Skip to main content

Home/ Graded 21st Century/ Group items tagged Web2.0

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Blair Peterson

Can we just skip the whole "data-driven" part if the technology is free? | Dangerously ... - 0 views

  • The problem is that even when offered the keys to a brand new shiny red sports car, it seems as if the inclination is to just let it sit in the driveway.
  • We have a new tool, with no real plans as to how specifically it will lead us to our 21st century goals.
  • But I also think that schools and districts need to keep asking how THEY will make these tools effective additions to how they educate a student. Without that understanding or plan, that Corvette isn’t going to get on the open road at all.
  •  
    Blog posting on Google Tools for learning.
Blair Peterson

Education Week Teacher Professional Development Sourcebook: Change Agent - 0 views

  • There's no one teaching them about the nuances involved in creating a positive online footprint.
  • if you’re not transparent or findable in that way—I can’t learn with you.
  • “Without sharing, there is no education.”
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • I would definitely share my own thoughts, my own experiences, and my own reflections on how the environment of learning is changin
  • I would be very transparent in my online learning activity and try to show people in the school that it’s OK, that it has value. I think it’s very hard to be a leader around these types of changes without modeling them.
  • students should be able to create, navigate, and grow their own personal learning networks in safe, effective, and ethical ways.
  • And now we’re moving into what they call a “lifelong learning” model—which is to say that learning is much more fluid and much more independent, self-directed, and informal. That concept—that we can learn in profound new ways outside the classroom setting—poses huge challenges to traditional structures of schools, because that’s not what they were built for.
  • So, I think we need to focus more on developing the learning process—looking at how kids collaborate with others on a problem, how they exercise their critical thinking skills, how they handle failure, and how they create. We have to be willing to put kids—and assess kids—in situations and contexts where they’re really solving problems and we’re looking not so much at the answer but the process by which they try to solve those problems. Because those are the types of skills they’re going to need when they leave us, when they go to college or wherever else. At least I think so. And I don’t think I’m alone in that.
  • I almost defy you to find me anyone who consciously teaches kids reading and writing in linked environments. Yet we know kids are in those environments and sometimes doing some wonderfully creative things. And we know they’ll need to read and write online. You know what I’m saying? But educators would read Nicholas Carr’s book, and their response would be to ban hypertext. It just doesn’t make sense.
  • “Why do you blog?” That’s what we need. We need people who are willing to really think critically about what they’re doing. I’m not an advocate of using tools just for the sake of using tools. I think all too often you see teachers using a blog, but nothing really changes in terms of their instruction, because they don’t really understand what a blog is, what possibilities it presents. They know the how-to, but they don’t know the why-to. I’d look for teachers who are constantly asking why. Why are we doing this? What’s the real value of this? How are our kids growing in connection with this? How are our kids learning better? And I definitely would want learners. I would look for learners more than I would look for teachers per se.
  • And I think we have to move to a more inquiry-based, problem-solving curriculum, because
  • it’s not about content as much anymore. It’s not about knowing this particular fact as much as it is about what you can do with it. What can you do with what you understand about chemistry? What can you do with what you’ve learned about writing?
  • What does it look like? Kids need to be working on solving real problems that mean something to them. The goal should be preparing kids to be entrepreneurs, problem-solvers who think critically and who’ve worked with people from around the world. Their assessments should be all about the products they produced, the movements they’ve created, the participatory nature of their education rather than this sort of spit-back-the-right-answer model we currently have. I mean, that just doesn’t make sense anymore.
Blair Peterson

Mrs. Yollis' Classroom Blog: How to Compose a Quality Comment! - 0 views

  •  
    Tips for students on blogging in ES. Video clips of students explaining blogging.
Blair Peterson

createthefuture - home - 0 views

  •  
    This wiki is from an EARCOS weekend workshop by Kim Cofino and Julie Lindsay. The focus is on  using web 2.0 tools for project-based learning. 
Blair Peterson

Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0 (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUC... - 0 views

  • social learning.
  • In a traditional Cartesian educational system, students may spend years learning about a subject; only after amassing sufficient (explicit) knowledge are they expected to start acquiring the (tacit) knowledge or practice of how to be an active practitioner/professional in a field.9
    • Blair Peterson
       
      Interesting to hear teachers say that students can't tackle difficult problems until they have mastered the content. I hear this all the time.
Blair Peterson

Many Eyes - 0 views

  •  
    Data visualizations to review and you can add your own. These are excellent assignments for students to work on . They have to find creative was to show their data.
Blair Peterson

VisualBlooms - home - 0 views

  •  
    The visual Interactive Bloom's of Web 2.0 Tools. This is a wiki that can be updated if you join it. 
Blair Peterson

Welcome to my PLE - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting video from a 7th grade student. She explains how she uses Web 2.0 tools for her learning.
Blair Peterson

100 Ways You Should Be Using Facebook in Your Classroom | Online College Tips - Online ... - 1 views

  • Follow news feeds. Have students follow news feeds relevant to the course material in order to keep current information flowing through the class.
Blair Peterson

Wylio.com - free pictures - 0 views

  •  
    Finding creative commons photos for blogging.
Blair Peterson

Smarthistory: a multimedia web-book about art and art history - 0 views

  •  
    Access to many famous works of art organized by time period, artist, style and themes.
Shabbi Luthra

Leading with Web 2.0 - 1 views

  •  
    Leadership and Policy Initiative by CoSN - Is an admin guide to integrating collaborative Web 2.0 tools in K-12 education.
Shabbi Luthra

Discovery Education Web2011 : Home - 3 views

  •  
    information and links for teachers in the areas of Web 2.0 tools, Internet safety, and media literacy
1 - 20 of 24 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page