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Davin Rose

Modifying the Flipped Classroom: The "In-Class" Version | Edutopia - 0 views

  • teachers who practice flipping have seen "higher student achievement, increased student engagement, and better attitudes toward learning and school."
  • But instead of having students view the content at home, that video becomes a station in class that small groups rotate through. The rest of their time is spent on other activities -- independent work and group work, with some activities related to the lesson and others focusing on different course content.
  • The teacher can observe whether students are really watching.
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  • It doesn't make for tidy one-period lesson plans.
  • More preparation is required at the beginning.
  • Technically, you don’t "gain" more class time.
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    This is an interesting concept that allows the teacher more hands on time during the reflection side of education. This would become very helpful during certain lesson plans in the chemical classroom.
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    This is an interesting concept that allows the teacher more hands on time during the reflection side of education. This would become very helpful during certain lesson plans in the chemical classroom.
Kelsey McManus

Should Handheld Devices for Kids Under 12 Be Banned? | MindShift - 0 views

  • and possibly as an equalizing force in the digital divide.
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    This is an important article for teachers to use when using technology in the classroom. I feel that it is important to use technology within the classroom but that also there needs to be breaks, especially with handheld devices.
Kelsey McManus

Kleinspiration: Differentiated math instruction using Front Row: adaptive math for K-8 ... - 0 views

  • Every student works at their own pace, so no student is in over their head, and no student is bored
  • They do this using a diagnostic pre-test the kids take the first time they use Front Row. This figures out where the kids are, and then they practice at their own level.
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    This article describes the application Front row which is a an app available on the iPad that allows students to practice math inside and outside of the classroom.
Davin Rose

Social Media for Teachers: Guides, Resources and Ideas | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Free Parents’ Guides for Snapchat, Instagram, and Facebook from ConnectSafely (9): ConnectSafely is a great source for tips and advice for keeping kids safe on social media. Their comprehensive guides for teens' favorite social networks highlight the risks, privacy settings and strategies for keeping young people safe. Some of educational ideas for Instagram:
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    As a consumer of today's culture myself. I have no idea what most of these apps are and how to use them in their own right. What importance do these really have in my classroom and what do they have to do with better understandings of chemical concepts.
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    As a consumer of today's culture myself. I have no idea what most of these apps are and how to use them in their own right. What importance do these really have in my classroom and what do they have to do with better understandings of chemical concepts.
Davin Rose

Using SAMR to Teach Above the Line - Getting Smart by Susan Oxnevad - 1:1 program, Appl... - 0 views

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    What if we made an interactive website that would pertain specifically to our classroom and allow the student to interactively learn through various medias.
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    What if we made an interactive website that would pertain specifically to our classroom and allow the student to interactively learn through various medias.
Deb Gardner

Educational Leadership:Getting Students to Mastery:Differentiation: It Starts with Pre-... - 1 views

  • Lily clearly stated what everyone should do:
    • Deb Gardner
       
      Would be effective for (UdL) to have written (on board) directions as well. Helps create independent learners, helps to avoid students who didn't hear the first time or need written AND verbal instructions.
  • Before starting a unit in science, Lily had her students take a pre-assessment that required them to circle the parts of the body that belong to the nervous system:
    • Deb Gardner
       
      How is technology used in this classroom in conjunction with grouping to differentiate instruction?
  • The quiz results showed that six students really struggled to understand the different parts and functions of the nervous system. These students missed three to six items on the 18-question test (or scored between an 83 and 67 percent). Many people would consider 83 a sufficient score and not consider the student in need of remediation. However, Lily decided 83 wasn't good enough
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  • Further, Lily didn't stop with remediation with this group; instead, she chose to frontload the next body system, the skeletal system
  • She didn't engage the group in inquiry-based instruction practices that day, however. The Rhodes group made flash cards, listing such questions as, "What are the two main structures that make up the central nervous system?" and "What are the functions of the spinal cord?" Although this is a more traditional practice, in this group flash cards had a different feeling. The students chatted with one another while making the cards. They asked Lily to clarify concepts so the information on the cards would be easily understood and to quiz them using the cards. "Great job!" she would say. "You missed three. Practice with the cards a little more, and you'll have it!" Not every student in the room needed to work with flash cards. These students, however, benefited from the practice.
    • Deb Gardner
       
