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David Ellena

Building Technology Fluency: Preparing Students to be Digital Learners | Edutopia - 0 views

  • how much time is devoted to the development of their technology fluency?
  • a student with technology fluency navigates programs or apps quickly, completing tasks correctly and deliberately.
  • technology fluency, a student not only navigates within a single environment, but also begins to "demonstrate an ability to make effective choices and use the tools to advance their understanding and communication"
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  • ultimate sign of technology fluency is the "ability to manipulate, transform and move information across various media and platforms"
  • A non-fluent student may be proficient in a single program or app, but not automatically see the connections to other content areas or different contexts.
  • 3 Strategies for Building Technology Fluency
  • 1. Flip (10) Your Lessons
  • 2. Create Scaffolded Challenges
  • These steps gave them enough scaffolding to get started and then teach themselves how to finish the project.
  • students would collaborate among themselves to navigate the rest of the challenge. By not providing students with specific steps, they learned to read menu items, access help, search for tutorials and become effective problem solvers, taking critical steps towards fluency.
  • 3. Empower Student Leaders
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    Here are some steps to help students become tech fluent
EducationPlus Learning Department

Information Fluency Home - 0 views

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    The 21st Century Information Fluency Project (21CIF) began in 2001 when the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy received funds from the US Department of Education to research and develop training in the largely unexplored field of online information literacy. The mission then, which remains today, is provide professional development and resources to help educators and students improve their ability "to locate, evaluate and use digital information more effectively, efficiently and ethically." Great site to learn all about information literacy!
Dennis OConnor

Information Investigator 3 by Carl Heine on Prezi - 0 views

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    What if every student (and educator) was a good online researcher?  I know, you don't have the time to teach information fluency skills.  What if you could get a significant advance is skills with just a 2 -3  hour time commitment?  Here's a great Prezi 'fly by" of the new Information Investigator 3.1 online self paced class.  Watch the presentation carefully to find the link to a free code to take the class for evaluation purposes. 
Reuven Werber

Playing more twitter games - NeverEndingSearch - Blog on School Library Journal - 0 views

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    Description: A discussion of information fluency, teaching, and learning in the 21st century.
M. Circe

Fast Forward: A School District Redefines Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

  • by Grace Rubenstein AUDIO SLIDE SHOW: Lawrence Township Narrated by Grace Rubenstein It is one thing to create change inside a classroom -- the best teachers, masters of their one-room domains, break from tradition and foster innovative learning environments all the time. A harder task, which a growing number of schools are proving can be done, is to convert an entire school to embrace new practices that fulfill the changing educational demands of our age. Then comes the next -- and the messiest -- frontier, the entity most resistant to cohesive change: the school district. Five years ago, administrators in the Metropolitan School District of Lawrence Township, in the northeast corner of Indianapolis, tackled this challenge. With a $5.9 million grant from the Lilly Endowment, a local philanthropic organization, they set out to transform the prevailing vision of what preK-12 education is for -- as one district official put it, "to meet the needs of the kids' future, and not the teachers' past." They decided that they needed to teach a modern set of skills in a student-centered way. Critical thinking, self-direction, and cultural competency, along with fluency in technology, information resources, and visual and graphic presentations. These were the elements of digital age literacy the district believed its students would need in the twenty-first century. Educating students for the new era demanded not only new content, they believed, but also new teaching methods. Teachers needed to recast themselves as facilitators, and to demand that students take more ownership of their learning. Into Focus Visit classrooms in Lawrence Township -- at least those where the change has caught on -- and you'll see kids inventing their own projects, using computers in daily work, involving themselves in community initiatives, and inquiring on their own about continued . . . 1234567next ›last » This article was also published in Edutopia Magazine, June 2007
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