Skip to main content

Home/ Graded 21st Century/ Group items tagged inspiration

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Blair Peterson

To Inspire Learning, Architects Reimagine Learning Spaces | MindShift - 1 views

  • nstead of classrooms, PlayMaker School has a suite of spaces that are interconnected physically and visually. There’s an ideation lab, a maker space, and an immersive gaming and learning zone where the students can try out the games they create and the software they develop.
  • When you put math and science teachers together, they can cross-collaborate on lesson plans. If they’re teaching trigonometry or wave properties in math, they know they have to pull in the physics faculty also.” Schools that embrace STEM end up retraining. “They have to stretch their conception of what’s being taught.”
  • They were inspired by facilities that “let spontaneous collisions happen,”
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • One of its major findings was that, to succeed, STEM and other interdisciplinary programs need to create propinquity—literally, “nearness”—among their participants.
  • There are still labs. They operate in two modes: students seated around a large table or working as teams around a lab bench. The lab classrooms can shift easily between the two modes, so they’re slightly larger than tradition dictates. The idea is that you can do a math lab at the table or a science lab at the bench.
Blair Peterson

Little Speak Easy | Immersive Learning-what? - 0 views

  •  
    The ideas and insights shared on SpeakEasy are intended to stimulate thought, inspire innovation and fuel breakthrough ideas that create a better future for people. SpeakEasy is authored by the restless minds at Little, a national, multi-disciplinary design firm.
jennifermaxpeterson

How a High School Teacher Is 'Gamifying' World News - 2 views

  •  
    HS teacher using fantasy football approach with geopolitics to inspire students. Use of news aggregator tools. Many HS classrooms using the model. Asking for kickstarter funds to expand.
Blair Peterson

Tina Barseghian: Napa New Tech High: 5 Reasons This is the School of the Future - 0 views

  • Put simply, project-based curriculum emphasizes learning through doing classroom projects that address a specific issue or challenge. Students typically carry out the projects in groups, and teachers guide them along
  • Tina Barseghian Editor of MindShift, a website about the future of learning Posted: January 7, 2011 02:48 PM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index Napa New Tech High: 5 Reasons This is the School of the Future Amazing Inspiring Funny Scary Hot Crazy Important Weird Read More: Computer Tech School , Education Technology , Napa New Tech High , New Tech High Napa , New Tech Network , New Technology High , School Computer , Tech School , Tech Schools , Education News share this story 11481122 Get Education Alerts Sign Up Submit this story digg reddit stumble What does the high school of the future look like? It's one that emphasizes useful, relevant skills that can be applied
  • At Napa New Tech, you'll hear very little lecturing and see few teacher-led activities. For this school, the decision to use project-based curriculum was based not only on what topics students should learn, but also what skills they should acquire in school.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • "Critical thinking, collaboration, and communication.
  • With New Tech's "gradebook" system, a student is graded on four different criteria: content, written communication (even in subjects like math), critical thinking, and work ethic.
Blair Peterson

ELEV8ED - 1 views

  •  
    Site for studnents to submit videos on what education could be and to inspire others to transform education. Seems like an excellent opportunity for Graded students.
Blair Peterson

Ignite, Engage, Inspire « What Ed Said - 2 views

  •  
    Really good example of how a teacher took a risk, gave up control and the students responded with high quality learning. How would you assess these videos?
Blair Peterson

A Bill of Rights and Principles for Learning in the Digital Age | Digital Pedagogy | HY... - 0 views

  • Courses should encourage open participation and meaningful engagement with real audiences where possible, including peers and the broader public.
  • Students have the right to understand the intended outcomes--educational, vocational, even philosophical--of an online program or initiative.
  • n an online environment, teachers no longer need to be sole authority figures but instead should share responsibility with learners at almost every turn.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Online learning should originate from everywhere on the globe, not just from the U.S. and other technologically advantaged countries.
  • The best online learning programs will not simply mirror existing forms of university teaching but offer students a range of flexible learning opportunities that take advantage of new digital tools and pedagogies to widen these traditional horizons, thereby better addressing 21st-century learner interests, styles and lifelong learning needs.
  • This can happen by building in apprenticeships, internships and real-world applications of online problem sets. Problem sets might be rooted in real-world dilemmas or comparative historical and cultural perspectives. (Examples might include: “Organizing Disaster Response and Relief for Hurricane Sandy” or “Women’s Rights, Rape, and Culture” or “Designing and Implementing Gun Control: A Global Perspective.”)
  • The artificial divisions of work, play and education cease to be relevant in the 21st century.
  • Both technical and pedagogical innovation should be hallmarks of the best learning environments. A wide variety of pedagogical approaches, learning tools, methods and practices should support students' diverse learning modes.
  • Experimentation should be an acknowledged affordance and benefit of online learning. Students should be able to try a course and drop it without incurring derogatory labels such as failure (for either the student or the institution offering the course).
  • Open online education should inspire the unexpected, experimentation, and questioning--in other words, encourage play. Play allows us to make new things familiar, to perfect new skills, to experiment with moves and crucially to embrace change--a key disposition for succeeding in the 21st century. We must cultivate the imagination and the dispositions of questing, tinkering and connecting. We must remember that the best learning, above all, imparts the gift of curiosity, the wonder of accomplishment, and the passion to know and learn even more.
Blair Peterson

