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Kelsey Agett

Back to School: Preparing for Day One | Edutopia - 0 views

  • If you are a new teacher, this is imperative. By rehearsing, this gives you an idea on pacing, one the greatest challenges for most beginning teachers.
    • Kelsey Agett
       
      We talked about this...it may feel awkward, but seems worth it, even with little kids.
  • Modeling forgiveness and kindness and giving a kid a second
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  • Every child deserves a chance to make a new first impression.
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    Good advice, especially since most of us did not get to experience a first day of school as a student teacher.
Shally Ackerman

Virtual Schools: From Rivalry to Partnership | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Most students still push through a seven- or eight-period day, 45-day quarter and 180-day school year. Unfortunately, mandates, physical plant limitations, local political pressures and institutional traditions have limited even the best intentions of rethinking the traditional school calendar and schedule. This is why the flexibility found in virtual schooling environments (1) should be so attractive to educators, students and parents alike. Not bound by the constraints of physical space or out-of-date school calendars, virtual schools can provide opportunities for students to take courses at a time and place that meets their needs
  • oo often, independent virtual schools might be no more than diploma mills openly competing against local schools.
  • Instead of competing, virtual schools need to partner with local schools and allow individual students to create what Staker and Horn (2) call a "self blend model."
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  • schools need to investigate how virtual options may provide multiple pathways for their students to earn credits, recover learning, explore an interest or follow a passion, all while taking control of their education through a variety of modalities
  • We've reached a point where multiple pathways are, should and can be available to any student, anywhere at any time
  • t's time for schools to unite and break the barriers of time, place and tradition so that each student can be empowered to develop his or her own learning path, a path which can include a blended mix of brick and mortar, virtual, experiential and personal learning options.
Alexander Hendrix

http://www.access2academics.com/Map%20Skills%20Lesson%20Plans%20-%2010%20day%20Unit.pdf - 0 views

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    ten day unit for map skills for first graders in Virginia
Moni Del Toral

Celebrate Diversity with Dream In Color | Digital Storytelling - 0 views

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    An 8-day unit working towards developing a coherent digital story with each student
Allie

Skype in the classroom - 0 views

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    I have already seen this tool used in the classroom! Students skyped the teacher's friend from Japan to see the difference in day and night. What a great way to expose students to other cultures. New way to do pen pals or for students to meet their pen pals!
Jennifer Massengill

iCivics | Free Lesson Plans and Games for Learning Civics - 0 views

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    A civics website founded by Sandra Day O'Connor trying to teach kids civics in a fun and engaging way.
Stephanie McGuire

Digital Literacy Includes Learning to Unplug - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • The new digital divide isn’t between children who have access to computers and devices and those who do not. It’s between kids whose parents are saying “turn that thing off” and those whose parents don’t limit their access — because they don’t know how, or because they’re not available to do it.
  • Instead of closing the achievement gap,” said the author of the Kaiser study, “they’re widening the time-wasting gap.”
  • The F.C.C. is considering creating a “digital literacy corps” to teach productive uses of the computer and Internet to students, parents and job seekers
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    A problem lies also in the time wasted on technology. Education needs to include WHEN to use technology for learning purposes.
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    "A study published in 2010 by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that children and teenagers whose parents do not have a college degree spent 90 minutes more per day exposed to media than children from higher socioeconomic families"... why is this? Parents busy working? Lack of resources (e.g. books)? Home environment (e.g. no yard to play in outside)?
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    Thank you for sharing the original article, very interesting and well written! What a difference in time wasted per day. I would agree with your ideas of why that might be. So I certainly think a digital literacy core could be a helpful and useful investment! I also think education for parents is just as important as students to learn to use the Internet to learn new information and be creative.
Lauren Tappan

How to Use Twitter to Grow Your PLN | Edutopia - 0 views

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    here is a list of educational chat times and days on twitter
Carly Guinn

How to Teach Math as a Social Activity | Edutopia - 1 views

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    "Establishing a cooperative-learning environment in an upper-elementary classroom" -- great for the first few days/weeks of class!
Emily Wampler

Why students skip school - Schools of Thought - CNN.com Blogs - 0 views

  • about 15% of the K-12 population - are out of school 18 or more days of the school year.
  • students who skip more than 10 days of school are significantly (about 20%) less likely to get a high school diploma.  And they’re 25% less likely to enroll in higher education.
  • parental encouragement to attend school was the most widely cited factor in what would make students want to go to class diligently.
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  • “If we - parents, educators, and even celebrities - show them we truly care about them, their aspirations and frustrations, they will be more likely to care about making it to school,”
  • they wanted to see a “clear connection” between their classes and the jobs they’d like down the road.
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    Why do students skip?  Because they can...
Karrissa Harbour

History.com - History Made Every Day - American & World History - 0 views

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    Although not specifically geared towards teachers, History.com has a bunch of educational videos and games that can be useful.
Alexander Hendrix

virginiacapitol.gov -- Visitor's Guide - 0 views

    • Alexander Hendrix
       
      Wonderful program that makes available a lot of free resources for students and educators. We spent a day here for SS and it was wonderful the amount of opportunities that are available here.
Lauren Tappan

