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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Sarah Hanawald

Sarah Hanawald

434 + essential web 2.0 Tools in one place! - 0 views

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    Wow-- a very cool list of web 2.0 tools. Great resource for a workshop or for play.
Sarah Hanawald

Social Networks in Education wiki listing - 0 views

  • A listing of social networks used in educational environments. Please add to this list (alphabetical by category and within categories).
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    Source for finding a social network for teachers.
Sarah Hanawald

Why Schools Don't Educate - The Natural Child Project - 0 views

  • The world's narcotic economy is based upon our own consumption of the commodity, if we didn't buy so many powdered dreams the business would collapse - and schools are an important sales outlet.
  • Senator Ted Kennedy's office released a paper not too long ago claiming that prior to compulsory education the state literacy rate was 98% and after it the figure never again reached above 91% where it stands in 1990
  • in the United States almost nobody who reads, writes or does arithmetic gets much respect. We are a land of talkers,
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    More John Gotto--his speech as he accepted the Teacher of the Year award. Written in 1990, but spot on today.
Sarah Hanawald

Diablo Valley School, a Concord California Sudbury School - Serving Elementary Middle a... - 0 views

  • I heard a vice-president of IBM tell an audience of people assembled to redesign the process of teacher certification that in his opinion this country became computer-literate by self-teaching, not through any action of schools. He said 45 million people were comfortable with computers who had learned through dozens of non-systematic strategies, none of them very formal; if schools had pre-empted the right to teach computer use we would be in a horrible mess right now instead of leading the world in this literacy.
  • In modern society, said Dewey, people would be defined by their associations--not by their own individual accomplishments. It such a world people who read too well or too early are dangerous because they become privately empowered, they know too much, and know how to find out what they don't know by themselves, without consulting experts
  • Dewey said the great mistake of traditional pedagogy was to make reading and writing constitute the bulk of early schoolwork.
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  • New York State, for instance, employs more school administrators than all of the European Economic Community nations combined.
  • rederich Froebel, the inventor of kindergarten in 19th century Germany, fashioned his idea he did not have a "garden for children" in mind, but a metaphor of teachers as gardeners and children as the vegetables.
  • Kindergarten was created to be a way to break the influence of mothers on their children.
  • Violence, narcotic addictions, divorce, alcoholism, loneliness...all these are but tangible measures of a poverty in education.
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    Interesting. John Taylor Gotto on education and the value of less rather than more school. He mentions that the best programmers are self-taught.
Sarah Hanawald

SIMILE | Exhibit 2.0 - 0 views

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    Why webpage design is becoming a niche instead of a literacy
Sarah Hanawald

Study: Teens See Disconnect Between Personal and School Writing : April 2008 : THE Journal - 0 views

  • Study: Teens See Disconnect Between Personal and School Writing by Dave Nagel Extra Credit Student Writing and Internet Usage According to the Pew/National Commission on Writing study, 50 percent of teens write something for school every day. Ninety-four percent use the Internet for research for their school assignments at least occasionally, and 48 percent sad they use the Internet for research at least once per week. More Information Study: Writing, Technology and Teens (PDF) --D. Nagel Students see a distinction between the writing they do for school and the writing they do in their personal lives. While the vast majority of 12- to 17-year-olds (85 percent) engage in some form of electronic writing--IM, e-mail, blog posts, text messages, etc.--most (60 percent) don't consider this actual writing. That's one of the findings from a study released last week by the Pew Internet & American Life Project and the National Commission on Writing for America’s Families, Schools and Colleges.
Sarah Hanawald

Dipity Anotated and Illustrated Timelines - 0 views

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    Looks really interesting for Social Studies or Literary Studies. How to use with students under 13?
Sarah Hanawald

Techlearning > > Bloom's Taxonomy Blooms Digitally > April 1, 2008 - 0 views

  • Bloom's Taxonomy Blooms Digitally
  • This categorized and ordered thinking skills and objectives. His taxonomy follows the thinking process. You can not understand a concept if you do not first remember it, similarly you can not apply knowledge and concepts if you do not understand them. It is a continuum from Lower Order Thinking Skills (LOTS) to Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS). Bloom labels each category with a gerund.
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    How does Bloom's Taxonomy translate in the digital realm?
Sarah Hanawald

The Partnership for 21st Century Skills - Framework for 21st Century Learning - 0 views

  • The Partnership for 21st Century Skills has developed a unified, collective vision for 21st century learning that can be used to strengthen American education. The key elements of 21st century learning are represented in the graphic and descriptions below. The graphic represents both 21st century skills student outcomes (as represented by the arches of the rainbow) and 21st century skills support systems (as represented by the pools at the bottom):
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    sort of the "official" publication about 21st Century Learning
Sarah Hanawald

