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Karen Chichester

Q & A on 21st Century Skills « 21st Century Skills | Blog - 0 views

  • What are 21st century skills? ➢    21st Century Skills are the set of skills students need to succeed in learning, work and life in this century. ➢    To ensure success, students need both deep understanding of the major principles and facts in core subjects (such as math, language, arts, science, history, etc.) and also be able to apply this knowledge to important contemporary themes (such as global awareness, financial, health and environmental literacy, etc.) using a variety of skills, such as: Learning and Innovation Skills (critical thinking and problem solving, creativity and innovation) Digital Literacy Skills (information, media and technology literacy); and Life and Career Skills (initiative and self-direction, leadership, adaptability, etc).
  •  These skills are vital for everyone’s success in our times, and global competition, increased access to technology, digital information and tools are only increasing the importance of these 21st century knowledge-and-skills.
  •  The skills are not new (with the exception of some of the Digital Literacy skills), but for centuries have been offered to only the privileged and gifted students. Yet all students need these skills to succeed.
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  • Confucius recognized the need for learning by doing,
  • “I hear and I forget, I see and I remember, I do and I understand”. 
  • Michel de Montaigne said “Rather a mind well-shaped than well-full”.
  • According to Christopher Dede, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, students are better engaged and learn more deeply when they are taught in the context and environment where that learning normally occurs, such as solving a real-world problem.
  •  According to John Bransford of the University of Washington Professor of Education and Psychology, and author of How People Learn, the following characteristics are part of how we naturally learn: Context – Real-world learning Caring – Intrinsic motivation Construction – Mental & virtual model-building Competence – Multiple pathways to expertise Community – Learning socially in groups & team
  • We advocate for the integration of 21st century skills into the teaching of core subjects and themes. In fact, our work with the Partnership for 21st Century Skills has involved many of the curriculum groups that set standards in english, science, math, geography, etc. (NCTE, NSTA, NCTM, NCGE and others, as well as Achieve/ADP), that represent the experts on what the core content standards in each field should be. We continue to support those groups in helping ensure that 21st century skills are embedded in their standards.
  • Critical thinking, problem solving, communications skills, innovation skills, technology skills and career and life skills will be needed far into the next century, yet many countries have not yet focused their resources on the best ways to teach and assess these skills
  • Isn’t it much more important to ensure students are capable of doing basic arithmetic and reading before moving to these soft skills? ➢    According to Elena Silva, senior policy analyst at Education Sector, “the best learning happens when students learn core subjects and processes, such as the rules and procedures of arithmetic, at the same time that they learn how to think and solve problems.”
  • We now know that motivation and engagement are crucial to learning success. By integrating the learning of core knowledge, key 21st skills, the effective use of technology and applying this learning to relevant, real world problems and questions, in every classroom, we will help build a society of knowledgeable, responsible citizens, workers and leaders equipped to handle the challenges of our times and to continue learning lifelong.
  • he learning of core subjects is amplified and strengthened by the integration of 21st century skills as these skills: Help bring theory, facts, questions and problems, and real world applications together in a powerful learning experiences Have a transformative potential to go beyond the walls of a classroom to connect students with global peers through the development of digital literacies Promote deeper understanding, more useful knowledge, and pro-social, responsible approaches to everyday life when students study core subjects as they learn how to think critically and creatively, research answers to questions, solve problems, and innovate.
  • Students have always wanted to be more engaged in their learning, with relevant materials and content that relate to their lives and the issues of the times.  That pressure is higher now than ever before, as “digital native” students, immersed in today’s technologies, have access to more information and thinking tools than ever before.
  • But parents and educators now have a greater responsibility to guide the students toward the effective use of these powerful tools for improved learning that meets the needs of our times.
  • Teachers are so busy – how do you expect them to incorporate these skills? ➢    The outcome of the “depth vs breadth” decisions will help free up time for the application of skills and for deeper understanding, and as teachers apply effective inquiry, design and project learning methods, they will achieve a better balance of direct instruction and project-oriented methods.
  • Digital literacy is no longer a nice-to-have – it is becoming basic to life in our times.
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    21st Century Skills FAQ. Lots of quotes to think about. Writing plays a major role. My question is how to make Traditional English Curriculum  with required lit relevant to today's at risk kids.
Karen Chichester

