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corinnawest

Formative assessment - Google Slides#slide=id.p - 0 views

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    Good ideas for Formative assessment tasks
djplaner

What Baby George and Handstands Have Taught Me About Learning - YouTube - 0 views

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    Presents some principles about learning (yours or your students) with illustrations of a baby learning to walk down stairs
djplaner

Too Big to Know: David Weinberger explains how knowledge works in the Internet age - Bo... - 1 views

  • He explores the merits and demerits of "echo chambers" -- the fact that it's easier to get stuff done if you exclude those who question all of your axioms
    • djplaner
       
      A definite problem in networks. People selecting only to make connections with people who agree with them. But it strikes me that creating an echo chamber is the inherent purpose of strategic planning within organisations. Identify the plan and work toward. Anyone who disagrees is frowned upon and excluded.
Kacey Howard

Does the Khan Academy know how to teach? - The Washington Post - 5 views

  • Gates has called Khan, "the best teacher I've ever seen.
    • djplaner
       
      An example of some of the large claims being made about Khan Academy that seem to suggest limited understanding of what makes a good teacher?
    • anonymous
       
      This is an interesting one - how can a teacher be hailed as such, when there is no real interaction (questioning from the student's point of view)? The Khan Academy does have its advantages as a very useful prop to specific lessons and concepts, yet the questions posed by any learner should be equally important if effective learning is to take place.
    • Margaret Johnson
       
      I agree Doreen, furthermore, the Khan Academy cannot be used as a stand alone to teaching, yet as a tool to extend understanding or to reteach concepts
    • Deb Mac
       
      It is a useful tool I agree. Students need to have an understand of a variety of ways/strategies/methods to draw upon in order to gain a full understand of the concepts.
    • Lisa Rose
       
      Interesting to see Bill Gates making a reference to teaching skills. Last I checked he wasn't an expert in education?!
    • robbie1282
       
      I don't get why they are making reference to Bill Gates I don't believe he has an understanding of teaching. Although these online library can help with understanding but is it really the way we want education to go online teaching??
    • djplaner
       
      I belive that the reference to Gates arises from the fact that he's spending a lot of his money attempting to improve schools and universities. That money means that his views on what is good teaching carry significant weight. More so than his qualifications and experience might otherwise warrant.
  • What is more, his videos reveal an ignorance of how we know students learn mathematics.
    • djplaner
       
      The Khan Academy videos suffer from the poor PCK of the people developing the videos. The core of the argument here.
    • Colleen Lenehan
       
      The videos were started to help students who were already learning through the school system and needed more help without having to pay for it. A lot of people are complaining about the videos as alternatives to explicit teaching in the classroom, but aren't they great for what they were originally designed for.
    • Kate Dugdale
       
      I don't think the Khan videos are doing any damage...They shouldn't be used as a stand alone, but instead as a supplement for learning, perhaps.
    • Louise Hoggett
       
      I think the videos are great as a supplementary activity, it provides a different way to explain something. Good on him for attempting it.
    • Lisa Rose
       
      I like David's comment: videos aren't actually evidence of the Khan academy, just "the poor PCK of the people developing the videos.".
  • Pedagogical content knowledge is an important foundation for planning lessons and for decision making during a lesson.
    • djplaner
       
      Building your PCK is essential to improving your ability to create effective learning experiences.
    • Lisa Rose
       
      I'm banging on the same drum here, but "building" to me is important - it's not the be all and end all.
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • All teachers make mistakes, after all, and Khan should not, the reasoning goes, be called out for making the same mistakes we all make.
  • There certainly are broken models in education, but there is absolutely no evidence that competent knowledge of student learning and thinking is one that teachers can afford to jettison.
  • researchers are finding evidence that particular kinds of PCK are associated with greater gains in student learning in elementary mathematics.
  • revolutionize
  • The equal sign (=) i
  • Many mathematics educators stress another kind of knowledge necessary to design and deliver quality instruction: pedagogical content knowledge (PCK). PCK refers to knowledge of content as it relates to teaching.
    • Stephen Druery
       
