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Anna Castillo

Ken Robinson says Schools Kill Creativity - 0 views

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    In the video, Ken Robinson says Schools kill Creativity, the speaker, Ken Robinson, talks about how not only the United States, but education systems all around the world, hinder children's creativity because that won't get them anywhere in life. He brings up this notion of creativity in schools being the most important thing, and programs like music, dance, and theatre are on the bottom of the totem pole where Math and English are perceived as the core subjects in schools. He challenges that notion. Why are Math and English at the top? The point of this video is to make people re-think creativity in school and the fact that education will not have a future if we keep dismissing the use of creativity in schools.
anonymous

Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity? - 0 views

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    Sir Ken Robinson presents his idea of schools restricting students from their creativity and talent.
Samantha Airth

Dale Dougherty: We are makers - 0 views

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    "We are makers of our own world and how much technology is involved in our world." Others are more creative in our making, some artistically and some simplistically.
anonymous

Materiality, Memory and Imagination: Using Empathy to Research Creativity. - 0 views

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    This Article reveals the idea of how technology has changed and how we use these type of technologies to enhance our creativity and imagination.
Grant Keller

http://vosloo.net/wp-content/uploads/pubs/texting_and_literacy_apr09_sv.pdf - 0 views

ANNOTATION #3 This piece was on some of the effects of SMS messaging has on literacy. It shows instant messaging can be productive in literacy. Kids use creative phonetic substitutions in textin...

started by Grant Keller on 19 Oct 10 no follow-up yet
Ryen Walter

Civic Identities, Online Technologies: From Designing Civics Curriculum to Supporting C... - 1 views

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    In the chapter "Civic Identities, Online Technologies: From Designing Civics Curriculum to Supporting Civic Experiences" from Marina Umaschi Bers book, Civic Life Online: Learning How Digital Media Can Engage Youth, the author claims that online games, such as Zora, help our youth engage in community and civics. Zora allows it's players to create their own individual avatar, with physical, mental, and emotional traits that the players choose. Bers argues that Zora is a great way for children to think about their identity and civic life by making choices that will show them how to acquire certain sills and attitudes to become good citizens. Like many other researchers, Bers agrees that it is easiest to learn by doing, and games like Zora are helping to improve the youths social awareness. This chapter describes engagement in society not only by voting and being political, but by forming communities and volunteering.
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    In "Civic Identities, Online Technologies: From Designing Civics Curriculum to Supporting Civic Experiences" by Marina Umaschi Bers, Bers discusses a scenario that is being used all across the country. Zora is a three dimensional multiuser environment that students use to think about identity and civic life. Students make avatars and are in charge of everything going on in the city or summer camp. This came to life after identity construction environments (ICEs) were found that creative things to do on the computer make children learn better. The students work mostly with different civic identities like police, Jewish people, etc. along with real life, controversial community related issues which the students try to solve. Many of the tools used in Zora can then beused in real life and the moral values can be used both on the computer and in real life. Zora is different than traditional learning because "Children are put in the role of producers, instead of consumers, of information, knowledge, and habits of mind."
Andrea Stevens

Is Standardized Testing Failing our students? - 0 views

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    Rose Garrett writes an article called Is Standardized Testing Failing Our Kids? which is basically questioning the purpose for taking the test. It talks about how the test hurt the students who need the help the most and is adding a lot of pressure to both the students and the teachers. It states how teachers have to teach to the test instead of teaching in a way that will not end up on paper. This article says that we should have a different kind of testing that is called performance based assessments and it is based on the idea that kids should be evaluated on what they can do and not for the purpose to see how successful they are. It allows kids to be creative and to shoe us what they actually know instead of taking a test. It seems clear that a standardized test only shows wheatear a student got the question right or wrong not how well they know the material or how well they can answer a question. The author states that until we can decided what we want kids to learn than it is hard to give them a test on things they may or may not know.
Bre'Onna Wills

The Socialism of Flash Mobs; Or, How Glee Stole Your Freedom - 1 views

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    This article suggests that flash mobs posess certain dangers to our way of life. "The loss of individualism."
Roger Thor

Larry Lessig on laws that choke creativity - 0 views

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    In this video, Larry takes about 3 stories that generates to one argument. Larry is a Harvard professor and is one of TED's authorities that knows a lot about the copyright issues. He talks about how the user generated content was created to be.
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