Mrs. Shehan's Full Day Kindergarten - Printables - 1 views

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    word work resources
Denise Lenihan

The Best Sites To Learn & Teach About Thanksgiving | Larry Ferlazzo's Website... - 1 views

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    Thanksgiving resources!! My favorite holiday and it involves Social Studies!! 
Kylee Ponder

Omaha schoolgirl dresses as a different historical figure each day - Omaha.com - 0 views

    • Kylee Ponder
       
      Can I please have a classroom full of these children? That would be fantastic. 
Kasey Hutson

Bill Goodwyn: Technology Doesn't Teach, Teachers Teach - 0 views

  • Technology doesn't teach. Teachers teach.
  • All of us involved in education received the same mandate this past winter from President Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan: to replace traditional, static textbooks with dynamic, interactive digital textbooks within the next five years. Several organizations have accepted this challenge enthusiastically and are partnering with districts every day to help transform classrooms into the digital learning environments our leaders envision. But the process is complicated.
  • We have seen the power of new technology in practice, especially when used by effectively trained teachers. In an initiative to replace traditional social studies textbooks, those students using digital tools in the Indianapolis Public Schools system, in which 85 percent of students are enrolled in subsidized lunch programs, had a 27 percent higher passing rate on statewide progress tests than students in classrooms that were not plugged in. Students in Miami-Dade County Public Schools who used digital resources achieved a 7 percent increase in their science FCAT (Florida's Comprehensive Assessment Test) exams. And students of the Mooresville Graded School District in North Carolina increased their performance on state exams by 13 percent over three short years, thanks to digital content and passionate, technology literate teachers
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  • North Carolina's Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) perfectly illustrates both the power of effective teacher training and technology. Since 2008, CMS has provided digital science resources to Title I schools -- schools with a high concentration of students living in poverty. Along with digital content, the district provided teachers with ongoing professional development designed to show them how to build engaging lessons, enhance their current curriculum and inspire students by integrating digital media, hardware and software. The professional development, however, was not mandatory. The results could not have been clearer: The students of teachers who opted into the professional development not only closed the achievement gap between themselves and students from Title I schools that did not have the same technology, they also outperformed the non-Title I schools, amassing a 57 percent passing rate on the state's end-of-year standardized science tests, compared to the 43 percent passing rate of those from wealthier schools. These are some of the most disadvantaged students in the state, remember, and yet they caught up to -- and surpassed -- students from more affluent schools.
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    One of the coolest points - Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools provided technology resources to Title I schools, and made professional development to integrate technology into the classroom optional. Those teachers who participated in the professional development not only closed the achievement gap, but also outperformed non-Title I schools in the area.
Kasey Hutson

My View: Advice to a new teacher - Schools of Thought - CNN.com Blogs - 0 views

    • Kasey Hutson
       
      ie Can-Do descriptors, especially important for ELLs
  • Use classroom helpers or “employees” to help you run the room so you are free to teach.
  • use proximity and language to sort out what’s happening. Do it with a neutral tone of voice and with a smile on your face whenever possible.
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  • Design lessons and activities that give kids freedom, choice and fun.
  • Collaborate like crazy. Great teachers are social, reflective, proud but not egotistical and always open to improvement.
  • Teacher burnout isn’t a myth, it’s a reality.
  • Carve out two nights a week and one whole weekend day for yourself and nothing else.
  • Have courage to teach boldy, with creativity, and beyond the test.
  • Go forward and do that thing you were born to do: TEACH!
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    Not ed tech related, but a sweet little article on the homepage of CNN. A quick pep talk!
Jennifer Massengill

Introversion and the Invisible Adolescent | Edutopia - 0 views

  • limitations of group decision making, a context in which extroverts dominate and the creative thinking of introverts most often gets lost
    • Jennifer Massengill
       
      I see this a lot is group building exercises. I like giving the students a puzzle to solve. Often the quiet ones have the answer quickly, but the group continues to struggle because nobody is listening to the quiet kid.
  • rewards for classroom engagement should not be measured only by oral contributions
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  • Many of my best students were ones who rarely spoke in the large group, were active in smaller groups (and the smaller the better) and had a great deal to share with me privately in papers.
  • Our classrooms contain too many forgotten introverted students who may need help but are not getting it and/or have gifts that aren't being either elicited or supported.
    • Jennifer Massengill
       
      Not all quiet kids are troubled - should not assume "something is wrong", but many have a lot to offer a class if given an opportunity to contribute in a way that they can feel comfortable.
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    Insightful article about the need to include space for introverts to shine in areas of their talents, too. I like the emphasis not on "overcoming" introversion, but instead on helping introverts use their strengths. Definitely a good reminder to pay attention to all our students, not just the ones jumping up and down all day long.
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