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anonymous

Kids Are Learning . . . Just Not in Ways We Want Them To. « User Generated Ed... - 0 views

  • Kids Are Learning . . . Just Not in Ways We Want Them To. May 17, 2011 in Education | Tags: educational reform, emerging technologies, game-based learning, learning, networked learning, school reform, social learning Kids are learning . . . just not in the ways expected of them through formal education.  Young people have always engaged in informal learning based on their interests and passions. 
  • I am that not sure if those involved in the institutionalized education of young people are unaware or choose to ignore that young people are often learning more outside of the school than within that learning environment.
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    Kids Are Learning . . . Just Not in Ways We Want Them To. May 17, 2011 in Education | Tags: educational reform, emerging technologies, game-based learning, learning, networked learning, school reform, social learning Kids are learning . . . just not in the ways expected of them through formal education. Young people have always engaged in informal learning based on their interests and passions
anonymous

Linux for Education - 0 views

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    Welcome to the GNU/Linux Educational Server. Here you will find collections of useful courses to help you better use the educational applications found on the educational distributions. There are also forums, chatrooms, courses, and help materials at your disposal.
anonymous

Classroom Technology Integration - 0 views

  • More than 40 states have adopted standards calling for effective professional development for all educators accountable for results in student learning--with "technology integration" often front and center. As educators put such standards into action, they are producing profound technology results for themselves and students. The Teacher Leadership Project, a nationally recognized, award-winning professional development model that is used in 18 states by 4,200 teachers, is a prime example of the good work being done in technology-infused teaching. This article describes the program and its success in improving teaching and learning.
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    A brief narrative description of the journal article, document, or resource. More than 40 states have adopted standards calling for effective professional development for all educators accountable for results in student learning--with "technology integration" often front and center. As educators put such standards into action, they are producing profound technology results for themselves and students. The Teacher Leadership Project, a nationally recognized, award-winning professional development model that is used in 18 states by 4,200 teachers, is a prime example of the good work being done in technology-infused teaching. This article describes the program and its success in improving teaching and learning.
anonymous

NetFamilyNews - 1 views

  • Last week Chairman Julius Genachowski unveiled the children-and-family part of the FCC's universal broadband plan, designed to enable, among other things, 21st-century education. There's just one problem: Schools have long turned to law enforcement for guidance in informing their communities about youth safety on the Net, broadband or otherwise, and the guidance they're getting scares parents, school officials, and children about using the Internet.
  • There is a tendency among law enforcement officials to think that scare tactics are effective in reducing risk behavior. Research has never found this to be so."
    • anonymous
       
      Dangerous activity is attractive to many kids.
  • the predominant approach in the field of health promotion sought to motivate behavior change by highlighting risk.
    • anonymous
       
      As soon as teachers start talking about the dangers of the Internet, students want to try it.
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  • As sociologist H. Wesley Perkins has pointed out, however, this kind of traditional strategy 'has not changed behavior one percent'."
  • What has "revolutionized the field of health promotion," according to the UVA Institute: the social-norms approach.
  • as a society, we can lower public resistance to broadband adoption and begin to free up American education to do for children's use of new media what it has long done for their use of books: guide and enrich them (examples here and here). But not only that: School will become more relevant to our highly new-media-engaged kids, and students will become more engaged.
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    "Last week Chairman Julius Genachowski unveiled the children-and-family part of the FCC's universal broadband plan, designed to enable, among other things, 21st-century education. There's just one problem: Schools have long turned to law enforcement for guidance in informing their communities about youth safety on the Net, broadband or otherwise, and the guidance they're getting scares parents, school officials, and children about using the Internet. "
anonymous

Open Educational Resources infoKit / What are Open Educational Resources - 0 views

  • Several of these 'movements' or 'philosophies' have been significant within the education community both in terms of research and learning & teaching (particularly educational technology).
    • anonymous
       
      What are the "movements"
  • Whilst the terms 'Open content' and 'Open courseware' are
anonymous

