention in class; getting teens to understand they need to look at their future and to therefore study harder. At the center of all this persuasion is selling: educators are sellers of ideas. "
Don Doehla

GABFLE - 0 views

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    BLOG POUR APPRENDRE LE FRANÇAIS AVEC DES INTERVIEWS DE PERSONNES FRANCOPHONES...
Donal O' Mahony

Once there was a postman who fell in love with a raven… | eLearning Island - 1 views

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    Some thoughts on eBooks after an interview with Audrey Niffeneger developed into a discussion of same!
Florence Dujardin

Ethnotelling for User-generated Experiences - 30 views

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    This paper focuses on storytelling as a research tool for social sciences, especially for cultural anthropology. After a short review of the main methodological tools traditionally used in ethnography, with particular regard to observation and interview, we focus on collecting and crafting stories (ethnotelling) as suitable tools for conveying the relational nature of fieldwork. Drawing on the works of Orr, Chipchase, Marradi and Adwan/Bar-on, we show how stories – collected, mediated or made up – are valuable tools for representing experiences and identities. As a result, we suggest a different approach to user-experience design, based on the creation of "thick" environments enabling a whole range of possibilities, where users can imagine or live their own user-generated experiences.
C CC

Reasons why teachers leave the profession & what they do next - UKEdChat.com - 60 views

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    Workload and Bullying Main Reasons for Teachers Leaving the Profession A survey and interviews commissioned by UKEdChat.Com has revealed the main reasons why teachers are leaving the profession, and the careers they move onto once they have made th…
anonymous

The Center for Fiction - 114 views

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    Literature for adults, YA, and kids--videos on interviews with authors, sections on For Writers and Audio & Video, and more for booklovers of all ages.
Mary Higgins

BBC - Radio 4 - In Our Time - Archive by Genre: History - 0 views

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    Lots of podcasts on history topics. Interviews with historians. Also has links to related programs.
dmassicg

The Future of the Phone Transcript - On The Media - 1 views

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    The Future of the Phone: an interview with Tom Vanderbilt, who says the phone call's day may be passing.
Tu Loan Trieu Trieu

Do 'flipped classrooms' get a pass or fail? - The Globe and Mail - 203 views

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    interviews of students in a flipped environment
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