A 'Stealth Assessment' Turns to Video Games to Measure Thinking Skills - Technology - T... - 0 views
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new methods to measure skills like critical thinking, creativity, and persistence.
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"A lot of important stuff happens when playing games," Ms. Shute said. "You're just doing. You're in the process."
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"Wouldn't it be lovely to actually pass along the log files of what students did in order to look at their scientific-inquiry skills?"
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More Educators Joining Online Social Networks -- THE Journal - 1 views
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Librarians have the highest level of participation in online social networking sites, with 89 percent participation;
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Women have slightly higher rates of participation in social networks than men;
Lafayette conference focuses on shifting conversation about liberal arts' value | Insid... - 0 views
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Rosenberg said colleges probably have to do a better job of connecting what students are learning in the classroom to what’s going on in the world around them, to further the argument that liberal arts colleges provide a social good.
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And they acknowledged that liberal arts colleges, which bill themselves as being the best form of undergraduate education, should constantly be striving to be on the cutting edge of good instruction.
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Lines on Plagiarism Blur for Students in the Digital Age - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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“Our notion of authorship and originality was born, it flourished, and it may be waning,” Ms. Blum said.
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Instead of offering an abject apology, Ms. Hegemann insisted, “There’s no such thing as originality anyway, just authenticity.” A few critics rose to her defense, and the book remained a finalist for a fiction prize (but did not win).
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“If you’re taught how to closely read sources and synthesize them into your own original argument in middle and high school, you’re not going to be tempted to plagiarize in college, and you certainly won’t do so unknowingly,” she said.
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"…students leave high school unprepared for the intellectual rigors of college writing" said Wilensky. HS students must understand that their learning experiences in schools, will develop the skills they will need in Higher Education. 9-12 students should be exposed to articles like this, stating real cases of plagiarism in Colleges, and discuss them, thinking in their future in University and in how prepared they are to face it. Thanks for sharing!
Brain scan: Making data dance | The Economist - 1 views
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that it no longer makes sense to consider the world as divided between developing and industrialised countries; and that people everywhere respond similarly to increasing levels of wealth and health, with higher material aspirations and smaller families. “There is no such thing as a ‘we’ and a ‘they’, with a gap in between,”
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The best measure of political stability of a country, he believes, is whether fertility rates are falling, because that indicates that women are being educated and basic health services are being provided. “
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Innovation in infographics has always been driven by the need to explain difficult things,
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An Academic Hopes to Take the MLA Into the Social Web - Technology - The Chronicle of H... - 0 views
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THE BIG IDEA: Have scholarly associations set up bloglike online forums to let scholars share ideas and openly conduct peer review.
Technology Has Its Place: Behind a Caring Teacher - Commentary - The Chronicle of Highe... - 1 views
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Despite the considerable differences among all those institutions, one idea binds them together: the understanding that reflection and practice together are the best pedagogy. As Andrew Delbanco puts it in College: What It Was, Is, and Should Be: "Learning is a collaborative rather than a solitary process.
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Computers will enhance learning, but they will never replace the profoundly personal dimension in deep learning.
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We know that the best learning involves practices—lots of them. We know that effective learning is best achieved through the engagement of other deeply attentive human beings. The learning might occur in a traditional classroom, but it might happen in a different space: a lab, a mountain stream, an international campus, a cafeteria, a residence hall, a basketball court.
Education Week Teacher: Teaching the iGeneration: It's About Verbs, Not Tools - 0 views
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Instead of exploring how new digital opportunities can support student-centered inquiry or otherwise enhance existing practices, today’s schools are preparing their teachers to use office automation and productivity tools like Microsoft Word and PowerPoint.
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begins by introducing teachers to ways in which digital tools can be used to encourage higher-order thinking and innovative instruction across the curriculum.
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Let me suggest that it is time to be done with this unnecessary conflict about 21st-century skills. Let us agree that we need all those forenamed skills, plus lots others, in addition to a deep understanding of history, literature, the arts, geography, civics, the sciences, and foreign languages.
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