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Blair Peterson

English Companion Ning - Where English teachers go to help each other - 0 views

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    With over 26,000 members this Ning for English teachers has to have some good stuff.
Blair Peterson

Literary History, Seen Through Big Data's Lens - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Data-centric specialties are growing fast, giving rise to a new vocabulary. In political science, this quantitative analysis is called political methodology. In history, there is cliometrics, which applies econometrics to history. In literature, stylometry is the study of an author’s writing style, and these days it leans heavily on computing and statistical analysis. Culturomics is the umbrella term used to describe rigorous quantitative inquiries in the social sciences and humanities.
  • Such biological metaphors seem apt, because much of the research is a quantitative examination of words. Just as genes are the fundamental building blocks of biology, words are the raw material of ideas.
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    Story of a project to use data analysis in English literature.
Blair Peterson

Are We Teaching To The Modern Definition of Literacy? | Connected Principals - 0 views

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    Post on Will Richardson's talk on the skills students need today. Using the National Council of the Teachers of English
smenegh Meneghini

TeachUNICEF - - 0 views

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    TeachUNICEF is a portfolio of free global education resources. Resources cover grades PK-12, are interdisciplinary (social studies, science, math, English/language arts, foreign/world languages), and align with standards. The lesson plans, stories, and multimedia cover topics ranging from the Millennium Development Goals to Water and Sanitation
Blair Peterson

Life in a Inquiry Driven, Technology-Embedded, Connected Classroom: English | Powerful ... - 1 views

  • This semester, we’ve chosen to create a social media campaign to raise awareness around modern slavery. This is the project-based part. It’s not enough for my students to learn about slavery, they need to do something with it, specifically “real world” projects that matter.
  • Teaching this way also allows me to teach real writing to my students. Before we started to create videos, my students looked at numerous YouTube videos about slavery. They focused on those they found powerful, and conversely, those that weren’t very effective. We analyzed the differences between the two. My students talked animatedly about how the powerful videos touched your emotions.
  • My students have started designing our curriculum units.
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  • After hearing a number of ideas, and seeing a plan beginning to formulate, one of my students looked at me and said, “Can you help us create a unit plan for this?”
    • Blair Peterson
       
      I think that this is an excellent post with examples, reflection, and curriculum connections. Something every teacher should read.
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    Project based learning ideas. 
Blair Peterson

Coding the Curriculum: How High Schools Are Reprogramming Their Classes - 0 views

  • Understanding how to use Python, or write code to solve problems, is just a way of having an additional tool to be creative with."
  • "The old teaching method — you know, where a teacher says something and you write it down and then take a test — that's about as passive as it gets," he says. "This idea pushes kids to be more actively involved since, by and large, it's something we're both learning together. That leads to a lot of innovative teaching — and a lot of innovative learning, for that matter."
  • "I'm certainly not a coder," says Lisa Brown, an English teacher and head of the English department at Beaver. "But, like anything, the more I've played around with it the more I've realized there's a lot that's really accessible and understandable."
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  • he exact curriculum for the year — or just how staff will b
  • implementing coding into each discipline — is still open-ended.
  • Brown says she's considering a poetry unit using code language. Kader Adjout, head of the Global History and Social Sciences department, is planning to have his students design — through code — interactive graphs to correlate with their research papers. Tina Farrell, who heads the Performing Arts department, is interested in experimenting with live-coding performances, where students would use software to compose and perform music with scripts they write.
  • It's difficult to trace back to when the American education curriculum began. Why, for example, do students at public schools take biology before chemistry? Chemistry before physics? And algebra before geometry?
    • Blair Peterson
       
      Not all schools are doing this now. Certainly a traditional approach.
  • Hutton doesn't believe the education field is one to be viewed as "risk-averse" — the play-it-safe or uphold-the-status-quo methods just aren't cutting it anymore.
  • We don't need to engineer a workshop so every kid that graduates here becomes a professional programmer," he says. "We just want them to think about new ways to solve issues, and grasp that entrepreneurial mindset early on. It's ... it's just this day and age."
Blair Peterson

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Diigo for Digital Writing Reflection - 1 views

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    The use of Diigo in a 8th grade English class.
Blair Peterson

Learning in Virtual Worlds - not a Child's Play | Disrupt Education | Big Think - 0 views

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    Second life and English language learning.
Blair Peterson

Remixing Writing: A Digital Essay « The Unquiet Librarian - 1 views

  • I am currently collaborating with two of our English teachers to co-design and co-teach research and content creation for digital research projects.   Susan Lester (10th Honors World American Literature/Composition) and I began our project about three weeks ago (read more in this blog post), and I’ll be working with John Bradford (11th Honors American Literature/Composition) as of Tuesday for the next month or so on his twist on the project (more details coming soon).  In both of our collaborative projects, we felt our students were not quite ready  in terms of skill sets or prior learning experiences to completely open up the possibilities for a digital research “paper” or project although students do have creative latitude in choosing and designing their multigenre elements that will be integrated into the wiki based “text”; students also have the option to integrate multimedia into each section of their wikified “papers”.
  • the three of us  felt torn in wanting to open up the options and not setting up students for utter frustration (to the point many would completely shut down) in terms of combining two advanced skill sets (new research skills and content are being introduced);
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    Think about student digital essays on Prezi and partnerships between teachers and librarians. Great ideas here.
Blair Peterson

