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anonymous

Famous Quotes: Educational Quotes for the 21st Century - 0 views

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    This is the second edition of quotes we have complied to complement the philosophy that underpins our website www.leading-learning.co.nz We believe that the quotes provide unified collection of thoughtful ideas to transform education. It is often said that we are entering the 'Information Age' but we prefer to believe that we are entering an 'Age of Ideas, Talent and Creativity'. We present the quotes as part of on ongoing dialogue to give all who read them the courage to transform schools so as to meet the exciting challenges of the 21stC. One suggestion is to as a staff reflect on the quotes in any one section (or any selected quotes) and discuss what they might mean for your school. Others people select suitable quotes for school newsletters of school brochures and other school documents.
praba_tuty

Learning Quotes power of the ideal is in the practical - 0 views

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    Learning Quotes The power of the ideal is in the practical Quote by Swami Vivekananda Explanation about quote on learning Bookish knowledge is of no use unless otherwise it is applied practically in the day to day life.
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    Learning Quotes The power of the ideal is in the practical Quote by Swami Vivekananda Explanation about quote on learning Bookish knowledge is of no use unless otherwise it is applied practically in the day to day life.  
praba_tuty

Motivational Quotes in chinese word crisis one danger and other opportunity - 0 views

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    Motivational Quotes In chinese, the word Crisis has two characters, one danger and the other opportunity Quote by John F. Kennedy Explanation about quote on motivation When there is a problem, you can see it either as an opportunity or as a road ...
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    Motivational Quotes In chinese, the word Crisis has two characters, one danger and the other opportunity Quote by John F. Kennedy Explanation about quote on motivation When there is a problem, you can see it either as an opportunity or as a road ...
qualitypoint tech

Peace Quotes - TheQuotes.Net - Motivational Quotes - 0 views

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    If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other. - Mother Teresa
QPT SEO

Maria Montessori Quotes | TheQuotes.Net - Motivational Quotes - 0 views

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    Never help a child with a task at which he feels he can succeed. Maria Montessori
qualitypoint tech

Excellent Quotes by Warren Buffett | TheQuotes.Net - Motivational Quotes - 0 views

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    Don't save what is left after spending, but spend what is left after savings. -Warren Buffett
qualitypoint tech

Education Quotes - TheQuotes.Net - Motivational Quotes - 0 views

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    Learning gives creativity. Creativity leads to thinking. Thinking provides knowledge. Knowledge makes you great. - Abdul Kalam
anonymous

The EdQuotes List allows for multiple quotes from a single source. - 5 views

For some reason, the multiple quotes are now showing up in the description on the EdQuotes group page. Go figure.

stephanie886

10 Extremely Romantic Quotes You Must Say To Your Loved once | QuotesDNA - 0 views

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    Check out some best Romantic quotes and images collections you can share it with your loved ones
anonymous

Simple Guidelines - 7 views

1) KISS is operative - One sentence is great; two is fine; three is the outer limits; four - it better be a super quote. 2) Add just the number after the quote: 99 or 166-67 3) Tag 4) If you ...

rules

started by anonymous on 15 Jul 09 no follow-up yet
anonymous

The Innovative Educator: Ten 21st Century Education Quotes I Carry With Me - 0 views

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    1-Technology is only technology to those who were born before it. 2-We need to prepare students for THEIR future not OUR past-Ian Jukes, educator and Futurist. 3-Teachers need to stop saying, "Hand it in," and start saying "Publish It." Alan November 4-We have moved from "know what" learning to "know where" learning. 5-The largest number of podcasts in education are about Podcasts in education.-Marco Torres. 6-Kids DO want to learn, but schools get in the way. 7-Digital Media enables us to build more stages for our kids to express themselves. - Marco Torres 8-What gets us in trouble is not what we don't know. It's what we know that just ain't so. Mark Twain. 9-We need to replicate in the classroom the world in which students are living. 10-If we teach today the way we were taught yesterday we aren't preparing students for today or tomorrow.
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    7.15.09 1-Technology is only technology to those who were born before it. 2-We need to prepare students for THEIR future not OUR past-Ian Jukes, educator and Futurist. 3-Teachers need to stop saying, "Hand it in," and start saying "Publish It." Alan November 4-We have moved from "know what" learning to "know where" learning. 5-The largest number of podcasts in education are about Podcasts in education.-Marco Torres. 6-Kids DO want to learn, but schools get in the way. 7-Digital Media enables us to build more stages for our kids to express themselves. - Marco Torres 8-What gets us in trouble is not what we don't know. It's what we know that just ain't so. Mark Twain. 9-We need to replicate in the classroom the world in which students are living. 10-If we teach today the way we were taught yesterday we aren't preparing students for today or tomorrow.
anonymous

Sir Ken Robinson: Bring on the learning revolution! | Video on TED.com - dennisar's pos... - 1 views