It's the P.Q. and C.Q. as Much as the I.Q. - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • When the world gets this hyperconnected, adds Mundie, the speed with which every job and industry changes also goes into hypermod
  • In the old days,” he said, “it was assumed that your educational foundation would last your whole lifetime. That is no longer true.
  • More and more things you know and tools you use “are being made obsolete faster
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  • those with more education start to earn much more than those without it, those with the capital to buy and operate machines earn much more than those who can just offer their labor, and those with superstar skills, who can reach global markets, earn much more than those with just slightly less talent.
  • How to adapt? It will require more individual initiative. We know that it will be vital to have more of the “right” education than less, that you will need to develop skills that are complementary to technology rather than ones that can be easily replaced by it and that we need everyone to be innovating new products and services to employ the people who are being liberated from routine work by automation and software.
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    In a quickly changing technology and social world developing relearning skills are critical.
anonymous

University of Manitoba: Information Services and Technology - Michael Wesch and the Fut... - 0 views

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    Mike Wesch and the Future of Education, a lecture at the U of Manitoba
anonymous

Digital Citizenship Education - 0 views

  • Students interact with music, movies, software, and other digital content every day. Do they understand the rules that dictate the ethical use of these digital files, and do they understand why these issues are relevant? The Digital Citizenship and Creative Content program is a free, turnkey instructional program. The goal is to create an awareness of the rights connected with creative content. Because only through education can students gain an understanding of the relevance of and a personal respect for creative rights and grow to become good digital citizens.
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    Students interact with music, movies, software, and other digital content every day. Do they understand the rules that dictate the ethical use of these digital files, and do they understand why these issues are relevant? The Digital Citizenship and Creative Content program is a free, turnkey instructional program. The goal is to create an awareness of the rights connected with creative content. Because only through education can students gain an understanding of the relevance of and a personal respect for creative rights and grow to become good digital citizens.
anonymous

OER Handbook for Educators 1.0 - WikiEducator - 0 views

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    Open Education Resource Handbook
anonymous

The Impact of the iPad on K-12 Schools - 0 views

  • These devices were designed to have one or two at home, not 30 in a classroom. And that's why managing that many devices presents a challenge. “They’re made for consumers, and we’re using them for education,
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    "These devices were designed to have one or two at home, not 30 in a classroom. And that's why managing that many devices presents a challenge. "They're made for consumers, and we're using them for education," Morelock said."
anonymous

Around the Corner-MGuhlin.org: Education Experiment Ends - 0 views

  • Content experts are a necessity, but there is no excuse to be media illiterate
  • What!? This is an ongoing debate that's been around for years. Even as content continues to be King, the question is, with content changing so rapidly and embedded in new media, aren't we as educators foolish to disregard media?
  • The connection between reading, writing, communication and new literacies is multi-modal, engaging everyone as learners as a result of its constant, transformative nature. Multiple modalities go beyond traditional ways of communicating—such as pen and paper, keyboard and mouse—to combine old literacies with new ones. This results in increased usability, increased experience that engages learners (Source). 
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    • anonymous
       
      Which "best practices" spare the rod spoil the child?
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    Can teachers continue to be content experts without being technology literate?
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    See Mass New Literacies Institute at massnewliteracies2011.wikispaces.com
anonymous

Interactive Opportunities - Home - 0 views

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    "O as the name suggests is about creating interactive learning opportunities for students, teachers and parents. We are focused on working with the education sector and the video games and video special effects industries to bring them together for mutual benefit. We are already working on a number of projects that have exciting groundbreaking prospects and which we will report on here as we go forward."
anonymous

Bloom's Taxonomy and the Digital World - Open Education - 0 views

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    Open Education blog post about the new Bloom's Taxonomy and the digital age.
anonymous

Social Media: The New Path of Economics and Marketing « Lorelle on WordPress - 0 views

  • Part of her work in developing educational standards for writing social media training materials, Liz explains that we are walking down a totally new path of economics and marketing which is returning to the “culture of a village” and changing the whole marketplace. You can watch from the outside or jump in - either way, you have to understand that this is the same as business techniques of the past while being totally different. In her words, “Can you spell paradox?”
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    I am getting more and more interested in how the web is changing how we connect and from social groups. There are powerful social currents forming under our feet and if educators don't get connected to these currents we will become just foam on the surface.
anonymous

