Edupunk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 4 views
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teaching and learning practices that result from a do it yourself (DIY) attitude.[
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Michelle Berceli on 24 Jan 11This is a wonderful idea for those independent students!
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Emily Dunn on 25 Jan 11It is really important to be invested in the work a student is doing in school. Making assignments personally resonate with students can make a huge difference in the learning they take away.
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Elizabeth Floyd on 26 Jan 11It's not often that you see students working independently and trying to do it themselves....
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anonymous on 29 Jan 11Maybe not, but this may be a good approach to getting students into working independently and trying things on their own.
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Venita Smith on 31 Jan 11In school I was rarely asked to DIY, it was always do it the teacher's way. I'm looking forward to seeing how my future students will handle this. It is out of my realm of experience.
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an approach to teaching that avoids mainstream tools like PowerPoint and Blackboard
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Isn't good for students to know how to use mainstream mediums like powerpoint and blackboard as they are almost definitely going to have to be used later in life? Maybe mainstream teaching shouldn't be replaced completely by Edpunk mediums!
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Well I would argue that power points can be the most boring type of teaching EVER. Of course students will have to use them later in life, but teachers should be using powerpoints to facillitate this DIY attitude, and not use powerpoints as technology included lectures. What about making powerpoints for a class collaborative. Maybe as the students read through the chapter they make a slide on the class powerpoint through google docs of a topic that they found confusing or really interesting. Then atleast the powerpoint would be giving the students what they want and not a lecture.
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Im sure kids will learn how to use and be exposed to all the mainstream tools inevitably, so if a few teachers picked up on the edupunk approach I don't think that kids would miss learning how to use other formats...
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commercialization of learning
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Again, I think its very important for students to know how to use the mediums that are required in the commercialized world we do live in. Being able to say that I know how to extensively use excell, powerpoint, and wiki pages is what can get a student a job over someone else.
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not only being able to use them, but having a comfort level with technology that influences your ability to use programs you are not familar with.
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I agree with you both. However, don't you hate teachers that have powerpoint presentations every single class!? Boring!! I think some teachers rely too much on these technologies and need to have a more diverse way of teaching.
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I agree that these can be useful tools to know, but I also think that students should learn to value more creative avenues of expressing themselves and communicating their ideas to others. While many jobs do requite knowledge of these tools, many others look for individuals with a more unique approach to things.
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To continue the rant on PowerPoint: it has become a crutch to people who use it (though, I'm sure there are exceptions). In most of the presentations that used it that I have witnessed, the presenter simply reads off of the slide. That ends up feelin like a waste of time, because I could have just read the slides myself. Powerpoint has potential to add to the lecture, not just be the lecture.
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I love what you said about powerpoint adding to a lecture but not being the lecture. I hate when people read directly off a slide. It is an insult to my intelligence for the same reason you said, I could have just read it myself. It is a tool with a lot of good uses that has gotten overused like an overplayed song on the radio.
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