How social media improved writing - FT.com - 0 views

  • Day by day, prose is becoming blessedly more like speech. Social media, blogs and emails have hugely improved the way we write.
  • Before the internet, only professional writers wrote
  • Email kicked off an unprecedented expansion in writing.
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  • We’re now in the most literate age in history.
  • Clare Wood, development psychologist at Coventry University
  • Her own study of primary schoolchildren suggested that texting improved their reading ability.
  • Texters, after all, are constantly practising reading and spelling. Sure, children tend not to punctuate text messages. But most of them grasp that this genre has different rules from, say, school exams.
  • George Orwell in 1944 lamented the divide between wordy, stilted written English, and much livelier speech. “Spoken English is full of slang,” he wrote, “it is abbreviated wherever possible, and people of all social classes treat its grammar and syntax in a slovenly way.” His ideal was writing that sounded like speech. We’re getting there at last.
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    From the Financial Times. Discusses how the use of email and social media changed and (in the author's opinion) improved the way we write.
Karen Chichester

Our Space: Being a Responsible Citizen of the Digital World - 0 views

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    Our Space is a set of curricular materials designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments. Through role-playing activities and reflective exercises, students are asked to consider the ethical responsibilities of other people, and whether and how they behave ethically themselves online. These issues are raised in relation to five core themes that are highly relevant online: identity, privacy, authorship and ownership, credibility, and participation. For more information, download the Introduction to Our Space, FAQ, and Road Map. All curricular units and lessons are free and available for download below. The full casebook can be downloaded using the link at the bottom of the page.
Karen Chichester

Cinch - Create and share micro podcasts, images and text updates on CinchCast.com - 0 views

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    Another (currently) free podcast creator. you can call and create a short podcast. From the folks at Blog Talk Radio
Karen Chichester

TodaysMeet: Provides Disposable Chat Rooms With Twitter Hashtag Stream - 0 views

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    Description of Today's Meet developed by James Socol for his dad, Ira's use in classes at MSU.
Karen Chichester

Teaching Methods - 0 views

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    More from Science Education Research Center at Carleton College. This is a nice overview of different teaching strategies.
Karen Chichester

Pedagogy in Action - 0 views

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    From the Secinece Education Resource Center at Carleton. Goog reaource for teaching methods and reasearch  on learning. While this suppose to be fore the "harde" sciences, there are a lot of inofrmation and activites that can apply to any subject area.
Karen Chichester

Teacher Tech Videos- Short Tutorials for Teachers to Help in Use of Digital Tools - 0 views

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    Video tutorials for tech tools that teachers can use. Videos are short and broken down by user skill level. Click on the tabs at the top to access the numerous tools listed (On the left side of each page.) Each tool's is broken into three parts: the basic, the intermediate, advanced features. Evety video can be downloaded, remixed, shared, or used in whatever way you want to help your school.
Karen Chichester

Classroom Broadcasting - Global Tech Port - 0 views

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    Nice list for sites that every student in every classroom should have access too for collaboration. At least the teacher should have access to all of these.
Karen Chichester

ePub Bud - Publish, Convert, Store, and Download free children's ebooks online for the ... - 0 views

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    create epub books at http://t.co/bQL2MJ8 You can read in browser or on ereaders (except K*ndle) #DENSI
Karen Chichester

Education Week: International Test Scores, Irrelevant Policies - 0 views

  • Of the 30 occupations in the United States with the fastest rate of growth, only nine are in science and engineering fields, and 16 of the 30 do not require a college degree, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics projections.
  • of the 30 occupations expected to provide the largest numerical growth in jobs, only two (both in computer fields) are in science and engineering, and 23 do not require a college degree.
  • If we consider only occupations requiring a college degree or above, 15 of the top 30 fastest-growing occupations are in science and engineering; however, only eight (six in computer fields) of the 30 occupations expected to provide the largest numerical growth in jobs are in science and engineering.
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  • we have ignored the strongest evidence emerging from the international tests: the adverse effects of poverty and concentrations of poverty in schools on student performance in all countries.
  • Although countries can exacerbate or mitigate the impact of poverty through their social, fiscal, and education policies, and although some students do overcome the odds, the fact is the gap between high-poverty and more-affluent students remains a fundamental problem in virtually every country.
  • our rhetoric has assumed that test-score rankings are linked to a country’s economic competitiveness, yet the data for industrialized countries consistently show this assumption to be unwarranted. For example, the World Economic Forum’s 2010-2011 global-competitiveness report ranks the United States fourth, exceeded only by Switzerland, Sweden, and Singapore. Many of the countries that ranked high on test scores rank lower than the United States on competitiveness—for example, South Korea, No. 22, and Finland, No. 7.
  • Poverty, not international test-score comparisons, is the most critical problem to be addressed by our public policies. Unfortunately, our recent political polarization over budgetary priorities does not leave much room for optimism.
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    Good analysis of the plotics tied to testing and job growth.Favorite quote: "When companies claim that they need to hire from other countries because they cannot find qualified U.S. graduates, it is more likely that they cannot find them at the wages they would prefer to pay and find it cheaper to outsource. 
Roger Morris