A Bill of Rights and Principles for Learning in the Digital Age | EdSurge News - 2 views

  • We are aware of how much we don't know: that we have yet to explore the full pedagogical potential of learning online, of how it can change the ways we teach, the ways we learn, and the ways we connect.  
  • As we begin to experiment with how novel technologies might change learning and teaching, powerful forces threaten to neuter or constrain technology, propping up outdated educational practices rather than unfolding transformative ones.
  • All too often, during such wrenching transitions, the voice of the learner gets muffled.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Learners within a global, digital commons have the right to work, network, and contribute to knowledge in public; to share their ideas and their learning in visible and connected ways if they so choose.
  • The best courses will be global in design and contribution, offering multiple and multinational perspectives.  
  • The best online learning programs will not simply mirror existing forms of university teaching but offer students a range of flexible learning opportunities that take advantage of new digital tools and pedagogies to widen these traditional horizons, thereby better addressing 21st-century learner interests, styles and lifelong learning needs.  
  • Both technical and pedagogical innovation should be hallmarks of the best learning environments.
  • Open online education should inspire the unexpected, experimentation, and questioning--in other words, encourage play.
Blair Peterson

Social Media and Two-Way Communication | Connected Principals - 1 views

  • No longer is newsletters, calendar of events, e-mails and other one-way communication enough for schools. Great school communities inspire great conversations.
  • “Everything I blog also shows up on Facebook, Twitter, School Website, and Google Plus – it’s not hard to have things post simultaneously.” Remember, a hardcopy is still necessary for some families.
  • It is important to diversify your PLN. Put people around you who cause you to think differently. People who are straightforward and willing to connect in uncomfortable conversations. Those who say what they mean and mean what they say
Blair Peterson

Why Flip The Classroom When We Can Make It Do Cartwheels? | Co.Exist: World changing id... - 0 views

  • The cartwheeled classroom not only connects text books and classrooms to the real world, but it also inspires, uplifts, and offers the joy of accomplishment. Transformative, connected knowledge isn’t a thing--it’s an action, an accomplishment, a connection that spins your world upside down, then sets you squarely on your feet, eager to whirl again. It’s a paradigm shift.
Blair Peterson

200 Young Leaders Under 30 Meet in Lisbon to Plot the Future | Sandbox - 0 views

  • Over three days, Sandboxers from across the globe turned the city of Lisbon into a melting pot of the most innovative thinking, fresh ideas, and energy of a new generation of global leaders.
  • The key insights from these discussions will be published in the Sandbox Playbook, which we hope will inspire other innovators around the globe on how to maximize their positive impact”, s
  •  
    While this organization is for 20+ kids, what do we do to provide our students with exposure to these ideas?
Blair Peterson

Nós.vc | Inspiring Encounters - 1 views

  •  
    Crowdlearning site here in Brazil
Blair Peterson

Why Educators Should Join Twitter - Finding Common Ground - Education Week - 0 views

  • Connecting with people from around the world who have similar interests and understand your passion for education can be inspiring. Although educators get accused of accepting the status quo and not wanting to move forward, Twitter is a place where that accusation is proven wrong.
  • We live in the 21st century where our students don't just "do" social networking; it is a part of who they are as digital citizens. To us, it's a big deal to get on Facebook or Twitter, and to our students it is something they cannot fathom living without. Understanding their connection with those sites will increase an educator's connection with their students. Being able to talk their language may even provide an opportunity to breakthrough to a hard to reach student.
Blair Peterson

OnInnovation : Visionaries thinking out loud™ - powered by The Henry Ford - 0 views

  •  
    What an amazing resource with videos of innovators.
Blair Peterson

1:1 Laptop Schools - Connecting and Inspiring Educators in 1:1 Schools - 0 views

  •  
    A ning devoted to 1:1 Laptop Schools. Join and contribute to the leanring community.
Blair Peterson

Laptops and Inspired Writing - 0 views

  •  
    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.
1 - 20 of 23 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page