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Amanda David

Dean Encourages Professors to Teach Naked? - 0 views

    • Amanda David
       
      Brain Rule #4 stresses that people don't pay attention to boring things. To keep an audience's attention this article encourages professors to teach without the boring powerpoint.
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    attention: teaching without powerpoints
Dionne Wesley

CollegeWriting.info--A Free, Full-Text Writing and Composition Textbook, Handbook, Edit... - 1 views

    • Dionne Wesley
       
      This site is cool. A student can find out how most writing techniques are created and they have examples. The site is set up for the visual learner in templates. The templates allow the student to stay organized and it breaks down the process to product..
  • CollegeWriting.Info
  • Section A. Starting To Write Section B. Arguing   Section C. Responding to Readings Section D. Online Help Grammar Handbook \                                             \                                          /                                           /           E.-G.-Speak-Read-Think _  Welcome!        Table of Contents        Grammar        Samples _  Sections H.-I. Revise Edit College Writing High School Writers     Teachers     Theory     Free Use     http://www.tc.umn.
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  •    Welcome to CollegeWriting.Info!  This Web book is an online, full-length college, AP, and basic writing textbook and professional resource--the most complete and practical writing textbook on the free Web.                     Are you a student?  CollegeWriting.Info is easy to read and highly practical, with more information than other free college writing textbooks on the Web.  It is a community with many houses, each with different rooms: CollegeWriting.Info has dozens of chapters on academic, professional, literary, and creative writing, all containing a variety of helpful descriptions and examples.  Most chapters offer multiple focuses for both beginning and advanced writers, and for classroom, personal, or professional use.  Navigation is simple, with both visual and textual links to other pages and sites, to sample papers, and to related readings.  Why is this book good?  Here is a 4:45-min. video showing you why having a highly practical (and free) guide to real writing is important in our world: "A Vision of Students Today": www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGCJ46vyR9o.                            Are you an instructor?  CollegeWriting.Info is a genre- and community-oriented textbook with an emphasis on learning-centered, writing-intensive instruction useful in most beginning and some advanced undergraduate college courses in composition, writing across the curriculum, literature, speech, and writing in other disciplines.  A section for basic writers is included, too.  CollegeWriting.Info also can help you and your students easily explore other online writing resources, with links to some of the Web's finest sites containing usage and mechanics, argumentative and other nonfiction essays, and full-text literary classics.  In addition, CollegeWriting.Info provides instructor-oriented essays on--and links to--theory and pedagogy, listings of academic writing organizations and resources, and many other helpful professional links.  For more about the author and the development of this Web textbook, see "About the Authors."  For more about the theory behind this textbook, see "Teaching Strategic Experience."                 
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    A composition site for college students
Jamie LaCava-Owen

Seven Principles of Good Teaching Practice - 0 views

    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      We see here that the use of technology is vital to teacher student bond.
  • and for the bright and well motivated. Expecting students to perform well becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. WebCT Tip: Provide students examples of "A"-quality work. Release statistics along with grades, so that students can see how they are performing as compared to the rest of the class (stats can give the mean grade and/or the frequencies). Use the "Selective Release" feature to release course info only as students achieve a certain level of success on a test.
    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      I find that teacher modeling is one of the most important parts of teaching English.  As a 6th grade teacher, you have to teach students how to think about things so that they will be more effective and critical thinkers in the future.
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  • WebCT Tip: Stick to a template for course page design *but* vary the types of excercises and assignments.
    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      This is very important, as we have learned through our articles.  Technology allows our students to look at things in different ways and learn in a way that is best for them.  
  • WebCT Tip: Use the Discussion Board, Mail, Chat & Whiteboard to interact with your students.
sarah spangler

Effective Teaching Strategies: Six Keys to Classroom Excellence - Faculty Focus | Facul... - 0 views

  • are makes
  • When our interest is aroused in something, whether it is an academic subject or a hobby, we enjoy working hard at it.
  • It avoids those assessment methods that encourage students to memorize and regurgitate. It recognizes the power of feedback to motivate more effort to learn.
Shelley Rodrigo

Widgets for Web 2.0: What is Web 2.0 - 5 views

  • Web 2.0 is all about the following and more... 1. User Centric and User Oriented2. Web Services, Web API's3. Widgets, Gadgets, Mashup's4. Blogs, Feeds, Wiki's, Tagging, Podcasting 5. Social profile 6. Social bookmarking 7. Client rich technologies like CSS, HTML, DOM, XML, AJAX, JSON, XHTML, REST, SOAP
    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      I really like that the first item is focused on the user writer.
    • Betsy Long
       
      From what I've read, that's a big part of the concept of Web 2.0-- user centeredness, and letting users get the most out of the Internet in the easiest way possible. There is so much available, but it's no good if the general public can't benefit from it.
    • Beth Bensen-Barber
       
