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Trudy Sweeney

A Handful of Great Apps for literacy Education ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Lear... - 0 views

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    "Reading and writing is a core skill that pervades all other school subjects. With the focus we see on STEM-related products, it is good to see so many emerging products with their sights on literacy too. Here are a handful of notable tools for literacy education."
Trudy Sweeney

ACEC2014 | NOW IT'S PERSONAL - 1 views

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    ACEC2014 is the 26th Australian Computers in Education Conference which will be held in the first-class Adelaide Convention Centre on 30 September - 3 October 2014. The theme "Now It's Personal" is focused on you and your learning.
Trudy Sweeney

7 Ways To Keep Students Focused While Using Technology | Edudemic - 0 views

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    Even with all of the benefits of technology in the classroom, however, educators must use caution to ensure that students are focusing on the lesson and not giving in to distractions. Here are seven ways that teachers can use to help students pay more attention when using technology:
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    FYI
Trudy Sweeney

12 Ways To Use Google Search In School, By Degree Of Difficulty | Edudemic - 2 views

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    "Dubbed 'Search Education,'Google's new site has an array of lesson plans, videos (check a sample out below), concept maps, and other tools designed to help any educator properly integrate Google."
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    FYI
Trudy Sweeney

Future U: Classroom tech doesn't mean handing out tablets - 0 views

  • "I would argue the classroom twenty years from now will be a space reconfigured and repurposed for different needs," he said. "No more 'tablet armchairs.' The classrooms may look more like living rooms. We're going to see classrooms moving away from lectures to a more collaborative environment, heavy on group projects. I could see a student's tools all contained on one device, sharing wirelessly on a common screen or with each other, device-to-device, and much more web-based." The devices they use will also continue to shrink. Students are already showing a preference for tablets and web-books over laptops. "The social web has enforced a powerful notion of collaborative knowledge creation," Jim Groom, instructional technology specialist and adjunct professor at Virginia's University of Mary Washington told Ars. "How can a classroom in this moment ignore the shape of the web?" he asked. His university is planning a pilot program to give 900 new students not just their own blogs, but a complete domain and space in which they will work, archive, sandbox, rant and play, and over which they have complete control.
  • "I would argue the classroom twenty years from now will be a space reconfigured and repurposed for different needs," he said. "No more 'tablet armchairs.' The classrooms may look more like living rooms. We're going to see classrooms moving away from lectures to a more collaborative environment, heavy on group projects. I could see a student's tools all contained on one device, sharing wirelessly on a common screen or with each other, device-to-device, and much more web-based." The devices they use will also continue to shrink. Students are already showing a preference for tablets and web-books over laptops. "The social web has enforced a powerful notion of collaborative knowledge creation," Jim Groom, instructional technology specialist and adjunct professor at Virginia's University of Mary Washington told Ars. "How can a classroom in this moment ignore the shape of the web?" he asked. His university is planning a pilot program to give 900 new students not just their own blogs, but a complete domain and space in which they will work, archive, sandbox, rant and play, and over which they have complete control.
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    "I would argue the classroom twenty years from now will be a space reconfigured and repurposed for different needs," he said. "No more 'tablet armchairs.' The classrooms may look more like living rooms. We're going to see classrooms moving away from lectures to a more collaborative environment, heavy on group projects. I could see a student's tools all contained on one device, sharing wirelessly on a common screen or with each other, device-to-device, and much more web-based." The devices they use will also continue to shrink. Students are already showing a preference for tablets and web-books over laptops. "The social web has enforced a powerful notion of collaborative knowledge creation," Jim Groom, instructional technology specialist and adjunct professor at Virginia's University of Mary Washington told Ars. "How can a classroom in this moment ignore the shape of the web?" he asked. His university is planning a pilot program to give 900 new students not just their own blogs, but a complete domain and space in which they will work, archive, sandbox, rant and play, and over which they have complete control.
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    FYI
Trudy Sweeney

Donald Clark Plan B: More pedagogic change in 10 years than last 1000 years - all drive... - 1 views

