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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

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.
Davin Rose

Personalized learning v. targeted advertising | Dangerously Irrelevant - 0 views

  • The fact that you don’t know – or don’t care – means that I don’t want your company anywhere near my kids.
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    Is education about learning or is it about more money?
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    Is education about learning or is it about more money?
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.
Davin Rose

New Padagogy Wheel Helps You Integrate Technology Using SAMR Model - Edudemic - 0 views

  • Want the apps to be clickable? Click here to download the PDF.
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    Padagogy Wheel, the use of technology and apps in education.
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    Padagogy Wheel, the use of technology and apps in education.
Kelsey McManus

Six Ways to Use ThingLink Hashtags in education | ThingLink Blog - 0 views

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    By using creating key specific hashtags teachers can allow students to use them in order to search the web for specific topics.
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

Technology and Teaching: Finding a Balance | Edutopia - 0 views

  • There is no doubt that finding the time to integrate technology is an overwhelming task for anyone. Throughout the course of a day, teachers find themselves pulled in many directions. However, technology is already integrated in nearly everything we do and nearly every job our students will encounter. So how do educators find an ideal balance for learning about and eventually integrating technology? It begins with a focus followed by good instructional design -- but ultimately, a healthy balance.
  • It's equally important to expose students to information literacy skill sets. As databases grow and information continues to evolve into paperless formats, it is essential to teach students how to question effectively and efficiently.
  • Getting caught up in the never ending, always expanding world of web 2.0 applications and iPad or Android apps will only confuse your students and, inevitably, frustrate you.
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    This seems to be the real question at the end of the day. How much integration is necessary in order to have students being the most prepared for the real world and not just academia.
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    This seems to be the real question at the end of the day. How much integration is necessary in order to have students being the most prepared for the real world and not just academia.
Davin Rose

Rethinking Independent Schools in the 21st Century | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Generalizations that label these schools as elitist, tradition-bound and homogenous probably aren't based on a recent first-hand look.
  • A Skype call with a school far away may represent good exposure to different places and cultures, but without integrating it into a learning plan, it's more of a memory than a skill-building endeavor, and divvying up topics for a group presentation fall short of collaboration if problems aren't being solved together.
  • Outdoor and adventure education Global education and travel Service learning Sustainability initiatives Leadership development
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  • Would your school be open to embracing innovation coming out of independent schools, or engaging in a public-private partnership to advance 21st century skills?
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    Are there better options than public schools for diversity and how can we remove certain stereotypes that may exist in current lines of thinking on schools.
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    Are there better options than public schools for diversity and how can we remove certain stereotypes that may exist in current lines of thinking on schools.
Deb Gardner

Teacher to Teacher: 7 Steps for Integrating Technology - Getting Smart by Aimee Bartis ... - 1 views

  • student knows more about the technology than you do.
    • Deb Gardner
       
      Happens all the time in EDU120 (more power to 'em) Knowledgeable students help not hinder instruction.
  • 2. Converting
  • Start by taking a lesson you’ve done before and transforming it. How can you use technology with the lesson?
    • Deb Gardner
       
      Begin with the standards. What are your students expected to know and/or be able to do as a result of your teaching and THEN  how might technology expedite or enhance the learning.
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  • 3. Lesson Planning
  • 4. Creating
  • 5. Collaborate 
    • Deb Gardner
       
      The key here is to actually have students CREATE not just Control-C/Conotrol-V it.  Take information from multiple sources, synthesize it, evaluate it, learn it and then create something (a document, a podcast, a digital poster, a Voice Thread and ThingLink) to demonstrate they have learned it.
  • 6. Showcase 
  • 7. Portfolios 
  • Integrating technology is an ongoing project. You are never finished. The key is to keep on learning.
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

A Bunch of B.S.: The Antidote for #EdTech Negativity - Getting Smart by John Hardison -... - 0 views

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    This article defends ed-tech by taking the "negatives" and actually creating them into positives or even showing different options.
Davin Rose

New and Old Challenges for Teacher Candidates | Edutopia - 0 views

  • There are also some other pieces that make educators skeptical. It is a privatized exam through Pearson, costs $300, and is scored outside of the context of the teaching practice.
  • I believe a successful teacher is one that can awaken the curiosity of their students, illustrate the intrinsic value of the subject matter, and foster understanding rather than memorization.
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    This is erie and exciting. Teachers who don't have to put in the same amount of time and training in the upfront aspect will be seen as different from those who have traditional training.
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    This is erie and exciting. Teachers who don't have to put in the same amount of time and training in the upfront aspect will be seen as different from those who have traditional training.
Davin Rose

No wonder nobody wants to come | Dangerously Irrelevant - 0 views

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    Are we teaching this generation of students the way that the world now operates or are we showing student ways to succeed in todays realm?
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    Are we teaching this generation of students the way that the world now operates or are we showing student ways to succeed in todays realm?
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