Literary History, Seen Through Big Data's Lens - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • His mathematical models are tailored to identify word patterns and thematic elements in written text. The number and strength of links among novels determine influence, much the way Google ranks Web sites.
  • Data-centric specialties are growing fast, giving rise to a new vocabulary. In political science, this quantitative analysis is called political methodology. In history, there is cliometrics, which applies econometrics to history. In literature, stylometry is the study of an author’s writing style, and these days it leans heavily on computing and statistical analysis. Culturomics is the umbrella term used to describe rigorous quantitative inquiries in the social sciences and humanities.
  • “What is critical and distinctive to human evolution is ideas, and how they evolve,” says Jean-Baptiste Michel, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard.
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  • By contrast, “1973” declined to half its peak by 1983, only 10 years later. “We are forgetting our past faster with each passing year,” the authors wrote.
    • Blair Peterson
       
      New terms Political methodology, cliometrics, stylometry, culturonmics
Blair Peterson

Education Rethink: Ten Thoughts on Photo Prompts - 0 views

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    Interesting ideas for photo prompts for writing.
Blair Peterson

The Rise Of Multicultural Managers - Forbes - 0 views

  • In short, their ability to be creative, to share complex knowledge across locations, contexts and cultures and to manage global innovation and product development teams effectively is precisely why multiculturals in integrative roles in the innovation process do make such a positive difference.
  • In addition, they identified intercultural, cognitive integration (one’s ability to simultaneously hold and apply several culturally different schemas and thus to think as a member of one culture or another depending on need and context, or to think simultaneously as member of several cultures) as the key to creative, adaptive and leadership skills fostering their career success. As one of the managers Hae-Jung Hong interviewed put it:
  • The most important skill I need in order to develop and launch this product line successfully is to exploit what I’ve got from one part to other parts of the world, which brings something innovative in the market. I am able to do this because I have references in different languages— English, Hindi, and French. I read books in three different languages, meet people from different countries, eat food from different countries, and so on. I cannot think things in one way only. That’s not my way.
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  •  “Multiculturals have a kind of gymnastic intellectual training to think as if they were French, American, or Chinese and all together inside them.”
  • The experience of living in multiple cultures obviously helps, but just “being there” is not enough. One needs to have strong on-going interaction with people belonging to the local culture, and become embedded in the local culture. Expatriate “villages” will not suffice.
Blair Peterson

Blended Learning Model: Gives Students Time to Think - 1 views

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    Article on how to use online tools for a blended learning environment. Students have more time for thinking and reflection.
Blair Peterson

Laptops and Inspired Writing - 0 views

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    Key themes for students in writing: tools for better writing, access to information, share and learn, self directed learning, remaining relevant, engagement with new media.
Blair Peterson

Cursive removed from K-12 curriculum | Kansan.com - 0 views

  • In order to create a universal set of educational standards, a few old requirements had to be replaced, according to the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers. One of which includes the requirement to teach cursive. Under that standard, states are no longer required to teach their students cursive. Instead of spending time teaching cursive, the standard requires states to spend more time teaching K-12 students how to type.
Blair Peterson

Technology helps make language click for students - The Denver Post - 0 views

  • Experts figure that kids today read and write even more than previous generations. And they do so in a broader and more complex environment — though not always in academic ways.
  • Roberts wields every tool available to lift students toward "new literacies," the confluence of language and technology that's evolving as fast as researchers can study it.
  • as 21st-century literacies blend with traditional skills.
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  • "I'm not going to say it's a good thing or a bad thing," says Elizabeth Kleinfeld, assistant professor of English at Metropolitan State College of Denver. "But it's a thing for sure, and we have to deal with it in our classrooms, in our workplaces and in our relationships."
  • Her research indicates that students have a troubling tendency not to read deeply, though she's quick to add that there's no evidence that previous generations fared any better.
  • Mastering the technical aspects of multimedia tools is essential.
  • Perhaps most important, the breadth of information that flows from Internet search engines requires that students cultivate a discerning eye.
  • "I think there should be very much a conscious, strategic moving back and forth between rapid locating (of information) and deep reading."
  • "The Internet offers incredible opportunities to build high-level, deep thinkers if we provide the instruction that's needed."
  • New literacies aren't about displacing mainstream standards
  • "If you choose to see (new literacies) as dumbing down, you're going to see lots of evidence of that," Knobel says. "But if you choose to see it as something new and opening up all sorts of opportunities for young people to really think about media, how truth itself is often up for grabs, then there are all sorts of ways of understanding it."
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    This is a good article on today's reading habits.
Blair Peterson

Teacher recognized for use of technology - 0 views

  • Instead of writing traditional book reports, her students created video book trailers, in the style of movie trailers, which summarized their readings but also analyzed deeper themes.
  • “I want them thinking critically about the transitions they’re including, the font choices they’re including, the color selection, the music,” Beach said. “All of that is tying into their analysis of that story.”
  • On a departmental level, she is instrumental in running the English teachers’ wiki, a collaborative website for sharing ideas and teaching materials.
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