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alisonseaman

Network thinking | Harold Jarche - 3 views

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    "Network thinking"
Glenn Hervieux

Using Blogs to Help Students Develop Global Awareness - video - 4 views

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    Linda Yollis, an award-winning 3rd grade teacher, made this video with her students to share how they have used blogs to learn the importance of connecting online with others online, about Digital Footprints and Internet safety, and sharing their voice. I think you'll enjoy it and hopefully think about the ways you encourage students to make their writing/learning visible and connect with others, whether it be a blog or an interactive online discussion. 
Glenn Hervieux

Backwards EdTech Flow Chart | Talk Tech With Me - 0 views

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    Katie Ritter, Tech. Coordinator developed a helpful tech. integration flow chart that will help with the CCSS - "I hope it helps you think backwards (or rather the "right" way) to think about selecting a technology tool to use in your class."
Glenn Hervieux

Five Characteristics of Learner-Centered Teaching | Faculty Focus - 4 views

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    On the Teaching Professor blog, the author starts with: "In May I finished a second edition of my Learner-Centered Teaching book. Revising it gave me the chance to revisit my thinking about the topic and look at work done since publication of the first edition ten years ago. It is a subject about which there is still considerable interest." And that it is. Check out the five characteristics of Learner-Centered Teaching helped me to think about my own thoughts of Learner-Centered engagement as a Tech. Coordinator who loves teachers and teaching.
kirstentschofen

Whois Lookup & IP | Whois.net - 1 views

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    A site where you can check the authors of other webpages, I think?
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    Basically. It tells you who registered for the domain that the pages sit on.
Glenn Hervieux

Edu Change & Advocacy: Is High School Ready For A Major Makeover? Think 'Yes' In A Big Way - 2 views

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    "As learners, we are sometimes challenged (not often enough fortunately) to think big.  We are able to ask the question 'what if' when looking at a challenge.  We are tasked with redesigning, recreating, reimagining or rethinking the entire thing.  Maybe these are more 22nd century ideas. Well, when it comes to our high school system and overall student experience, here are my suggestions:" (Get ready for some out of the box ideas)
Alec Couros

Some things I think I might have learned so far… « Experiments in the world o... - 3 views

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    Good discussion of learning design in a MOOC.
alisonseaman

Why some smart ppl are reluctant to share - 5 views

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    Smart people want to give their best and as they learn more, they learn that they need to learn a lot more before they start sharing. They learn some more and they learn they need to learn some more. What they forget is that most of the expertise that they already have is either becoming "obvious" to them or better yet, going into their "background thinking."
Glenn Hervieux

TC Reading and Writing Project's Videos on Vimeo - 0 views

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    39 Instructional videos on K-8 pathways to the CC Standards. What do you think of the approach these teachers are taking? How can they help you in your transition to the CCore? Some practices here are applicable to high school, as well. 
Glenn Hervieux

Can Teachers Alone Overcome Poverty? Steven Brill Thinks So | The Nation - 3 views

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    Important reading on the effects of poverty and teachers on student performance. 
kirstentschofen

What the Internet Means for How We Think About the World - Rebecca J. Rosen - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • knowing looks less like capturing truths in books than engaging in never-settled networks of discussion and argument. That social activity -- collaborative and contentious, often at the same time -- is a more accurate reflection of our condition as imperfect social creatures trying to understand a world that is too big and too complex for even the biggest-headed expert
Lisa Noble

Tracking Elements | doug --- off the record - 6 views

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    Another amazing extension, suggested by @dougpete. I think I could do a digital literacy course for grown-ups, just based on what he suggests.
Glenn Hervieux

Joining #etmooc to Connect and Learn | Margaret A. Powers - 5 views

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    Great way to use a blog as an online resume. Margaret has done an exemplary job in her curation of her blog. Great to show for career classes & business. I'm thinking about starting to do something like that for myself!
alisonseaman

Irrelevant Ideas Lead To Breakthroughs - Business Insider - 3 views

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    "At Reebok, the cushioning in a best-selling basketball shoe reflects technology borrowed from intravenous fluid bags. Semiconductor firm Qualcomm's revolutionary color display technology is rooted in the microstructures of the Morpho butterfly's wings. And at IDEO, developers designed a leak-proof water bottle using the technology from a shampoo bottle top. These examples show how so-called "peripheral" knowledge -- that is, ideas from domains that are seemingly irrelevant to a given task -- can influence breakthrough innovation. "The central idea of peripheral knowledge really resonates," says Wharton management professor Martine Haas. After all, who can't think of examples when ideas that seemed to bear almost no relation to a given problem paid off in some unexpected way? By bringing peripheral knowledge to core tasks, it is well known that work groups can recombine ideas in novel and useful ways. But the problem, Haas notes, is primarily one of attention: How do you get workers focused on a particular task to notice -- and make use of -- seemingly irrelevant information?"
Vukasin Vasic

Supporting Critical Thinking in eLearning by Bill Brandon : Learning Solutions Magazine - 2 views

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    "Technology constantly brings new tools and channels for communication to a state in which designers can use them to support effective, engaging dialogue. Use an appropriate mix of these to clearly express the expectation of critical, creative thought and to provide opportunities for it.
Glenn Hervieux

Blogging about blogging. - learning with #etmooc - 4 views

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    A really well written post on some things we should consider about blogging. She based her post on her own experience with blogging and the work of Sue Waters, a professional educ. blogger and trainer for Edublogs. Here are some questions she asks: Who should be writing for? What is the benefit? Is it important to read others work and comment? I think if you read this post, you will be encouraged. 
Glenn Hervieux

Resta, viator, et lege....: Content vs. Creation in the Classroom - 2 views

  • Content is important.  Creativity is important too.  I think that there's should be some ideal mix of the two that will look different in different classrooms.  I also think that educational literature that is quick to dismiss tradition and content-based learning, however broken, is ultimately unhelpful and only serves to widen the gap between sides.  Likewise myopic is the claim that using technology to create more opportunities to play can only be accomplished at the expense of content.  Ultimately, it's not the content or the creative technology that matters.  The single most important factor in quality education is the teacher, and I fear that too much of the pedagogical literature being shared right now fails to focus on this fact (cf. ASCD "21st Century Skills" for a good assessment of this).
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    "Content vs. Creation in the Classroom" - both are needed. Can't really have creative learning without the content. Read his thoughts on how to capture that in classroom pedagogy.
kirstentschofen

Neil Postman - Bullshit and the Art of Crap-Detection « Critical Thinking Sni... - 3 views

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    Neil Postman's article on the forms of bullshit
Glenn Hervieux

Synchronous Sessions, Asynchronously: Blending Meetings, Learning, and Digita... - 2 views

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    What is the relationship between synchronous and asynchronous experiences? The opportunity to learn more about digital literacy by treating both sessions as one continuous "meeting" helps define what digital literacy actually implies (the ability to move seamlessly within these various digital platforms to create one cohesive experience). How we define "meetings" is being transformed with the advent of the blending of synchronous and asynchronous experiences and I think will have a profound effect on education and professional development. What literacies will be needed to learn in these settings?
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