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Expect To Learn From HR Training Courses - 1 views

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    It is quite obvious that there are a couple of options when it comes to studying Human Resources Management or HRM.
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Unschooling Lifestyle: How to Write Great Admissions and Scholarship Essays? Rely on th... - 0 views

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    "As a high-school student, you couldn't wait to start attending college. However, you didn't expect for the application process to be so overwhelming, did you? Unfortunately, many applicants have to endure stressful situations, which are mostly imposed by the necessity to complete extraordinary admissions and scholarship essays."
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Formal style, proper grammar and good spelling ARE important in student posts and comme... - 1 views

  • Currently I correct most of my student’s spelling and grammar when I approve their comments
  • I’d think it would be a different matter with older children.
  • If the blog is of academic nature and is going to be read by other students/parents/teachers, then it’s our job to show them why conventions like spelling and grammar matter.
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  • Again, it’s our job to show students how a writer’s audience affects how they write.
  • Speaking for all the poor writers out there, having someone always on my back about my grammar would put an end to my writing–it did for 27 years–from the time I graduated from college to the time I started blogging. So for me and all the other poor writers out there like me, would you rather we just stop writing? or is our voice valuable enough that maybe, just maybe, you could look past out inability to use proper grammar.
  • I feel that correcting everything, all the time, would kill their enthusiasm for using and experimenting with the language.
  • I was reading a grade 1 teacher’s blog, and the teacher left the childrens’ posts as is, but following each, put the correct form in parentheses. This both keeps the sense of ownership for the student, but allows for readers to understand the message clearly
  • I do not correct comments for a few reasons. First, they can be too numerous at times. Secondly, if I always do the editing work for them then students will never do it themselves. Third, I have several reluctant writers who never get a word down on paper but will make an effort if they get to write on our blogs.
  • am having students occasionally reflect on their comments and set/review goals for future comments.
  • I think that if they saw a good conversation going on in the comments (maybe on another classroom’s blog) they may get the idea that comments are as important, if not more important than the post.
  • Student edited, teacher directed vs. teacher corrected. In this instance, student age is an important consideration. Revising and editing are part of the writing process, so I require it of my middle schoolers. I also rely on peer review and peer editing.
  • I would appreciate teachers correcting posts and comments. It might be slightly embarrassing if it is done through comments, but maybe devoting a part of class every week to go over things that the teacher has found looking through posts and comments could improve the student’s grammar skills.
  • I like to balance between writing for an audience who is expecting readable text and the writing abilities of the grade or age level blogging. It also changes if the post is a class assignment with expectations described on a rubric as opposed to a free choice writing post.
  • BTW – peer editing is one way to check for spelling and convention errors and fix them.
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Divide & Rule: A Trick For Perfect Essays - 0 views

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    Have you been giving a lot of thought to the essays you were expected to write? No? Not yet. Well, you know what happens when you sit down, at the absolutely last, possible minute, to complete all of your work?
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Do You Remember Comma And Its Importance? - Custom Essay Writing Service - 0 views

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    For most students, the comma holds little importance save as a small punctuation mark that they are never very sure about when they are expected to use. In academic writing however, minus the comma means that whatever will eventually be written will make little sense to the reader.
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digitalmarketing courses-akhilhubsot - 0 views

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    akhil hubspot providing online courses and digital marketing services or real time certification expects you can join this course enroll for free demo boost your career any more in formation call for me-9133160516
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100 Words Every High School Freshman Should Know published by Houghton Mifflin Company - 0 views

  • Building on the success of the popular 100 Words Every High School Graduate Should Know, the editors of the American Heritage® Dictionaries are pleased to introduce a new list of words geared toward the reading level expected of high school freshmen. With its attractive format and thoughtful word selection, 100 Words Every High School Freshman Should Know will spur students to add new words to their vocabularies as they make the important transition from middle school to high school.
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The Challenges of Digital Leadership - 1 views

  • Technology doesn’t simply support traditional teaching - it transforms it for deeper thinking and gives students more agency over their own learning.
    • ccozort
       
      To which people reply: "Prove it."
  • Heads of school don’t have to be skilled users themselves to be effective technology leaders, but they do have to exercise appropriate oversight and convey the message - repeatedly - that frequent, meaningful technology use in school is both important and expected.
  • eel sad for the students and teachers in the schools who choose to simply ban and block rather than do the harder but necessary work of enabling and learning from other schools that have followed a less restrictive, more creative path
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  • powerful amplifiers
  • A few workshops here and there rarely result in large-scale changes in implementation
  • We can’t simply delegate things to our technology coordinators and integrationists and be done with it all.
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How Digitial Portfolios Document and Motivate Learning - Learning Personalized - 0 views

  • Teachers start to look closely at the kinds of tasks that we’re asking students to do, and see that some work better than others. We refer to them as “portfolio-worthy assignments.”
  • So rather than tying a student’s grade level to their age or the number of hours accumulated, we can tie it to a body of work that shows student readiness
  • The portfolio is a body of evidence that demonstrates what a student can do and how the student has grown. In addition, as educators and parents we can see what the student is like as a learner and really understand them personally
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  • school-wide rubrics
  • Digital portfolios provide a new opportunity for assessment. It helps clarify expectations for students
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