      MIxing traditional review practices (flashcards) - kinesthetic learning with cooperative grouping (Marzano strategy) in differentiating instruction
  • Four Lessons Learned
  • How can we transfer these practices into other classrooms?
  • Second, teachers must use pre-assessments to make decisions; we must become what Carol Ann Tomlinson called "assessment junkies."
  • Third, we can apply this lesson structure to any content
  • Could teachers do this every day? Sure. Do they need to do it every day? No. Teachers could start with one or two lessons per unit;
  • Each lesson does take some additional planning
  • Just start small, and go on from there.
Kelsey McManus

Infographic: Setting the Context: A Brief History of EdTech - Getting Smart by Guest Au... - 0 views

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    Getting Smart shows an awesome diagram that displays the whole history of technology and its integration into the classroom.
Kelsey McManus

Free Technology for Teachers: 5 Good Apps for ESL / ELL Students - 0 views

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    Apps that assist ESL in the classroom.
Kelsey McManus

Free Technology for Teachers: New Features Come to Google Documents in the Form of Add-ons - 0 views

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    These are awesome add ons that anybody can add on to their google drive account. They can be very useful within the classroom as well.
Davin Rose

Cramming is indisputable proof of the superficiality of most classrooms in Am... - 0 views

  • Learning – real LEARNING – starts when, for whatever reason, the learner wants it to start.
  • What’s crammed wasn’t learned or there would be no need to cram; what’s crammed isn’t learned or it wouldn’t be forgotten.
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    Cramming vs. Learning
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    Cramming vs. Learning
Kelsey McManus

Google Glass: Recording at Schools | Langwitches Blog - 0 views

  • videos for flipped classroom
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    Google Glass provides students a cleaner and easier way to practice problems.
Kelsey McManus

10 Major Technology Trends in Education -- THE Journal - 0 views

  • According to the latest data, video for homework is on the rise; mobile computing is "beyond the tipping point"; and most kids don't use traditional computers to connect to the Internet at home.
  • surveyed identify 3G- or 4G-enabled devices as their primary means of connecting to the Internet
  • Evans noted that 46 percent of teachers are using video in in the classroom.
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  • students are leveraging mobile devices both to be more efficient in their day-to-day tasks and to transform their own learning processes.
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    The top ten trends for different Technologies that teachers can use in education.
Davin Rose

Teaching Students to Embrace Mistakes | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Telling students they need to take advantage of the feedback they get isn't just good advice
  • This latter category is called deliberate practice and involves isolating what's not working and mastering the difficult area before moving on.
  • Mistakes are the most important thing that happens in any classroom, because they tell you where to focus that deliberate practice.
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  • So why don't students view their mistakes as a valuable asset? Well, students don't think about their mistakes rationally -- they think about them emotionally. Mistakes make students feel stupid. "Stupid" is just that: a feeling. Specifically, it's the feeling of shame, and our natural response is to avoid its source. If we say something embarrassing, we hide our face. If we get a bad grade, we hide the test away. Unsurprisingly, that's the worst move to make if you ever want to get better. Academic success does not come from how smart or motivated students are. It comes from how they feel about their mistakes.
  • Changing your students' perspective on mistakes is the greatest gift you can give yourself as a teacher.
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    If Students are not willing to accept mistakes they will never try out of fear of failing. Ultimately they will not make it anywhere with that mindset.
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    If Students are not willing to accept mistakes they will never try out of fear of failing. Ultimately they will not make it anywhere with that mindset.
Davin Rose

10 Apps for Math Fluency | Edutopia - 0 views

  • There are so many ways to use mobile devices with students. You can create interactive textbooks (1) for children to read, ask them to explain their thinking through screencasting (2) or help them access informational text using QR codes (3). Mobile devices can also be used to help students practice foundational math skills and build their math fluency.
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    This seems to be more fun than educational. This seems that we are trying to hard to push integration. Why is it so important to integrate? How is this a better way to teach? In the SAMR model this seems to be mere substitution and boring.
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    This seems to be more fun than educational. This seems that we are trying to hard to push integration. Why is it so important to integrate? How is this a better way to teach? In the SAMR model this seems to be mere substitution and boring.
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