      The simplicity of the definition you highlighted in green seems to be show up in many articles/definitions. I like that we can break down the definition into pieces and then expand the pieces to a more meaningful idea of what Web 2.0 means. I think this ability to expand on simplified ideas is what attracted me to the wheel in one of the definitions I posted.
    • sarah spangler
       
      I like lists and use them frequently to order my life and my writing, so a list-type definition of this nature helps simplify the Web 2.0 concept.
    • Catrina Mitchum
       
      Image -specifically the words in orange- make me think of the teaching world because they all highlight issues in the field of rhet/comp right now.
    • Shelley Rodrigo
       
      What do the words in pink make you think?
    • Catrina Mitchum
       
      I suppose teaching and my own learning. It gets more into the nitty gritty of it al? It brings in the New Media aspect of rhet/comp?
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    Web 2.0 Definition Site #1
Beth Bensen-Barber

Seven Principles of Good Teaching Practice - 0 views

    • Beth Bensen-Barber
       
      Seems like good practices to engage students and hold their attention per Brain Rules chapter 4.
Betsy Long

Computers in the Composition Classroom - 0 views

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    Hawisher & Selfe say that because computers are in classrooms everywhere now, teachers have to revamp their strategies for teaching. They can't just take their traditional methods and throw in computers. There is a better way!
Betsy Long

Web 2.0 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

shared by Betsy Long on 29 Sep 11 - Cached
  • A Web 2.0 site allows users to interact and collaborate with each other in a social media dialogue as creators (prosumers) of user-generated content in a virtual community, in contrast to websites where users (consumers) are limited to the passive viewing of content that was created for them. Examples of Web 2.0 include social networking sites, blogs, wikis, video sharing sites, hosted services, web applications, mashups and folksonomies.
    • Betsy Long
       
      I like wikipedia's definition. I think that Web 2.0 does have to do with web apps that facilitate participatory info sharing, interoperability, etc. Social media is also an important part of web 2.0
  • The concept of Web-as-participation-platform captures many of these characteristics. Bart Decrem, a founder and former CEO of Flock, calls Web 2.0 the "participatory Web"[17] and regards the Web-as-information-source as Web 1.0.
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    • Betsy Long
       
      The concept of web as a participation platform is a big part of web 2.0, and also the teaching writing with technology classroom. The participatory culture is a huge part of integrating technology into the classroom.
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    This Wikipedia page talks about Web 2.0, saying that Web 2.0 as we use it has to do with web applications that facilitate participatory info sharing, interoperability, and user-centered design
Catrina Mitchum

Education Week: Let's Stop Teaching Writing - 0 views

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    Interesting article.
Shelley Rodrigo

Notes on cultivating a personal learning network - Howard Rheingold's Teaching Notes - 0 views

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    Graduate school is the best time to start developing a Personal Learning Network. 
Jamie LaCava-Owen

Building a Better Teacher - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • “So if there’s anything else on your desk right now, please put that inside your desk.” He mimics what he wants the students to do with a neat underhand pitch. A few students in the front put papers away. “Just like you’re doing, thank you very much,” Zimmerli says, pointing to one of them. Another desk emerges neat; Zimmerli targets it. “Thank you, sir.” “I appreciate it,” he says, pointing to another. By the time he points to one last student — “Nice . . . nice” — the headphones are gone, the binder has clicked shut and everyone is paying attention. Lemov switched off the video. “Imagine if his first direction had been, ‘Please get your things out for class,’ ” he said. Zimmerli got the students to pay attention not because of some inborn charisma, Lemov explained, but simply by being direct and specific. Children often fail to follow directions because they really don’t know what they are supposed to do.
    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      This is a very interesting technique that works well for 6th graders.  In order to get the students attention, you need to give them precise and clear directions.  Often, if they notice each other make sudden movements, they will begin to model that behavior.  
  • A teacher’s control, he said repeatedly, should be “an exercise in purpose, not in power.”
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    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      This point is a very important teaching tool.  Policies and procedures need to be constantly repeated so that they become long term memories for students.  At the age of 11, many of my students do not recognize the inappropriate behaviors that they constantly do.  My constant reminders make them aware of their behaviors.  I can see when they are about to make a mistake and then they say to themselves, "Oh...I'm not supposed to do that." 
  • which Lemov attended, the students don’t raise their hands — the teacher picks the one who will answer the question. Lemov’s favorite variety has the teacher ask the question first, and then say the student’s name, forcing every single student to do the work of figuring out an answ
    • Jamie LaCava-Owen
       
      We do this at my school.  The fact that every student is forced to be held accountable for the answer at any time forces students to pay attention in class.  When students assist each other with coming up with the answer, it actually helps them remember in the future.  They end up learning from each other, explaining the concept in a different way.
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    This article, though lengthy, is very interesting.  You really have to get towards the middle to get into the meat of the article.  This relates to all of the Brain Rules (4, 5, 6) that we have discussed in the past three weeks of class.  
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