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    I've added quotes and the poem He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven to this post.
velvetty mae

http://princessrhizxian.tumblr.com/ - 1 views

Life is like a roller coaster. It has its ups and downs. But it's your choice to scream or enjoy the ride. Come and Visit my tumblr account for some qoutes. http://princessrhizxian.tumblr.com/

princess rhizxian quotes life

started by velvetty mae on 08 Jul 13 no follow-up yet
anonymous

'Can we fix it' is the right question to ask - Telegraph - 0 views

  • Most of us believe in positive self-talk. "I can achieve anything," we mouth to the mirror in the morning. "Nobody can stop me," we tell ourselves before walking into a big meeting.
  • But not Bob. Instead of puffing up himself and his team, he first wonders whether they can actually achieve their goal. In asking his signature question – Can we fix it? – he introduces some doubt.
  • The self-questioning group solved significantly more anagrams than the self-affirming group.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The outcome was the same. People "primed" with Will I solved nearly twice as many anagrams as people in the other three groups.
  • "In addition, asking questions forces you to define if you reallywant something and probably think about what you want, even in the presence of obstacles."
  • "breathing your own exhaust"
  • "When you create something, you can fall in love with it and aren't able to see or hear anything contrary. Whatever comes out of your mouth is all you're inhaling," she says. "But when you ask a question – Will I? – you're creating an opening. You're inviting a conversation – whether it's self-conversation or a conversation with others."
  • His business is a series of projects – many of them unexpected, most of them hazily-defined – that require people to collaborate, fashion solutions on the fly and contend with surly customers. By asking "Can we fix it?", Bob widens the possibilities. Only then – once he's explored the options and examined his assumptions – does he elicit a rousing "Yes, we can" from his team and everyone gets to work.
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    Do we teach this to our students? Do we use the strategy ourselves? Here's the annotated link: http://diigo.com/0bj1y
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    Here's the annotated link: http://diigo.com/0bj1y
Dave Truss

Seth's Blog: A car is not merely a faster horse - 0 views

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    A car is not merely a faster horse And email is not a faster fax. And online project management is not a bigger whiteboard. And Facebook is not an electronic rolodex. Play a new game, not the older game but faster.
anonymous

Alfie Kohn, Trouble with Rubrics, English Journal, March 2006 - 0 views

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    *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective.
  • ...6 more comments...
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role. *students whose attention is relentlessly focused on how well they're doing often become less engaged with what they're doing.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role. *students whose attention is relentlessly focused on how well they're doing often become less engaged with what they're doing. *What all this means is that improving the design of rubrics, or inventing our own, won't solve the problem because the problem is inherent to the very idea of rubrics and the goals they serve.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm quoted on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role. *students whose attention is relentlessly focused on how well they're doing often become less engaged with what they're doing. *What all this means is that improving the design of rubrics, or inventing our own, won't solve the problem because the problem is inherent to the very idea of rubrics and the goals they serve. *Neither we nor our assessment strategies can be simultaneously devoted to helping all students improve and to sorting them into winners and losers. *We have to reassess the whole enterprise of assessment, the goal being to make sure it's consistent with the reason we decided to go into teaching in the first place.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role. *students whose attention is relentlessly focused on how well they're doing often become less engaged with what they're doing. *What all this means is that improving the design of rubrics, or inventing our own, won't solve the problem because the problem is inherent to the very idea of rubrics and the goals they serve. *Neither we nor our assessment strategies can be simultaneously devoted to helping all students improve and to sorting them into winners and losers. *We have to reassess the whole enterprise of assessment, the goal being to make sure it's consistent with the reason we decided to go into teaching in the first place.
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    http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/rubrics.htm downloaded on 7.15.09 *...research shows three reliable effects when students are graded: They tend to think less deeply, avoid taking risks, and lose interest in the learning itself. *Rubrics are, above all, a tool to promote standardization, to turn teachers into grading machines or at least allow them to pretend that what they're doing is exact and objective. *As long as the rubric is only one of several sources, as long as it doesn't drive the instruction, it could conceivably play a constructive role. *students whose attention is relentlessly focused on how well they're doing often become less engaged with what they're doing. *What all this means is that improving the design of rubrics, or inventing our own, won't solve the problem because the problem is inherent to the very idea of rubrics and the goals they serve. *Neither we nor our assessment strategies can be simultaneously devoted to helping all students improve and to sorting them into winners and losers. *We have to reassess the whole enterprise of assessment, the goal being to make sure it's consistent with the reason we decided to go into teaching in the first place.
anonymous

Should we designate EdQuotes group tags? - 3 views

I'd be interested in your thoughts. I have tentatively created tags for the group. Here they are: quotes, teaching, learning, web 2.0, culture, wisdom Do you have any additional tags to add to t...

tags

started by anonymous on 15 Jul 09 no follow-up yet
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