Truth: Can You Handle It? - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

  • subjects used them as an opportunity to reinforce their own beliefs.
  • "Since people have more choice, they can choose to read the things that reflect what they already believe.
  • If one quack repeats the same piece of information to you five times, it's nearly as effective as hearing the sound bite from five different reputable sources.
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  • truth can be elusive, but the fight for it can be rewarding.
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    How do we tell the difference between information and truth.
Sarah Hanawald

Commmitting to Conversations | always learning - 0 views

    • Sarah Hanawald
       
      This is even more true for students than for adults.
Sarah Hanawald

Top 100 Tools for Learning: Summary PDF - 0 views

  • Between January and March 2008 155 learning professionals shared  their Top 10 favourite tools for learning  (either for their own personal learning or for creating learning for others).  We used these lists to compile the Top 100 Tools for Learning Spring 2008. 
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    From the UK, top 100 tools for learning. Mostly web app's, lots of web2.0. Would be handy for a presentation, sort of "how many of these do you know about" overview for folks.
Sarah Hanawald

Apostrophes and Philosophy: Postcards from the Ivory Tower | The Line - 0 views

  • Let’s make it an institutional priority to talk on an ongoing basis to any university researcher who can help us teach better.”
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    Discusses the research at the university and school connection that is so often missing. Short of making sure a certain % of teachers are in grad school in any given year, what can we do?
Sarah Hanawald

Web 2.0 Is the Future of Education (Techlearning blog) - 0 views

  • I believe that the read/write Web, or what we are calling Web 2.0, will culturally, socially, intellectually, and politically have a greater impact than the advent of the printing press.
  • Because it is in the act of our becoming a creator that our relationship with content changes, and we become more engaged and more capable at the same time. In a world of overwhelming content, we must swim with the current or tide (enough with water analogies!).
  • You may think that you don't have anything to teach the generation of students who seem so tech-savvy, but they really, really need you. For centuries we have had to teach students how to seek out information – now we have to teach them how to sort from an overabundance of information. We've spent the last ten years teaching students how to protect themselves from inappropriate content – now we have to teach them to create appropriate content. They may be "digital natives," but their knowledge is surface level, and they desperately need training in real thinking skills.
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  • We may be afraid to enter that world, but enter it we must, for they often swim in uncharted waters without the benefit of adult guidance.
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    This is why literacy still matters more than anything else.
Sarah Hanawald

List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • List of cognitive biases From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search A cognitive bias is a pattern of deviation in judgement that occurs in particular situations (see also cognitive distortion and the lists of thinking-related topics). Implicit in the concept of a "pattern of deviation" is a standard of comparison; this may be the judgment of people outside those particular situations, or may be a set of independently verifiable facts. The existence of some of these cognitive biases has been verified empirically in the field of psychology, others are widespread beliefs, and may themselves be a consequence of cognitive bias.
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    Yikes. This one might provoke some pain. It would be a great start with students and for faculty self-reflection. Not techy at all.
Sarah Hanawald

Tryangulation: My part of the world is not flat - 0 views

  • The YouTube Wars Prof. Akalın was probably pleased last week when, for a few days at least, we lost our access to that Eurovision winning song. In response to a satirical video that was offensive to the memory of Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey, a Turkish court shut down any access to YouTube.com. The offending video was uploaded supposedly by Greeks wanting to antagonize their neighbors, and it prompted a war of offensive and counter offensive videos and endless (and pointless) comments.  It is against the law here to insult Atatürk, but since the offenders were "out there" somewhere beyond prosecution on the Internet, punishment was levied on Turkish Internet users instead. The story is even sadder as I remember attending a conference in Athens last fall with several Turkish colleagues, and we were pleasantly surprised at the warmth of so many Greeks, including several who spoke with us in Turkish.
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    An American blogging about his job teaching in Turkey. There's a section I highlighted about a Turkish "Idol" type issue and the resulting MySpace mess.
Sarah Hanawald

Support Blogging! » Links to School Bloggers - 0 views

  • Blogs on Educational Blogging
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    In case you were looking for more reading material. . .
Sarah Hanawald

Defining the Role of a 21st Century Literacy Specialist | always learning - 0 views

  • personal (and personable) support in the classroom is the key to the success of any technology-rich program, and 21st century literacy is no different.
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    From the 21st century literacy specialist at the international school Bangkok.
Sarah Hanawald

CommentPress - 0 views

  • CommentPress is an open source theme for the WordPress blogging engine that allows readers to comment paragraph by paragraph in the margins of a text. Annotate, gloss, workshop, debate:
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    comments on paragraphs
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    Useful for AP students?
Sarah Hanawald

The LoTi Connection - About LoTi - 0 views

  • esigned to accurately measure authentic classroom technology use. The LoTi Framework focuses on the use of technology as a tool within the context of student based instruction with a constant emphasis on higher order thinking.
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    This is the "about Loti" page, probably a better bookmark than the other.
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    I should have bookmarked this one instead of the other one.
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