Maine Learning with Laptop Study - 0 views

  • The MLLS evaluation team uses a success-based approach to evaluation. We use the research base and the experience of large scale educational technology initiatives to move beyond the question of whether technology can improve student learning to using the idenetified conditions and strategies for using technology which do improve the quality of a school's instructional program as a benchmark for evaluation. Doing so, the MLLS evaluation team can provide critical formative assessment to local project leaders about what they are doing well, what challenges they face, and can make recommendations on how to address the challenges.
    • anonymous
       
      The use of a success-based approach to measuring the effectivness of the initative is interesting. Success for one student or school may not be the same for another.
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    The MLLS evaluation team uses a success-based approach to evaluation. We use the research base and the experience of large scale educational technology initiatives to move beyond the question of whether technology can improve student learning to using the idenetified conditions and strategies for using technology which do improve the quality of a school's instructional program as a benchmark for evaluation. Doing so, the MLLS evaluation team can provide critical formative assessment to local project leaders about what they are doing well, what challenges they face, and can make recommendations on how to address the challenges.
anonymous

Tapped In Home - 0 views

  • The online workplace of an international community of education professionals. K-12 teachers, librarians, administrators, and professional development staff, as well as university faculty, students, and researchers gather here to learn, collaborate, share, and support one another.
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    The online workplace of an international community of education professionals. K-12 teachers, librarians, administrators, and professional development staff, as well as university faculty, students, and researchers gather here to learn, collaborate, share, and support one another.
anonymous

Educational Leadership:Teaching for the 21st Century:Navigating the Cs of Change - 0 views

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    Internet reciprocal teaching basics
anonymous

Technology and Academic Achievement by Les Foltos - 0 views

  • Harold Wenglinsky's study, "Does it Compute: The Relationship between Educational Technology and Student Achievement in Mathematics," concluded that for 4th and 8th graders technology has "positive benefits" on achievement as measured in NAEP's mathematics test. But it is critical to note Wenglinsky's caveat to this conclusion. He argues that not all uses of technology were beneficial. Wenglinksky found using computers to teach low order thinking skills, "...[W]as negatively related to academic achievement…." Put another way, this type of computer use was worse than doing nothing. By contrast, teachers who had students use computers to solve simulations saw their students' math scores increase significantly. As he explored the reasons for the differing ways teachers used technology, Wenglinsky found that professional development was the difference between those teachers who used skill and drill software and those who used software that could create simulations. Teachers who had training and skills used technology in ways that focused students on simulations and applications that encouraged students to develop problem solving skills. Those teachers who hadn't had training used skill and drill software (Wenglinsky, 1998).
  • More recently, educators in Missouri issued their findings on a study of the impact the statewide eMints program had on academic achievement. This program is designed as a comprehensive approach to assist teachers to integrate technology. Participating teachers receive classroom equipment, and over two hundred hours of professional development over a two-year period. In addition to traditional workshops, eMints training includes peer coaching for individual teachers. The training is designed to help teachers integrate technology so that they can use inquiry-based teaching and emphasize critical-thinking and problem-solving skills. As one of the program leaders noted, "We find that when you put the two, (inquiry based learning and true technology integration) together there's a synergy created that really boosts students' learning" (Brannigan, 2002). The power of pairing technology with inquiry learning was directly reflected in the test scores of more than 6,000 third and fourth grade students who recently took the Missouri Assessment Program (MAP) test. "Results show that a higher percent of students in eMINTS classrooms scored in the 'Proficient' or 'Advanced' categories…when compared with other students who took the MAP tests…" (Brannigan, 2002; Evaluation Team Policy Brief, 2002).
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    Article from New Horizons for Learning does increased spending on classroom technology make a difference?
anonymous

Ning networks in education - 12 steps for startup - e-wot? - 0 views

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    Good tips for setting up any type of web application in a school
anonymous

Visions of Students Today - 1 views

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    Another great video from Michael Wesch and his grad students
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