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    Wednesday, December 07, 2011 More pedagogic change in 10 years than last 1000 years - all driven by 10 technology innovations Pedagogy - one of those words that's used when people want to sound all academic. So let's just call it learning practice. Of one thing we can be sure; teaching does not seem to have changed much in the last 100 years. In our Universities, given the stubborn addiction to lectures, it has barely changed in 1000 years. So what's the real source of pedagogic change?
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    This may be useful to consider when planning your photostory :-)
Trudy Sweeney

Microsoft - Partners in Learning Toolkit - 2 views

  • The Innovation Framework highlights four areas related to what and how students learn: 21st Century Skills & Standards Curriculum & the Learning Paradigm Assessment Innovative Uses of ICT How should a curriculum be designed, and how should students be assessed? How can student-directed learning be encouraged?   In most countries, school curricula and instruction are mostly didactic based on subject-based knowledge transmission and large amounts of rote learning. This ignores many skills that are increasingly necessary for life and work and often fails to engage students. Of course, schools implement and work according to national standards and other learning requirements, but they can also consider more effective teaching and learning strategies and encourage student-centered learning and assessment processes.4   Many innovative schools actively engage students in their learning and in the co-design of the learning process. There are a variety of ways of doing this, from the use of student councils to students as researchers within schools, to online student feedback on the quality of teaching and learning. Technology skills are crucial in the 21st Century skill set, but technology should play a bigger role in the transformation of learning practices. High-level ICT integration increases the possibility of personalizing learning processes, making learning accessible to students anytime and anywhere.
Trudy Sweeney

Contemporary Learning | CEOM Sacred Landscape - 1 views

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    Informed by an extensive international and national research base, the Contemporary Learning Schema represents the findings from a research partnership between CEOM and twenty-five primary and secondary schools involved in the Contemporary Learning Research Schools Project and the Leading for Contemporary Learning Project, over a three year period 2006-2008. The purpose of the Contemporary Learning Schema is to assist leaders and teachers to reflect on their work and to stimulate dialogue around teaching practice and student learning within the context of their school. The schema provides a platform from which a shared language and way of thinking about teaching and learning can be developed within a school community and ultimately across all schools within the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne.
Trudy Sweeney

ICT-Rich Pedagogy - 1 views

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    Differences between 20th Century learning and ICT-rich pedagogy
Trudy Sweeney

Microsoft - Partners in Learning Toolkit - 0 views

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    The most difficult step on the journey towards innovation is the first one. Where do we start? Many questions and concerns are immediately obvious to you, mostly to do with constraints of finance, curriculum, professional practice and possibly the expectations of parents. However, the biggest risk of all is to take no risk at all.
Trudy Sweeney

101 Web 2.0 Tools for Teachers You Should Know About - 0 views

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    I am unsure if all of these tools are in fact Web 2.0 however lists like this are good for learning about what is popular and recommended by others :-)
Trudy Sweeney

I Want to Offer an Online Course - YouTube - 1 views

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    If you are an Instructional Designer you have had this conversation.
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    The pedagogy of online learning isn't the same as traditional teaching!
Trudy Sweeney

Educational Technology Made Simple | SimpleK12 - 0 views

shared by Trudy Sweeney on 20 Mar 12 - Cached
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    "SimpleK12 has helped more than 500,000 teachers and 2 million students learn and use technology. Our innovative, online learning programs empower individuals with the knowledge and skills needed to build 21st century classroom experiences."
Trudy Sweeney

The Flipped Classroom Model: A Full Picture « User Generated Education - 0 views

  • For educators, who are used to and use the didactic model, a framework is needed to assist them with the implementation of the Flipped Classroom.  In other words, the message to teachers to do what they want during classroom is not enough to make this transition.
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    For educators, who are used to and use the didactic model, a framework is needed to assist them with the implementation of the Flipped Classroom. In other words, the message to teachers to do what they want during classroom is not enough to make this transition.
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