      Design and deliver quality instruction.
    • sandra2812
       
      knowing the students and how they learn 
    • franerbacher
       
      and catering for all students
  • content knowledge alone is inadequate
    • Fran Gemmell
       
      How true, but how often do we see this and the reverse situation where teachers are teaching in areas where their content knowledge is lacking.
    • Lisa Rose
       
      Content is certainly the starting point and this is crucial.
    • Olivia Wirihana
       
      I agree content knowledge is crucial but there are so many more aspects needed to make it great.
    • sandra2812
       
      Content knowledge is important, but it doesn't matter how much knowledge a teacher has if s/he cannot teach that content in a way that the students will actually understand it and be able to apply it in future
    • traceydavis1968
       
      I agree that content knowledge is important but it is just as important to know your students and how best they learn
  • The standard American curricular treatment, in which students are instructed to append zeroes to the shorter decimal to equalize the number of digits helps students to perform this task correctly, but fosters its own misconceptions.
  • he exercises offer no intellectual rigor and do not address our central concern.
  • PCK knows from both educational research and professional experience
  • I think frankly, the best way to do it is you put stuff out there and you see how people react to it; and we have exercises on our site too, so we see whether they’re able to see how they react to it anecdotally.
    • Olivia Wirihana
       
      I think this comment is interesting as provocation has many benefits.
  • the examples Khan chooses appear selected at random and thus are, perhaps unsurprisingly, often quite poor.
    • sandra2812
       
      A teacher must be prepared before entering the classroom
  • If Khan’s videos occasionally popped up in a Google search, we would be content to have him carry on. There is lots of worse information available on the web. But Khan is hailed as “unbelievable” ( Bill Gates) and his work as “sparking a revolution in education
    • sandra2812
       
      It is up to the teacher to assess whether or not the videos are suitable for his/her students. If the teacher chooses to use the video, then s/her can refer to the teacher information and see which questions the students answered correctly / incorrectly and identify any misconceptions. These misconceptions can then be addressed by the teacher in the classroom
  • Whether small steps or large, we urge Sal Khan and his funders to put their time, effort and dollars to the best possible ends, particularly when it comes to making decisions grounded in accurate, carefully considered pedagogical content knowledge
  • discuss the meaning of the equal sign frequently and explicitly, and (2) model correct use of the equal sign.
    • Angela Woodward
       
      To quote a fellow student, Lucas Naughton states, 'ICT must be used to enhance and amplify the learning rather then becoming the point of the learning'. I get that there are holes in the Khan videos however if we are using them to enhance learning then why cant the teacher design an entire lesson around one video. They can discuss the missing misconceptions. They can provide other methods/concepts and they can create practice activities all around a Khan video. Remember-enhance and amplify the learning using these ICT's. Cheers Angela Woodward
    • djplaner
       
      Exactly. They can be a useful tool if used appropriately.
  • Khan will put the video out there and see how people react to it.
    • Kacey Howard
       
      There's no actual looking for student ability/interest - it seems as if he's more interested in teaching what he want to talk about.
  • Newsweek
    • Kacey Howard
       
      How does Newsweek become a credible source? Surely people know better than to blindly accept a newpaper's arbitary titles?
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
  • ...6 more comments...
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    Wikipedia mentions Khan's education: "Khan attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating with a BS in mathematics, a BS in electrical engineering and computer science, and an MS in electrical engineering and computer science in 1998. Khan also holds an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School" I can't see a Bachelor of Education in there. I would have thought that this would be essential, and the first stepping-stone, to acquire an understanding of PCK and how students learn. Danielson and Goldenburg state that "content knowledge alone is inadequate for quality instruction" and that many videos are prone to creating further confusion for students. They also go on to say that Khan's explanations are frequently off target in addressing likely student questions that experienced teachers would anticipate and elicit. Maybe a four-year stint at USQ might be in order? .
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
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    A critique of some of the Khan Academy videos from a PCK perspective.
kmerder

The Weblog of Kylie Merder - 0 views

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    pedagogical content knowledge article
kmerder

Assessment 2 so far | The Weblog of Kylie Merder - 4 views

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    Assignment 2 so far - English year 2
w0107730

