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jeffduckett

Why Kids Should Grade Teachers - Amanda Ripley - The Atlantic - 1 views

    • kicsprincipal
       
      "If someone had asked" - yes! Let's ask students! But not just about how their teacher is working with them, other things also. But let's give them the tools to be asked and to respond. It's time to open the BYOD debate!
  • The point was so obvious, it was almost embarrassing. Kids stared at their teachers for hundreds of hours a year, which might explain their expertise. Their survey answers, it turned out, were more reliable than any other known measure of teacher performance—­including classroom observations and student test-score growth. All of which raised an uncomfortable new question: Should teachers be paid, trained, or dismissed based in part on what children say about them?
    • kicsprincipal
       
      It's a tough one: asking and considering their responses does not mean acting dramatically on the feedback. But isnt knowledge supposed to be power? Don't teachers WANT to know?
    • jeffduckett
       
      Why shouldn't we value the perspective and perceptions of students. What is described here is just another form of assessment. The content of which would need to be considered carefully as to focus on effectiveness of learning to establish trends, and not "teacher evaluation". 
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    • jeffduckett
       
      Quality Teaching = Quality Learning
  • Test scores can reveal when kids are not learning; they can’t reveal why.
  • In math, for example, the teachers rated most highly by students delivered the equivalent of about six more months of learning than teachers with the lowest ratings. (By comparison, teachers who get a master’s degree—one of the few ways to earn a pay raise in most schools —delivered about one more month of learning per year than teachers without one.)
  • Why Kids Should Grade Teachers A decade ago, an economist at Harvard, Ronald Ferguson, wondered what would happen if teachers were evaluated by the people who see them every day—their students. The idea—as simple as it sounds, and as familiar as it is on college campuses—was revolutionary. And the results seemed to be, too: remarkable consistency from grade to grade, and across racial divides. Even among kindergarten students. A growing number of school systems are administering the surveys—and might be able to overcome teacher resistance in order to link results to salaries and promotions.
jeffduckett

How to Create Your Own Textbook - With or Without Apple | MindShift - 0 views

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    "How to Create Your Own Textbook - With or Without Apple"
Bradley Arnold

Why Instructional Designers Need To View Knowledge As A New Natural Resource - eLearnin... - 0 views

  • This all brings me to the Instructional Designer. It is important to understand that the raw material of knowledge is data. And we are drowning in it. And, significantly, it does not go away. Data that was not born digital is swiftly being digitized, and data that is born digital stays that way – forever. My goal in this article is to convince Instructional Designers to view data as a new natural resource, which means your job is to teach people how to adapt data and transform it into actionable intelligence. That is the key to the Fourth Industrial Revolution –sometimes called the Cyber-Physical Revolution– and the key is in the hands of the Instructional Designer community.
    • Bradley Arnold
       
      This is an understanding that teachers need to see and understand. 
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    This is something that teachers need to understand. 
jeffduckett

My Digital FootPrint - 0 views

  • How to Audit your Digital Footprint
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    "How to Audit your Digital Footprint"
kicsprincipal

Annie Murphy Paul: Why Old-School Rote Learning Is Still Important | TIME.com - 0 views

  • Kail’s experience is instructive. As soon as she began teaching her students the Greek and Latin origins of many English terms — that the root sta means “put in place or stand,” for example, and that cess means “to move or withdraw” — they eagerly began identifying familiar words that incorporated the roots, like statue and recess. Her three classes competed against one another to come up with the longest list of words derived from the roots they were learning. Kail’s students started using these terms in their writing, and many of them told her that their study of word roots helped them answer questions on the SAT and on Ohio’s state graduation exam. (Research confirms that instruction in word roots allows students to learn new vocabulary and figure out the meaning of words in context more easily.) For her part, Kail reports that she no longer sees rote memorization as “inherently evil.” Although committing the word roots to memory was a necessary first step, she notes, “the key was taking that old-school method and encouraging students to use their knowledge to practice higher-level thinking skills.”
    • kicsprincipal
       
      'Progressive' education doesn't mean abandoning what has worked in other contexts.
    • jeffduckett
       
      There is always a place for proven and effective instruction. Even 21st century teachers need an open mind.
  • . A study published in the Journal of Research in Science Teaching in 2010, for example, found that 10th-graders who were taught how to construct an argument as part of their lessons on genetics not only had better arguments but also demonstrated a better understanding of the material
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    • kicsprincipal
       
      Formal argumentation... debate... why is hardly any of it going on in the Seniors at KICS????
jeffduckett

Do Computers in the Classroom Boost Academic Achievement? - 0 views

    • jeffduckett
       
      This is really good. Read it and then we will discuss it in class.
  • This explosion in the technology has increased efforts to equip every classroom with computers and "wire" every school to the Internet. Between September 1984 and September 1997 alone, the number of computers in America's K-12 schools increased elevenfold to more than 8 million units.1 Educators have been forced to keep up, and some are finding themselves teaching general skills in how to use a computer while they use them to teach other subjects.
donovanhallnz

5 Critical Mistakes Schools Make With iPads (And How To Correct Them) - Edudemic - Edud... - 1 views

    • donovanhallnz
       
      Great tip about finding four general apps for specific purposes.  The final sentence is a reminder, focusing on the content, not the app.
  • And we don’t introduce a single subject app. Instead we focus on the amazing range of consumption, curation, and creativity possible across grade levels and subjects using only four general apps: an annotation app, a screencasting app, an audio creation app, and a video creation app. In our workshops conversations about pedagogy center the iPad properly as an effective learning device. The content comes from a wide range of materials available across the Web and in our classrooms, not from apps.
Bradley Arnold

CAOs and CTOs Ramp Up on Collaboration - Education Week - 0 views

  • In district administrative offices, both technology and academic officers have to start with the question, "What is our vision for learning, and how do we enable that?" Krueger said, and "how do we [create] a common vision for instruction and technology?"
jeffduckett

Expert fears "catastrophe" as Darfur yellow fever death toll hits 107 - AlertNet - 0 views

  • “If the person has been in Khartoum for any length of time and if he has been in contact with mosquitoes, then, whether he’s been treated or not, there still is the possibility that transmission will occur,” he said. People who have yellow fever can infect mosquitoes which bite them in the early stages of the disease because they have high levels of the virus in their blood, he said. This is how viruses travel from one country to another.
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