"Ask yourself the following questions. Then ask these questions of your faculty and administration.
* Is global awareness and education important to students who do not and most likely will never own a passport?
* Should/is "Global Awareness" or "Global Competencies" (be) taught as a (required) separate course/subject?
* Do you infuse culture BEYOND food, music, games, festivals, language or art?
* Do teachers need to be globally connected in order to connect their students?"
"I am extremely honored that Langwitches was nominated for Edublog Awards 2010 in the following categories: Best Teacher Blog , Best Individual Blog and Best Educational Tech Support Blog."
"Teachers are worried that students simply "google" answers to a homework assignment or "copy and paste" entire paragraphs for research papers from the Internet. They are right. Nowadays, it is very easy, fast AND accessible to find answers.
So, what do we do?
* Do we punish students and fail them if they found the right answer online?
* Do we spend our time and energy checking if they did not plagiarize by simply copying from another website into their papers?
* Do we use services such as Plagiarism Checker or Turn It In to catch students?
John Sowash, The Electric Educator, writes about Google-Proof Questioning"
"We are finally getting ready for the ACTUAL writing part with our students. Until now you have prepared your students by:
* exploring other student authored blogs
* talking about online safety, online identity and cyber bullying
* making the difference between social and academic commenting clear
As with commenting, talk with your students about the difference between social and academic writing. A true educational blog is NOT about socializing, but about students and teacher helping each other grow in their learning."
"Teaching ourselves, our students and other educators how to use screenshooting (images) and screencasting (video) tools is a relevant skill to have that integrates in so many areas. Think Tutorial Designers (A role from the Digital Learning Farm) or the Flipped Classroom model. Being able to create, share and take advantage of readily available screencasts touch upon so many of the skills (create, communicate) and literacies (network, media, information literacy)."
"Should Teachers Be More Like Conductors? This bog post from 2009 took me to the following TED talk by Itay Talgam. Although I am not a musician, nor listen to much classical music, I was mesmerized. This TED talk was geared towards organization leaders, but I so agree with Tania Sheko, that it seemed to directly speak to me as an educator."
"I am presenting at AASSA 2014- Association of American Schools in South America, here in São Paulo, Brazil today and tomorrow. Over 900 educators from South American schools (American and International) are here to REDEFINE RELEVANCE!"
"Blogging in education is about quality and authentic writing in digital spaces with a global audience, while observing digital citizenship responsibilities and rights, as on documents, reflects, organizes and makes one's learning and thinking visible and searchable!
Blogging is not analog writing in digital spaces.
Blogging is not an activity, but a process. The process includes reading, writing, commenting and connecting. It is about reciprocating and an emphasis on quality, not just publishing."
"Twitter can be overwhelming, even for a seasoned Twitterer.
We use tools, such as Tweetdeck, to help us organize the tweets coming in
--we use #hashtags to filter and connect our conversations
--we @mention, we RT, we DM, we #FF
--we participate in #edchats
--we give credit where credit is due
--we take notes
--we disseminate interesting information to our network
--we amplify our voices to engage in conversation with people from around the world
Yes, it can be overwhelming to follow a conference Twitter hashtag such as #AASSA15 (Association of American Schools in South America Annual Educators Conference . (Day 1, Day 2, Day 3).
You will find a few sample sreenshots of Tweets from the AASSA conference in Curaçao. Unpacked and annotexted to make the value of Twitter as a Professional Development tool, a learning tool visible to the untrained eye."
"In another post, Embedding Visuals Into Teaching and Learning, I looked at ways to support our students' ability to navigate a media rich world and "read and write" in that world. I shared how teachers could easily and quickly create visuals, that supported a question they wanted students to explore, break up long and monotone passages of text, review a concept discussed abstractly or make a real life connection.
Wonderopolis is a fascinating site with great visual prompts for you to "hook" students into inquiry and further research."
"Mike Fisher and I had the pleasure to sit down with Stephen Wilmarth and five of his Chinese High School students in the International Experimental Class at the Number 1 Middle School attached to the Central China Normal University in Wuhan. Steve is piloting the first 1:1 iPad program in all of China."
"I am in Wuhan China… Don't know off the top of your head where that is? Take a look at the map below. It is on the same latitude as Jacksonville, Florida where I live…just on the other side of the globe…"
"As an extension to my first blog post "Add a Global Perspective to your Google Search", I wanted to add a video that was inspired by last week's keynote presentation by Alan November at CMI 2011."