Initial idea A2 - 8 views

Here is my initial idea for A2 Context *School is a small coastal rural school with approx 250 students. There is 2 year 2 classes. The school has accessing to the following resources (ipads, comp...

draftUoW year 2 science

started by w0107730 on 24 Aug 15 no follow-up yet
traceydavis1968

Planning for exciting lessons… | On the road to learning ICTs - 6 views

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    This is just a start have loads of ideas but would love any ideas from colleagues
djplaner

Watch The Next Web's Vine, "There's an app for that... 1980's vs. 2015 [created by Harv... - 0 views

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    A Vine that illustrates the evolution of technology on a office desk from 1980 to 2015. Two questions. What would a similar Vine of a classroom look like? This Vine shows an evolution over the last 25 years, what would a 2040 Vine look like? What would it would look like for your classroom.
djplaner

Thinking About Classroom Dojo - Why Not Just Tase Your Kids Instead? | Teaching Ace - 1 views

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    Class Dojo is often held up as a good example. This post offers a good critique of Class Dojo and the problems it creates. There are also some suggestions about what you can do instead.
djplaner

Schools Use Genius Plan To Stop Students From Checking Their Phones - 1 views

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    One possible approach to the problem of students using phones in class. Not such a great fan of it and then one of the comments offers the solution that I imagine quite a few students adopting "I'd just put it on an old phone connected to wifi and stick it in my bag. BOOM 24/7 locked phone"
djplaner

The Most Dangerous Word in Education - 1 views

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    Short post focusing on the problem of "integrating" as the most dangerous word in education. Links to the S & A from SAMR and the R & A from the RAT framework
djplaner

No Clarity Around Growth Mindset…Yet | Slate Star Codex - 1 views

  • (if you’re not familiar with it, growth mindset is the belief that people who believe ability doesn’t matter and only effort determines success are more resilient, skillful, hard-working, perseverant in the face of failure, and better-in-a-bunch-of-other-ways than people who emphasize the importance of ability. Therefore, we can make everyone better off by telling them ability doesn’t matter and only hard work does
  • Good research shows that inborn ability (including but not limited to IQ) matters a lot, and that the popular prejudice that people who fail just weren’t trying hard enough is both wrong and harmful.
  • A rare point of agreement between hard biodeterminists and hard socialists is that telling kids that they’re failing because they just don’t have the right work ethic is a crappy thing to do. It’s usually false and it will make them feel terrible. Behavioral genetics studies show pretty clearly that at least 50% of success at academics and sports is genetic; various sociologists have put a lot of work into proving that your position in a biased society covers a pretty big portion of the remainder. If somebody who was born with the dice stacked against them works very hard, then they might find themselves at A2 above. To deny this in favor of a “everything is about how hard you work” is to offend the sensibilities of sensible people on the left and right alike
    • djplaner
       
      The point I take from this is that not "everything" is about how hard you work. There are other more important factors to be considered. And these factors mean that not everyone will be a genius in everything. But if you have to learn something (e.g. using ICTs to enhance/transform student learning) then spending the necessary time in an effective way to learn that skill is more likely to help you learn, than simply saying "I can't do it".
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    Detailed blog post outlining some reservations and limitation around the research around Dweck's Growth Mindset. An idea used early in this course. Reinforcing the idea to keep a skeptical view of your theories.
teegz87

Welcome | ScienceWeb - ASTA - 4 views

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    I have found this to be a very useful starting point to generate ideas and understanding surrounding Assignment 2
christinepeterson66

Using iPads effectively in Early Grades - 6 views

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    This is a very informative article about the benefits of iPads in early years. As many schools are now considering their use it is a timely article
u1033821

Decoding Learning | Nesta - 1 views

    • Kim Hatfield
       
      Looking at impacts of ICT in the classroom
    • u1033821
       
      The investment in the equipment might be fine but what about the investment in those that would be using them to teach? Sometimes when you are given the tools to implement, doesn't mean you know how to use them.
    • u1033821
       
      Meant to extend and suggest that training on using the equipment and the time to find how it would be implemented into the curriculum. The teacher using the curriculum is one thing but using it to teach and then assessing the students use of the technology after the scaffolding from the teacher. Does this make sense?
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    deciding ICT
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