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Steve Ransom

Good vs. great teachers: how do you wish to be remembered? « Granted, but… - 0 views

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    Excellently said!
Steve Ransom

Five-Minute Film Festival: Twitter in Education | Edutopia - 0 views

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    The first video is very creative! Beyond that, this could be a good resource for those looking to further understand what all the fuss over Twitter is about in education and how to get started using and benefitting from Twitter in a meaningful way.
Steve Ransom

Mathscasts - YouTube - 0 views

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    Good math resource in this YouTube teacher channel. Shows what maybe YOU can do, too.
Steve Ransom

Assistive Technology - 0 views

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    A good blog for anyone needing such a resource and contact.
Steve Ransom

Ten Tips for Becoming a Connected Educator | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Good suggestions toward getting better connected to a vibrant learning community. Try ONE thing... Baby steps
Steve Ransom

2013 Internet Trends - Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers - 0 views

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    A good souce of current data if you need it for any projects.
Steve Ransom

Radio Show » Mapping Media to the Common Core - 0 views

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    Good tips and resources on podcasting/creating a radio show by Wesley Fryer.
Steve Ransom

Testing in kindergarten: whatever happened to story time? | Ben Joravsky on Politics | ... - 0 views

  • When all is said and done, kindergarteners will have spent up to 60 days of class time—or a third of the school year—taking various standardized tests. And you wonder why so many wealthy people send their children to private schools.
  • to hold teachers accountable for how much their students learn—or at least how well they score on standardized tests, which is not always the same thing. But the idea is that high-scoring "good" teachers will keep their jobs and low-scoring "bad" teachers will be fired, presumably to be replaced by the thousands of "good" teachers eager to come to Illinois to give more tests.
  • "Most of the kids just look at me," says another kindergarten teacher who asked not to be identified. "They're five. They don't what a 'main character' means."
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  • means one-on-one testing.
  • Presumably, by the end of the year the child will know enough to say the bug feels anxious. At which point the teacher will get to keep his or her job, for at least another year.
  • that student's file her delightfully original take is marked: "Wrong!"
  • Here's the twist. All teachers record the answers. Think about this, folks: teachers get to grade their own accountability tests. Damn, if they had this for students back in the day, I might have passed chemistry.
Steve Ransom

Clive Thompson on Why Kids Can't Search | Magazine - 0 views

  • Who’s to blame? Not the students. If they’re naive at Googling, it’s because the ability to judge information is almost never taught in school.
  • And by the time kids get to college, professors assume they already have this skill.
  • Students quickly gain the ability to detect if a top-ranked page about Martin Luther King Jr. was actually posted by white supremacists.
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  • “crap detection 101,” as digital guru Howard Rheingold dubs it, isn’t easy. One prerequisite is that you already know a lot about the world.
  • group of college students
  • Pan grimly concluded that students aren’t assessing information sources on their own merit—they’re putting too much trust in the machine.
  • High school and college students may be “digital natives,” but they’re wretched at searching.
  • In 1955, we wondered why Johnny can’t read. Today the question is, why can’t Johnny search?
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    "Google makes broad-based knowledge more important, not less. A good education is the true key to effective search. But until our kids have that, let's make sure they don't always take PageRank at its word."
Steve Ransom

Teen Study: Social Media Is Positive Experience : NPR - 0 views

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    Teens see meanness, but they still see social media spaces as a good thing
Steve Ransom

Diigo V3: Highlight & Share the Web! Social Bookmarking 2.0 - YouTube - 0 views

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    A good video by Diigo to help you get started and see all that Diigo can do.
Steve Ransom

Blogs Wikis Docs Chart - 0 views

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    Good chart to compare 3 major web2.0 tools
Steve Ransom

Think Before You Tweet (Blog or Update Status) - 0 views

  • Speaking these words can be a way to commiserate with colleagues, or they can become “in jokes” among friends.  These exchanges can be OK when we are face-to-face with others, as we have body language and voice inflections to help us understand the meaning and context behind the statements.  Online is a different situation, however.
  • Suddenly my Twitter stream was a teacher’s lounge.
  • if we have an online presence, we must be responsible in what we say or write.  This seems simple, doesn’t it?  Nevertheless, we forget that we are not in the company of friends when we say or write the things we do.  Almost anyone can read our words, and they might misunderstand our intent.
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    Good advice.
Steve Ransom

How Ordinary Chinese Are Talking And Fighting Back : NPR - 0 views

  • the party won't tolerate anything it remotely sees as a threat.
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    A really fascinating story of how Chinese government-controlled social media still benefits people... as long as it works in the government's favor.
Steve Ransom

Good to Know - Google - 0 views

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    A nice compilation of tips and resources by Google.
Steve Ransom

eSchool News » On ed tech, we're asking the wrong question » Print - 0 views

  • Does the use of textbooks lead to better student achievement [2]? Somebody should do the research. Schools nationwide are spending billions of dollars each year on textbooks, with no clear evidence they improve test scores—and stakeholders deserve some answers.
  • That anyone would be OK with the notion that schools haven’t changed much since the days when factory jobs were prevalent speaks volumes about how our society values education and its children.
  • Still, the Times story is correct in noting the scarcity of scientifically valid evidence that proves technology’s pedagogical value without a doubt.
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  • But I would argue that’s the point: You can’t separate the technology from the rest of the learning process, because they are inextricably bound.
  • But technology doesn’t exist in a vacuum. For technology to have an impact on student achievement, schools also need sound teaching, strong leadership, fidelity of use, and a supportive culture, among other things.
  • In other words, technology can’t improve student outcomes by itself. Instead, it’s one of several elements that must work together in harmony, like a complex dance, to elicit results. Should it come as a surprise that test scores haven’t risen markedly in Kyrene, when the Times reported the district has had to cut several teaching positions in recent years? Who knows how much the district has invested in professional development, or tech support?
  • But the Times got it wrong with regard to the central question it invited readers to consider. Instead of examining whether technology is worth schools’ investment, the newspaper should have focused on two other, more relevant questions: Why are so many districts that invest in technology still failing to see success? And, what are the conditions that best lead to ed-tech success?
  • Funding constraints have been exacerbated by an ever-multiplying series of challenges, such as growing populations of ESL and special-needs students and the creeping effects of poverty on school district operations.
  • Problems such as poverty have always existed, but what hasn’t is the idea that schools should be responsible for educating every child, regardless of his or her circumstances. As a society, we’ve made this promise as part of No Child Left Behind, but we haven’t backed it up with the funding that is needed to make good on this promise—preferring instead what we think are quick solutions, such as merit pay for teachers … or technology in classrooms.
  • The real question isn’t how to improve public education, he says—it’s: Do we really want to? And that’s a question we’ve been avoiding as a society, because the answer might require a level of commitment we’re not prepared to make.
  • In the wealthiest country in the world, it would be nice to think that school districts like Kyrene shouldn’t have to choose between technology and teachers. It would be nice to think they could afford both.
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