Successfully Launched My writer Career… Thanks John - 1 views

I want to express my gratitude to John who helped me become the writer I want to be. Before meeting him, I thought that I was born to be a novel writer and I almost believed it after receiving 400 ...

started by Roger Morris on 10 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Karen Chichester

Lois Lowry Quotes on Writing - 0 views

  • Reading is the best way to learn to write well. Read as much as you can. Think about what you read: how the author made it interesting, or funny, or suspenseful. And write as much as you can, too.
  • Keep a journal.
  • he important thing is what you absorb from your surroundings. To be a keen observer….to see and ponder and weigh….to hear the cadence of speech and notice the shrugs and gestures and the way the eyebrows lift or the lip curls…to perceive human relationships and how they work (or don’t)….all of that is what makes a writer.
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  • My personal opinion is that you should not worry about ‘being published’. You should enjoy writing, and writing more and more, so that you become better at
  • There isn’t anything magical. It’s a lot of hard work, a lot of fun, and a lot of waiting for the words.
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    Seven  quotes from Lois Lowry about writing.
Karen Chichester

SBAC Portal - 0 views

    • Karen Chichester
       
      Test link is at the bottom of the page
  • Welcome to the Smarter Balanced Practice Test
    • Karen Chichester
       
      Here is the link. Log in with the prefilled information
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  • The Smarter Balanced Practice Test is available to schools and districts for practice and training purposes, professional development activities, and for discussions with parents, policymakers, and other interested stakeholders. Calculators are available for students to preview and practice with outside of the testing
  • Student Interface Practice Test
Karen Chichester

Home MITS - Technology assistance for students with disabilities - 0 views

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    Lots of information Assistive Technology for use with our students. Good place for free training about technology. They offer free webinars. Most sessions are archived here.
Karen Chichester

MLA Style Guide at Purdue Online Writing Lab - 0 views

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    Purdue's MLA Style Guide Online
Karen Chichester

Literacy Builders: Weighing the Options: Alternatives to Round Robin Reading - 0 views

  • One option teachers have is to read the text aloud. The benefits of reading aloud to children are well documented. Unlike round robin reading which has many strikes against it, reading aloud has many benefits, including:  It models what expert reading sounds like. It helps kids know and love many different authors. It exposes children to many genres. It actively engages children in thinking and meaning making while enjoying the piece being shared. It conditions the brain to associate reading with pleasure. It creates background knowledge. It builds vocabulary.
  • If the issue remains that we want our students to do the reading, then why not have them read it silently? Teachers often worry that student won’t actually read or might not understand what they read. If that’s the case, we’ve got to consider the underlying issues. Are they not reading because they don’t have the stamina they need to get through the text? Are they not reading because the text is too hard? It is only through honest reflection that we are able to answer these questions and in answering them, we inevitably find our way to better alternatives to round robin reading.
  • Research on round robin reading tells us: It slows down reading rates. It lowers the quantity of reading students do. (Research estimates that students actually read between two to six minutes in a typical round robin reading session. Any way you slice it, it’s not much.) It is ineffectual at improving reading comprehension. When reading aloud, pronunciation is emphasized over meaning. In turn, text is often read slowly and disfluently which interferes with meaning making. It is detrimental to fluency because children are often asked to read texts that are too difficult which leads to choppy models of what reading sounds like. It highlights the displeasures of reading leaving children feeling disinclined to pick up books and read on their own.
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    Article about the ineffectivenss of popcorn or round robin reading.Author suggests alternatives.
Karen Chichester

Illinois cancels the state's last writing exam - chicagotribune.com - 0 views

    • Karen Chichester
       
      Clearly the Fed government doesn't value writing instruction.
  • The writing exam taken by 11th-graders was left intact, state officials said at the time, because some universities and colleges require a writing exam of applicants. But even that test was lost when Quinn and state lawmakers slashed an estimated $269.4 million in public education funding for the coming year.
    • Karen Chichester
       
      I beleive that this is ACT Writing because Illinois is one of the states that uses the ACT as it's HS assessment.
Karen Chichester

The Innovative Educator: Free Assistive Tech Tools Make Learning Accessible to All - 0 views

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    Assistive Technology Tools gathered by the author form her online PLNs. Karen Chichester's Digital Is... piece is included.
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